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				 Photo link added to Ganges item 
 
			
			http://www.pbase.com/gould/ganges
Chuck Gould wrote: A few lines about one of the popular cruising destinations in thie
 region.....
 
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 Ganges
 
 
 My wife's favorite destination in the Gulf Islands is Ganges, on
 Saltspring Island. We plan our summer cruises to include a night or two
 in Ganges Harbour. If I aspire to
 "most favored husband" status I will assure that our scheduled
 visit to Ganges allows Jan to spend a few hours, (and at least a few
 dollars), at the Ganges Saturday Market. Ganges is a free-spirited and
 eclectic community, with a unique history that continues to exert an
 obvious influence on the character of the town.
 
 Among the earliest settlers on Saltspring Island were ex-slaves fleeing
 the California gold fields. During the 1850's, it was a common
 practice for American planters living in southern states to dispatch
 slave labor to work gold claims in California. Perhaps to help ensure
 that the slaves wouldn't simply run for the hills upon arrival in
 California, slave holders would often agree that once a slave had
 recovered many thousands of dollars worth of gold on behalf of his
 absentee owner the slave would summarily be granted his official
 freedom. Some of the slave owners were known to renege on this
 agreement, but it was honored frequently enough that a large community
 of freed slaves began forming in California. Concerned white residents
 of California began passing some racially discriminatory laws, (for
 example, a black person was prohibited by law from testifying in court
 against a white person), and many of the recently emancipated blacks
 thought it might be prudent to move on before conditions became even
 more oppressive.
 
 Slavery had been outlawed in Britain, including all British
 territories, colonies, and protectorates, in the early 1830's. As a
 result, Canada was thereafter considered the "promised land" by
 many freed and escaped American slaves. Governor James Douglas,
 (thought by many historians to be of mixed-race heritage himself), felt
 that encouraging ex-slaves to settle on Vancouver Island and other
 islands nearby would establish a population willing to forcibly resist
 any territorial incursions by Americans. Nine families of freed blacks
 in California wrote a letter to Governor Douglas, and he invited them
 to relocate to British Columbia's Saltspring Island.
 
 Just a year after the abolition of slavery throughout the British
 Empire, the Hudson Bay Company opened a "trading post" in the
 Sandwich Island settlement of Honolulu. Hawaiians were allowed to buy
 trade goods, liquor, and trinkets on credit- and many quickly found
 themselves unable to clear their debts. The trading post became the
 primary recruiting post for "Kanaka" laborers sent to Hudson Bay
 Company forts, farms, and sawmills in North America. In exchange for
 three years of labor, Kanakas would receive a small amount of cash,
 assorted merchandise, and their debts at the trading post would be
 expunged. Many of the displaced Hawaiians remained in the Pacific
 Northwest when their terms of indenture were fulfilled, and within a
 few generations most had intermarried with European or First Nations
 populations. Probably the oldest building on Saltspring Island is the
 Hudson Bay Company post at Ganges, (now incorporated into the Hastings
 House hotel and restaurant), and Kanaka laborers and their descendents
 have made notable contributions to the unique and diverse culture of
 Saltspring Island.
 
 Young men fleeing a somewhat different sort of "indenture" were
 relatively recent arrivals on Saltspring. The island developed a
 reputation for tolerance of a "hippie" lifestyle during the
 1960's, and became a popular destination for Americans dodging the
 grasp of the Selective Service System. While it is certain that the
 majority of immigrants to Saltspring were hardworking farmers,
 fishermen, and loggers of European heritage, the prevailing influence
 of groups which have not always been able to take personal freedom for
 granted have created a culture on Saltspring that seems even more
 adamantly independent than that on other free-spirited islands nearby.
 This independence asserts itself in some unusual ways, and among recent
 examples was the issuing of "Saltspring dollars", (only negotiable
 on the island and on par with official Canadian currency).
 
 Approaching and Arriving in Ganges:
 
 The town of Ganges is at the head of Ganges Harbour, with public
 marinas located near 48.61.45 N and 123.29.80 W. Additional moorage is
 usually available to the west of the long dock at the edge of the
 commercial district, but the fishing fleet has priority in this
 location. There is excellent anchorage well out into the bay, and
 during the peak summer months vessels arriving at Ganges will find it
 necessary to keep an active watch while threading through large numbers
 anchored boats. Considerate skippers will be mindful not to leave
 disruptive wakes. The preferred course through the harbour will be to
 the south of the Chain Islands. It is possible to pick carefully
 through the rocks separating the individual islands in the "chain,"
 but a completely unnecessary risk. Ganges Shoal (marked with a buoy
 about ¼ nm SW of Second Sister Island) and a pervasive mudbank close
 to the southern shoreline represent the main risks for grounding, and
 there is more than sufficient room to give these hazards a wide berth.
 Boaters with an appropriate chart should find the approach to Ganges
 easy as well as uneventful.
 
 Public Marinas at Ganges include the Ganges Marina, (viewed directly
 ahead when approaching up the harbour) and the Saltspring Marina,
 (viewed off the starboard quarter when approaching the head of the
 harbour).
 
 Saltspring Marina requires a longer walk to town, but has a pub onsite.
 Beware a notoriously hungry rock (it eats boats) off the Saltspring
 Marina breakwater. It is clearly marked with a large yellow buoy and
 easily avoided, but still manages to refer a steady clientele of
 careless or uninformed mariners to local boatyards.
 
 Ganges Marina is a few hundred footsteps closer to the majority of
 shops and restaurants in Ganges. During the busiest summer cruising
 months it may necessary to contact the staff of either marina by VHF
 radio and stand by until a slip is assigned. We have waited for as long
 as 20-30 minutes some years, but have always been accommodated.
 
 Once asho
 
 Expect to encounter a collage of cultures where Woodstock meets Country
 Grocers meets Greenwich Village Coffeehouse meets Little House on the
 Prairie. In addition to being the center of tourism on Saltspring
 Island, Ganges is the primary commercial area for island residents.
 This is the sort of town where a new-age shop peddling essential oils
 and therapeutic aromatics shares a storefront with a filling station
 featuring entirely different oils and aromas- and it isn't unusual in
 the local context. One can purchase anything from the most fundamental
 necessities to exquisitely fashioned handicrafts or world caliber works
 of original art. The laidback but culturally sophisticated lifestyle on
 Saltspring attracts a variety of exceptionally talented people. On any
 given day, one might even rub an accidental elbow with Randy Bachman of
 "The Guess Who" and "Bachman-Turner Overdrive", one of the more
 internationally recognized residents of Saltspring Island. Scores of
 sculptors, writers, photographers, musicians, painters, and potters
 enrich and diversify the creative community on Saltspring.
 
 Our perennially favorite haunts include the Tree House Cafe, Mouat's
 General Store, the gelato shop across the street from Centennial Park,
 the fish market at the head of the Ganges Marina gangway and the craft
 store in the old church directly across the street.
 Book lovers will find several well-stocked shops. Baked goods, teas and
 coffee, and snacks of all varieties seem to be within a 30-second walk
 regardless of where one is standing at any given moment. Galleries and
 stores with arts and crafts ranging from some that can be purchased for
 pocket change up to awesome offerings that would require most of us to
 seek a second mortgage line nearly every street in the compact town. A
 well-stocked full service grocery as well as a licensed beverage store
 makes Ganges an ideal stopover when ready to reprovision.
 
 The Saturday Market:
 
 If you have only one day to spend in Ganges, Saturday might be the best
 choice.
 Beginning each year on Easter weekend, (or April 1, whichever is
 earlier), and ending the last Saturday in October, the Ganges Saturday
 Market convenes at Centennial Park. Official hours are from "about
 8:30 to about 3:30", with the caveat that snow, thunderstorms, gale
 force winds, or an extreme deluge may result in some vendors leaving
 early. Most sellers are prepared to endure a typical Gulf Island rain
 squall or steady drizzle.
 
 The general rule governing the Saltspring Saturday Market is vendors
 must personally grow, bake, or locally make anything offered for sale.
 Saltspring abounds with organic farmsteads, and from midsummer on there
 are tables heaped with amazing herbs, fruits, and vegetables of all
 descriptions. (Something to bear in mind if reprovisioning at the
 grocer's on a Friday).  Wool and mutton are popular farm commodities
 on Saltspring, and several artisans offer knitted hats, scarves, and
 other items created from locally spun yarns. Musicians of all
 descriptions take apparently orderly turns entertaining at various
 locations within the market, with hats and instrument cases left open
 to catch any stray coins or bills that appreciative listeners might
 care to drop. Pastries, cookies, locally produced cheeses, candies and
 specialty snacks cooked up hot on the spot assure that nobody will walk
 away hungry.
 
 Jan stores her quilts in a handmade oak chest we bought a few years ago
 at the Ganges Saturday Market, and in 2006 we added a splendid
 hand-knitted "runner" that now protects the galley sole aboard
 "Indulgence". We have artwork hanging in various rooms of our home
 created by Saltspring painters, dishes in the cupboard thrown by
 Saltspring potters, and we've hauled home chutneys, cheeses, and bits
 of handcrafted jewelry from nearly every visit. We'll undoubtedly do
 the Ganges Saturday Market again in 2007. There's no telling just
 exactly what we'll decide we can't live without, but neither is
 there any doubt that we will have an absolutely incredible time.
 
 *******
 Sidebar:
 
 Saltspring or Salt Spring?
 
 Hudson Bay Company records indicate that the original name of the
 island was "Salt Spring," spelled as two separate words. In the
 early 1900's, the Canadian Geographic Board officially declared that
 the spelling would be "Saltspring", a single, compound word. Both
 spellings are accepted by Canada Post, and the two-word version seems
 to be more currently in vogue. The compound spelling, "Saltspring"
 appears on the Canadian Hydrographic charts, and as we are a boating
 publication it seems appropriate to use the spelling that agrees with
 official charts.
 
 
 
 Sidebar 2:
 
 Isn't Ganges a River in India?
 
 The town of Ganges was named after the vessel HMS Ganges, normally
 considered the last surviving sailing ship of the British Navy. The
 vessel destined to become the town's namesake was the second to be
 named "Ganges". She was built in India of Malabar teak and launched
 in 1821. A proud three-master with 84 guns, she had seen service around
 the globe before she became the flagship for the Royal Navy's Pacific
 Squadron and patrolled the local waters between 1857 and 1861. Fulford
 Harbour on Saltspring Island is named for the Captain of HMS Ganges,
 one John Fulford.
 
 By the turn of the 20th Century, HMS Ganges had been converted to a
 training vessel for young men aspiring to a career in the British Navy.
 (The author's maternal grandfather, who served as a British naval
 officer in the First World War, learned to sail on HMS Ganges). She
 later served as a hospital ship, and at the venerable age of 108 was
 broken up in 1929. The name transferred to the British Navy's
 training school at Shotley, and is endeared to many a British sailor
 who never set foot aboard the original ship.
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