A Ride through the History and Abundance of the Spallumcheen Valley
September and October are two of the best months to cycle in
the North Okanagan. The back roads are free of summer traffic; it’s a great
time to explore on two wheels.
North of Vernon is the Spallumcheen Valley, which means
‘beautiful valley’. We bike north from the intersection of 43 Ave on Old Kamloops
Road, along Swan Lake. There is still some green in the fields that slope down
to the lake. But Old Kamloops Road, with
its very narrow shoulder, is no place for distraction.
Soon we cross to the right shoulder of Highway 97 and
proceed west past young apple orchards and rows of tasselled corn. The highway drops down to the Spallumcheen
Golf Course. On our right is the
Historic O’Keefe Ranch. We stop for a
visit.
First we meet Pierre Cloutier, a want-to-be cowboy who has traveled with his dog Eska and his four-horse team across Canada. He has stopped at the ranch for a needed rest and today is re-shoeing his horses.
In 1862, 21 year old Cornelius O’Keefe left Eastern Canada,
eventually arriving in the Cariboo. He
was too late to make his fortune gold mining and soon realized the real
profiteers were those supplying the miners.
In 1866 he met Thomas Wood, and later, Thomas Greenhow. They herded cattle from Oregon up into the
Okanagan Valley. Realizing they had
discovered an ideal place to raise cattle, they each pre-empted 160 acres of
land and, in June 1867, created the original ranch. Pierre Cloutier Shoeing his horses at Historical O;Keefe Ranch |
In the late 1860’s Cornelius lived in the original log house
with his Aboriginal wife Rosie and their two children. Then In 1877 he returned
to Eastern Canada to marry Mary Ann McKenna. They had nine children and soon
the log house was too small. By 1886 a
fine Victorian house emerged, first as an addition onto the log house which was
eventually replaced with newer additions. In 1899 Mary Ann died leaving
Cornelius with eight surviving children.
He returned east and, at age 63, married 23 year old Elizabeth
Tierney. Over the next 13 years they had
six more children.
The Mansion at Historic O'Keefe Ranch |
Today we join visitors from Quebec, Italy and Vancouver to tour the O’Keefe Mansion. The rooms are adorned with the finest furniture, Italian glass fixtures, exquisite European porcelain and silverware of the day. The interior woodwork is hand carved, including the staircase, constructed with no nails. A large Swiss music box, wound by hand, plays the tops hits of 1905.
Inside St Anne's Church at Historical O'Keefe Ranch |
We visit the Quilt Shop manned by quilters from the ‘After
Seven Sew n Sews’ who display quilts and sell their handwork. At the Red Shed Pottery Studio a sign
requests that if we buy pottery to place our money into the blue cookie
can. The potter, Burt, is making water
filters out of clay and wood powder for ‘Potters without Borders’, an
organization which provides simple, affordable water filters internationally (www.potterwithoutborders.com)
There is no time for a trail ride, the corn maze, or lunch
at the Cattlemen’s Club Restaurant.
Perhaps we’ll return in October for a ghost tour or to the Field of
Screams when the corn maze becomes a very scary place. (www.o’keeferanch.ca )
Some grain products for sale at Roger's Foods Bulk Store |
We bike to St Anne’s Road and continue north, veering right
on Otter Lake Road to Larkin Cross Road.
Turning right, the road winds through low land and crosses a creek
before climbing up an old embankment. We
pass tidy farms and turn off at Rogers Foods to visit its Bulk Food Store. What started in 1951 as a simple stone mill
to provide flour to the Roger’s family, is now a thriving company that, along
with a sister plant in Chilliwack, provide over 457 ton of quality milled
products to stores and bakeries across BC and Alberta. I scoop up bulk BC grown dried cranberries,
the 7-grain cereal and bulk almonds.
After loading up our panier bags, we bike to the turn-around
that puts us onto Hwy 97A. For 4 km we pedal
along an ample shoulder, the sound of the traffic reverberating through our
bodies. We turn west onto Hwy 97,
returning to the Old Kamloops Road which
takes us back towards 48 Ave, clocking the ride at about 32km.
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