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Voyages North

Everything you need. Ahousat General Store. August 23, 2009.
09/09/2009, Matilda Inlet, Clayquot Sound

Photo: Ahousat General Store.

The next morning we listened to the weather report again and decided that the gales probably wouldn't get inside Clayoquot Sound so there was no reason to hide. We left at 10:00 a.m. just in time to catch the ebb tide through Sulfur Passage into Millar Channel where we motored under cloudy skies against light southeasterlies.

At Ahousat in Matilda Inlet we tied up at the dock by the General Store. The store and surrounding businesses have been for sale for years. At first every year, we'd wonder if the owners, Hugh Clarke and his sister Patty, would still be there but we no longer wonder; they're always there and the store is always for sale. In the store, we stepped over boxes of goods in the aisle and picked over rotten produce in the cold room, but we found just about everything we needed including a zinc for the replaced heat exchanger.

The Ahousat businesses -- a small café, fish processing plant, laundry facilities and showers, motel and hostel are reminders of the west coast of Vancouver Island as it used to be. Most of these businesses were originally developed for commercial fishermen who came in droves to this coast in the summer. Residents, such as those on the Indian Reserve at Marktosis across the Inlet were an incidental year-round customer base. The fishermen are gone, the residents of the Reserve do their major shopping in Tofino via the taxi boat but the General Store soldiers on. What will happen, I wonder, when (if) it finally sells?




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A canoe family. August 23, 2009
09/09/2009, Marktosis, Matilda Inlet

Photo: Dugout Canoe at Marktosis.

After anchoring in the inlet, we took our dinghy through the rocks into the village of Marktosis, home of the Ahousat band of Nuu-chah-nulths. On the beach in front of the village we found a beautiful dugout canoe, painted in colorful designs. A young man in a fancy T-shirt with a picture of a canoe told us he was part of the "canoe family," the term they use for the crew for dugout canoes, and that he had just returned from a paddle in the canoe to Suquamish (across Puget Sound from Seattle) for the annual canoe races. The canoe holds about 35 paddlers and it took about two weeks to get there. They don't race in the big canoe; smaller racing canoes are transported by truck. He told us proudly that his canoe family won many of the races.

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Floating in Paradise. August 24, 2009.
09/09/2009, Quait Bay, Clayoquot Sound

Photo: the float house, "Fireweed"

If the threatened gale ever blew, we didn't see it in Matilda Inlet, although it did rain during the night. By morning the rain had stopped and we caught the tide up inlet into Clayoquot Sound to Quait Bay. There we took our dinghy around the corner to a little cove where our friends Wayne Adams and Catherine King live on an elaborate floating complex called "Fireweed." Every time we visit them their pink and green float house complex is grander and more beautiful. This year we noticed a new boat, painted pink and green, tucked into a pink and green boathouse.

Wayne and Catherine are both ivory carvers. Their carvings are too expensive for people like us but they've recently started using their carvings to produce molds for candles. We came away with a boxful.


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Voyages North
Who: Steve, Elsie, Jigger the cat
Port: Seattle
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