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Look Who’s Back In Town!

by KeepItNorthSaanich
May 30, 2026
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The Rufous Hummingbird and the Flowering Red Currant: A Native Partnership Worth Celebrating

If you’ve been out walking in North Saanich this spring, you may have already spotted the flowering red currant (Ribes sanguineum) in bloom. This beautiful native shrub puts on one of the earliest and most striking floral displays of the season, with brilliant pink-red blossoms emerging in early March just as the rufous hummingbird arrives back from its wintering grounds in Mexico. After travelling over 6,000 kilometres north, these tiny birds arrive hungry and ready to breed, and those bell-shaped currant flowers are perfectly timed to fuel them on arrival. If you were lucky enough to catch a flash of rusty-orange darting through a currant bush this spring, that’s exactly what was happening.

The bad news is that rufous hummingbird populations have been declining since the 1970s, largely due to habitat loss on their breeding grounds, and every garden in North Saanich can play a small but meaningful role in turning that around. The good news is that planting a flowering red currant is one of the easiest things you can do. These shrubs are drought-tolerant once established, grow quickly, and support a wide range of native pollinators beyond just hummingbirds. Now is a great time to start thinking ahead: fall is the ideal planting season, and both Russell Nursery on Wain Road and Satinflower Nurseries on Lochside Drive in Central Saanich carry them. File this one away for September and give next spring’s hummingbirds something to come home to.

Sources: 

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Rufous_Hummingbird/lifehistory

Hummingbird makes long journey from Alabama to Errington
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  • Has North Saanich just gone Trump? A North Saanich resident is calling out a troubling pattern at council, where public voices are being silenced by administrative staff. But the issue goes beyond a bylaw. It is about whether residents still have a seat at the table.

This letter to the editor originally appeared in the Vancouver Island Free Daily on May 24, 2026.

At a recent North Saanich council meeting, municipal staff walked out after a resident began addressing the proposed Appointment of Officers Bylaw, referring to it as a “zombie bill” – a common term for legislation that returns after previously being defeated. A similar motion had been voted down in December 2025, making the description understandable.

What is most concerning is that the resident appears to have been interrupted before making any substantive commentary. Council, staff, and the public do not know what he intended to say because he was denied the opportunity to finish his remarks. This raises troubling questions about whether constituents are truly free to speak openly at council meetings.

Public participation is a cornerstone of local democracy. Residents have the right to question decisions, express concerns, and comment on matters before council, even when those views may be uncomfortable to hear. Municipal staff play an essential role in supporting council, but they are not elected decision-makers, and their response should not limit public discourse.

While the Appointment of Officers Bylaw may seem administrative, the principle behind it is important. Decisions about officer appointments affect accountability, governance, and protections for key municipal leadership positions.

North Saanich has long been shaped by an engaged public willing to speak openly and honestly. The real issue is not just the bylaw, it is whether democratic dialogue and the public’s right to be heard are being respected.

#KeepItNorthSaanich #northsaanichbc #saanichpeninsula
  • Has North Saanich just gone Trump? A North Saanich resident is calling out a troubling pattern at council, where public voices are being silenced by administrative staff. But the issue goes beyond a bylaw. It is about whether residents still have a seat at the table.

This letter to the editor originally appeared in the Vancouver Island Free Daily on May 24, 2026.

At a recent North Saanich council meeting, municipal staff walked out after a resident began addressing the proposed Appointment of Officers Bylaw, referring to it as a “zombie bill” – a common term for legislation that returns after previously being defeated. A similar motion had been voted down in December 2025, making the description understandable.

What is most concerning is that the resident appears to have been interrupted before making any substantive commentary. Council, staff, and the public do not know what he intended to say because he was denied the opportunity to finish his remarks. This raises troubling questions about whether constituents are truly free to speak openly at council meetings.

Public participation is a cornerstone of local democracy. Residents have the right to question decisions, express concerns, and comment on matters before council, even when those views may be uncomfortable to hear. Municipal staff play an essential role in supporting council, but they are not elected decision-makers, and their response should not limit public discourse.

While the Appointment of Officers Bylaw may seem administrative, the principle behind it is important. Decisions about officer appointments affect accountability, governance, and protections for key municipal leadership positions.

North Saanich has long been shaped by an engaged public willing to speak openly and honestly. The real issue is not just the bylaw, it is whether democratic dialogue and the public’s right to be heard are being respected.

#KeepItNorthSaanich #northsaanichbc #saanichpeninsula
  • 🌍 Happy World Environment Day!
North Saanich is home to one of the rarest ecosystems on Earth. 🌿

Garry Oak meadows support over 800 insect species, 250+ native bees, and countless birds, mammals, and reptiles. They exist only where the climate is just right, and right here on the Saanich Peninsula is one of the last places they still do.

Less than 5% of these ecosystems remain in near-natural condition across Canada. More than 100 species that depend on them are officially listed at risk.

In 1800, North Saanich had 1,040 hectares of Garry Oak meadow. By 1997, one hectare remained.
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