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Movies in the Museum

April 9, 2022 @ 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Free

Learn how the Grey Canal transformed land use and settlement in the North Okanagan. Join Bob Davison, Tom Ouchi, Mas Sakakibara, Peter Tassie at the Vernon Museum, along with filmmakers, Bruce Mol and Ingrid Neumann, to view The Ways of Water docuseries. Viewing will be followed by a reception and a chance to chat with all involved.

Admission is by donation. Seating is limited so please register ahead to guarantee a spot at

Now a network of multi-use trails that encircle the Greater Vernon area, serving up stunning views, this early irrigation system brought water from the lakes in the surrounding highland into the valley from 1914 to 1971. It once comprised the largest irrigation district in British Columbia.

Members of the Ribbons of Green Trail Society (ROGTS) wanted to find out more about the early days of the Grey Canal and how it impacted this area. “At Ribbons of Green, we’ve been working to find ways to connect all the original sections of the Grey Canal route into the current trail network,” explains ROGTS member, Ingrid Neumann. “We met with some of those involved in the canal as an irrigation system, and found out how much it impacted the settlement of this area. Their stories are fascinating, so we wanted more people to be able to hear them.”

Neumann enlisted fellow ROGTS member and video documentarian, Bruce Mol, to film interviews with Robert Davison, Tom Ouchi, Mas Sakakibara, and Peter Tassie. Mol and Neumann then edited the footage to create the series to capture the knowledge and recollections of these multi-generational residents. Each tells a different part of the story of this feat of engineering, and how it changed life in the North Okanagan. “Today, everything is power pumps…but that canal was 100% gravity,” recounts Bob Davison of Davison Orchards. “You’ve got to hand it to the vision they had: to cross a rock pile, they built a flume around it. Then they get to another rock pile and they drilled a tunnel through it.”

“Without the Grey Canal you wouldn’t have farmland up on the Bella Vista,” says Mas Sakakibara. “I’m sure the Japanese immigrants wouldn’t have bought the property if they didn’t have water but they had that Grey Canal with water running through it. It was a major undertaking, a major achievement, and a major benefit to the economy,” says engineer and land surveyor, Peter Tassie, whose father was the manager of the Vernon Irrigation District in the 1930s and 40s.”

Details

Date:
April 9, 2022
Time:
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Cost:
Free
Event Tags:
Website:
https://vernonmuseum.ca/

Venue

Vernon Museum & Archives
3009 32nd Avenue
Vernon, British Columbia V1T 2L8 Canada
Phone
250-550-3140
View Venue Website