• About
  • Home
Keep it North Saanich
  • Rural By Choice
  • Our Farms
  • Our Forest
  • Our Future
  • Our Home
  • Rural By Choice
  • Our Farms
  • Our Forest
  • Our Future
  • Our Home
Keep it North Saanich
No Result
View All Result
Home Our Future

Rare Garry Oak Ecosystem

by KeepItNorthSaanich
May 23, 2026
0
327
SHARES
2.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

North Saanich’s Garry Oak Ecosystems Are Among the Rarest on Earth. Here Is Why That Matters.

Garry oak ecosystems (also known as Prairie-Oak meadows or Coastal Oak ecosystems) are one of the defining natural features of North Saanich and among the rarest ecological environments on earth. Garry oak trees and the ecosystems they support exist within a distinctive near-Mediterranean climate shaped by the rainshadow of surrounding mountains, producing dry summers, moderate temperatures and a landscape that is a mosaic of woodlands, meadows, grasslands, and open rocky areas. Found across the territory of the Coast Salish peoples, from Vancouver Island across the Salish Sea to Washington State, these ecosystems reach their peak of colour in spring before the summer dry period sets in. They support over 800 insects including more than 250 species of native bees, along with birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians. Less than 5% of Garry Oak systems remain in near-natural condition across Canada, with more than 100 species now officially listed as at risk. 

The loss in North Saanich is staggering in its scale. In 1800 there were 1,040 hectares of Garry oak meadows here. By 1997, only one hectare remained. Garry oak meadows are sacred cultural landscapes shaped over millennia by Indigenous stewardship through controlled burns that nurtured camas meadows, sustaining food, medicine, ceremony and spiritual connections. North Saanich sits within the Coastal Douglas-fir biogeoclimatic zone, the smallest, most at-risk, and most biologically diverse zone in Canada, and what little remains faces ongoing pressure from development and invasive species. Protecting what is left is not a niche environmental concern. It is one of the most urgent conservation responsibilities on the entire peninsula. 

You can learn more about these rare and precious ecosystems at:

Learn

Sources:

https://www.timescolonist.com/opinion/comment-saanich-could-lead-call-for-stronger-biodiversity-safeguards-12071621

https://vancouverislandfreedaily.com/2026/03/29/letter-stronger-safeguards-needed-to-protect-saanichs-garry-oak-ecosystems/

https://goert.ca

Garry Oak Meadows: One of Canada’s Rarest Ecosystems, in Full Bloom, Here in North Saanich

Next Post

Wolf Orchard Park

KeepItNorthSaanich

KeepItNorthSaanich

Next Post
Wolf Orchard Park

Wolf Orchard Park

Categories

  • Latest Post
  • Our Farms
  • Our Forest
  • Our Future
  • Our Home
  • 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.
These aren
  • North Saanich is home to some of the best farmland on Vancouver Island, but here
  • The rufous hummingbird travels over 6,000 km north every spring, and one of the first things it
  • #northsaanichfarm
#northsaanichbc
#keepitnorthsaanich
  • #northsaanichfarm
#northsaanichbc
#keepitnorthsaanich
  • #northsaanichfarm
#northsaanichbc
#keepitnorthsaanich
  • H.M.S Plumber Park

#northsaanichbc
#keepitnorthsaanich

© 2026 Keep it North Saanich

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Home

© 2026 Keep it North Saanich