The Province

Ongoing work to ‘rewild’ city’s parks brings people closer to nature

- GLENDA LUYMES gluymes@postmedia.com

Driving through Stanley Park one morning, Vancouver park board biologist Nick Page came across a bizarre scene. Cars were abandoned haphazardl­y along the roadside as a crowd of people ran toward the seawall.

“I thought there’d been an accident,” he recalled.

In fact, a grey whale had been spotted in the water near Siwash Rock.

The incident confirmed an idea the park board had been working on, said Page. Parks shouldn’t only be about sports fields and recreation facilities, they should also be a place where people can experience nature.

“The more urban we get, the more people support and are captivated by what we have left,” he said. “Part of our role is to ask how we can better connect people with nature. How do we make it so nature is something we see in the city?”

In 2014, the park board began work to “rewild” parks and green spaces, identifyin­g 28 biodiversi­ty spots that should be protected, and educating people about their importance. The main goal of the plan was to encourage ecological literacy, said Page.

“It was doing the work, but also bringing people along,” he said.

Since then, the board has been restoring some areas, including the salt marshes at New Brighton Park, while supporting environmen­tal groups to undertake their own projects.

This winter, a huge herring spawn in False Creek surprised a conservati­on group that hung artificial spawning nets from the wharfs. The “billion year” spawn could eventually bring larger creatures, including seals, dolphins and orcas, to feed. Page said the park board did not lead the project by the Squamish Streamkeep­ers Society, but supported the group by provided material costs and access to the marina.

Overall, the city is actually “making gains” in increasing wild spaces, said the biologist.

Unlike many B.C. municipali­ties, which are destroying more wild spaces than they’re adding for the sake of new housing and developmen­t, Vancouver is likely gaining some natural areas.

More than a century ago, the city’s forests were cut down and streams filled in, said Page. “We’ve inherited an establishe­d landscape, which is different from most other municipali­ties. What we’re doing now is managing the ecological network that we have through our parks.”

 ?? MIKE BELL ?? Vancouver park board biologist Nick Page at the salt marshes at New Brighton Park.
MIKE BELL Vancouver park board biologist Nick Page at the salt marshes at New Brighton Park.

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