
That’s Mark Wallace, outstanding shipwright standing outside his shop on Salt Spring Island. When I visited him he was restoring a 1938 six-metre class racing sloop called Ça Va.
Salt Spring Photographer John Cameron

That’s Mark Wallace, outstanding shipwright standing outside his shop on Salt Spring Island. When I visited him he was restoring a 1938 six-metre class racing sloop called Ça Va.

Chris and Marilyn Schmah of Foxglove Farm and Garden Supply hiding out in the greenery (above) and in their gorgeous greenhouse (below).
Foxglove is a longtime Salt Spring business and certainly worth exploring if you visit the Island. I hope to be going back soon to capture the uniqueness and the old Salt Spring charm of the interiors.

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Photographer’s note: the story behind the photos
You rarely get a glimpse of ‘behind-the-scene’ in a photo. Which probably makes sense. A photo is what it is.
But here’s a glimpse of what’s behind these two photos:
This was a last minute magazine assignment, a cover and an interior shot for a Q&A section. Last minute as in a Sunday shoot with a Monday a.m. deadline. I had pretty much figured that the cover photo needed to be in the greenhouse, had to feature Chris and Marilyn, and still had to identify the branding and give a sense of (and perhaps exaggerate the) scale.
The Greenhouse Shot
We were lucky with the weather as the forecast storm came in hard and left early. It was heavy overcast during setup then broke into partly clear during the shoot. It gave us an interesting directional light and some condensation the glass. The light was too harsh though so I set up two strobes to provide fill front and left. The strobes were powered by a portable supply. Some distractions were removed from the background and some plants moved to the foreground. A super-wide tilt-shift lens gave just over 100 degrees coverage which, shifted, provided the scale. The Schmahs, although distortion free, were only six feet from the camera. The greenhouse shot is shown full frame.
The Head Shot
My idea was augmented by Chris’ use of ferns. Ferns were arranged on the greenhouse floor with space left for two heads. We setup near a scaffold which was being used to replace a roof vent. This allowed me to shoot pretty much straight down with a portrait lens. A screen was added at the last minute to block the sun which by this time was blaring into the greenhouse. No additional lighting was required. The Schmahs chose their own clothing and it couldn’t have been more perfect. By the way, this image is presented here upside down. Not sure why, but it looks much better this way. YMMV
The whole shoot, including setup and takedown took about 90 minutes. (Planning and communication took about three hours.) We had several more ideas to try, but decided what we had worked well. The image editing took another hour or so. The images were uploaded Sunday evening.

I came upon this odd phenomenon on the roof of the Burgoyne United Church while travelling the Fulford-Ganges superhighway on the weekend. It seems the early morning frost melted everywhere except within the chimney shadow. Strange but true, no photo editing chicanery here folks.

Fernwood dock at sunrise on a calm morning. A band of fog sits above the water in Trincomali Channel.
The following letter by the Fernwood Dock Management Commission Chairperson appeared recently in the Gulf Islands Driftwood, Salt Spring’s weekly newspaper. It’s included here for interest as it describes the current management and maintenance costs of the pier and dock.
FERNWOOD DOCK IS WORTH KEEPING
The recent letter from CRD about the activation of a requisition for the preservation of Fernwood Dock has understandably caused confusion. It has nothing to do with private wharfs or docks or the Harbour Authority that administers all the other Fisheries and Oceans docks on Salt Spring.
Some background might help. When the federal department of transportation decided to divest itself of some 67 docks on the West Coast, 10 of the outer islands docks were affected, as was the Fernwood Dock. Petitions were started on Salt Spring and the outer islands to save these facilities. A working group was formed and the writer ended up as spokesman for the negotiations with DOT. As a result, $1.67 million was obtained for the outer islands where a referendum approved funding. On Salt Spring we had further delays as the First Nation on Kuper Island became involved. After a two-year delay and further DOT negotiations, we obtained $280,000 and $20,000 in repairs as compensation. Subsequently a referendum was held, which approved retention of the dock, and Bylaw 2730 was approved to establish the service. No tax funding was requested for this service.
For the last 10 years or so the Fernwood Dock Management Commission has administered this public facility at absolutely no cost to the taxpayer based on interest on the capital. We have paid for insurance, CRD overheads and minor repairs. In addition, over $125,000 of major repairs have been accomplished, not to mention countless hours of volunteer help. I make no apology for the commission members, who have done a stellar job for no recompense for a decade.
Unfortunately interest rates have tanked, and last year reserves were down to $100,000. We were then in a position where in the longer term the capital would disappear and we would have neither the money to support the dock nor to decommission it, a much more expensive proposition than might appear at first sight. Accordingly, we asked for a small requisition to allow for the accumulation of a reserve fund in anticipation of major repairs within the next 10 to 15 years. The Amendment Bylaw 3761 was adopted on April 13, 2011 to allow for a parcel tax. The original amount was reduced by 33 per cent by Salt Spring’s electoral area director Wayne McIntyre to help control the overall budget. Hence the taxpayer will be asked to pay $5.50 per year. I wish the rest of the taxes I pay would return equal value.
Why should we keep this facility? It has no commercial return as some have suggested as a reason for its destruction. There is no direct benefit either from soccer pitches, parks, trails, libraries, swimming pools, ArtSpring and any number of things that make life interesting and rewarding. If direct economic return were the criterion, all of these things would be eliminated along with the dock. God forbid we turn into a society that knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.
It is of course a heritage amenity that has existed for over 100 years, enjoyed and used by hundreds every month. It is not a moorage but a connection point for Wallace Island and Galiano Island; the only refuge point for boats in distress, or medical emergencies on the east coast of the island, both of which happen. In the event of a major earthquake it might well be the only connection to the outside world.
If a charge for each tax folio of $5.50 per year is excessive and enough people want to get rid of the dock they can of course campaign to rescind the previous referendum. I do not think most people would support destroying this amenity and it would be a great pity if they did. I hope the above information may quiet some of the concern.
—Peter Lake

This year’s favourite Salt Spring subject. Splendid on a still February daybreak.
Photographs of Salt Spring Island and areas reachable by ferry and road (and sometimes off-road).