Ladner,
Map, Population and Info
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Population: 20,000 |
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For
thousands of years First Nations people lived along the
Fraser River, turning to the sea and the river for salmon
and shellfish, the mainstay of their diet. The first
non-Native settlers of this area were drawn to the fertile
land of the river delta, made up of silt and sand deposited
as the Fraser River slows to meet the sea.
In 1868
brothers William and Thomas Ladner preempted land on either
side of Chilukthan. Like many other settlers who quickly
acquired the rich land, they understood that the river and
sloughs afforded convenient transportation routes when roads
were non-existent or rudimentary.
In 1873 a
wharf was built on property donated by William Ladner.
Farmers loaded their agricultural produce and livestock onto
steamboats for markets in Victoria, Nanaimo, New
Westminster, and eventually Vancouver. The site became known
as Ladner's Landing, where a village grew up to serve the
farmers. The settlers also took advantage of the area's rich
fishing resources. In salmon canneries on the banks of the
river many of the workers were men of Chinese heritage, so a
Chinatown
developed nearby.
In 1879,
the residents of Ladner joined with others in petitioning
the provincial government to incorporate the new
municipality of Delta. Today, Ladner residents respect the
area's natural and human heritage as part of building and
maintaining a healthy community. Ladner, together with
Tsawwassen to the south, is where the majority of Delta's
population resides. Ladner and Tsawwassen are the two
communities that comprise the Lower Mainland area known as
South Delta.
Location:
Ladner is located on Highway 17 in the extreme southwest
corner of mainland BC, 17 miles (27 km) south of Vancouver
and 17 miles (27 km) west of Whiterock and the border post
at Peace Arch/Douglas. The nearest community is Tsawwassen,
location of the ferry terminal for the ferry service to
Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands. |
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Learn
the story of residents who bonded together to form a
viable community on a
Walking Tour of Ladner Village. Stroll down
Delta Street,
the main street in Ladner's Landing in the 1890s, the days
of wooden sidewalks built a foot or two above the ground
to provide protection from the water and mud of the dirt
road. View many of the heritage buildings, including
St. Andrews Presbyterian
Church (1890),
Old Ladner Baptist Church
(1903), and McKee House,
built in 1895 and now a senior's activity centre.
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The
Lower Mainland region is the traditional home of the
Tsawwassen First Nation
people, with their present-day 700-acre reserve located
near the BC Ferry Terminal in Tsawwassen. The Tsawwassen
People are one of 54 Coast Salish nations who
traditionally inhabited this land for over 10,000 years.
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Covering
10,000 acres east of Ladner is
Burns Bog.
Preserved by the Burns Bog Conservation Society, it is
nicknamed the Lungs of
Vancouver as the bog acts as a kind of
biological filter, helping to clean the air over a wide
area. The Society arranges tours through the trails and
waterways of this important area, celebrating
International Bog Day
in July.
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Discover
the Delta Nature
Reserve, located in the northeastern corner of
Burns Bog, at the south end of the Alex Fraser Bridge. The
60-hectare reserve covers only 2% of the bog, and is the
only part of Burns Bog that is protected. The nature
reserve has three loops of boardwalks and trails. A
90-minute hike takes you past a beaver dam and through a
spirea meadow and cedar grove. Along the way you'll see
stunted lodgepole pine, bracken fern, Labrador tea, bog
laurel, skunk cabbage, and spaghum moss. Birders will be
delighted by the many species of songbirds that visit the
Bog and build their nests in the Delta Nature Reserve.
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Of all
the wildlife viewing areas in the Fraser Estuary, none
surpasses the Reifel
Migratory Bird Sanctuary. Located on the
western fringe of the estuary in Delta, Reifel Island and
its companion, Westham Island, provide wintering grounds
for 230 species of
birds. Many of these are nesting residents,
such as Canada geese,
ducks and teals, marsh hawks, coots, blackbirds, gulls,
and doves. Some stay year-round, while others
head north to their summer nesting grounds. For example,
20,000 snow geese,
one of the largest birds at Reifel, winter here from
October to March before heading to Wrangel Island (Ostrov
Vrangelya), off the coast of northeastern Siberia. Fall
and winter are the best seasons to visit the Reifel
sanctuary, before the bird population begins to thin out.
A simple network of trails leads around the island and
connects with a series of blinds from where you look on in
hushed silence as the birds go about their business. For a
peek at the action from on high, seek out the 3-storey
observation tower at the north end of the island. As you
may find the breeze out here a touch chilly, the sanctuary
thoughtfully provides a warm-up cabin next to the
entrance, where a cheery fire blazes in colder months. For
more information, contact the B.C. Waterfowl Society,
which operates the sanctuary, (604) 946-6980.
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One of
the best ways to get a feeling for the Fraser Estuary is
from a small boat such as a
canoe or
kayak. Although
the Fraser River powers its way through the estuary in
three main channels, there are numerous backwaters where
the current is not as strong nor the wakes from passing
tugboats and freighters as intimidating. Try launching at
Deas Slough
and explore the nearby
Ladner Marsh area. There are two approaches,
one from Deas Island
Regional Park and the other from the public
boat launch at the north end of Ferry Road on the
outskirts of Ladner. Both approaches are equally well
suited to exploring Deas Slough. Deas Island Park lies 1.5
miles (2.5 km) east of the Hwy 99/Hwy 17 interchange. A
small causeway links the island with River Road. Car-top
boats can be launched at the east end of Deas Slough
beside the Delta Rowing Club. From here, the entire length
of the slough stretches before you, an open invitation to
steal away. The varied terrain of the Vancouver, Coast and
Mountain region of BC accommodates every outdoor
recreation known to man.
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The
boat ramp on
Ferry Road at the west end of Deas Slough is vehicle
accessible. This is where
anglers, water-skiers, jet
boats, canoes, and
kayaks launch.
From here, Deas Island's rocky-pointed snout is only a
quick paddle away. The full girth of the Fraser River's
South Arm lies on the far side of Deas Island and should
be paddled only at slack tide. During falling tides,
currents in the Fraser can reach almost 7 miles (11 km)
per hour, although you won't experience these conditions
in the backwater on Deas' south side. The heart of the
slough is equidistant from either Ferry Road or Deas
Island Park. If you want to expand your journey beyond the
slough, investigate the secluded channels of
Ladner Marsh
and the South Arm
Marshes Wildlife Management Area that begins
west of the Ferry Road boat launch and includes all of the
delta between Deas and Westham Islands.
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Deas Island Regional Park
in Delta is interlaced with over 3 miles (5 km) of
forested walking trails
that run beside the Fraser River on the north side and
Deas Slough on the south. Walk across the island to a
small beach near the west end where the Fraser laps at the
shoreline as large, oceangoing freighters glide past. The
overwhelming girth of these vessels dwarfs those of the
small fishing boats that also ply the Fraser. Eagles perch
in the branches of the tall black cottonwood trees that
overhang the trails. There's even a 2-storey observation
tower from which you can look out over the island at
treetop level. Nearby is a lovingly restored heritage
home, a schoolhouse, and an agricultural hall. Group
camping is
available at Muskrat
Meadow. The setting is an open field in a
forest. Up to 40 people can be accommodated here, and the
location includes a fire ring, drinking water, a playing
field, toilets, picnic tables, and a cookstove and
fireplace.
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An
impressive stretch of dike trail runs beside Mud and
Boundary Bays in Ladner. The
Boundary Bay Regional
Trail, which includes the
East Delta Dike Trail,
winds around both bays, skirting the mudflats that once
extended much farther inland. Today's dike is a much
sturdier version than the crude ones built at the turn of
the century. You can put in a full day
cycling 12
miles (20 km) one way between the Surrey-Delta border and
Boundary Bay Regional Park in Tsawwassen. There are always
shorebirds to entertain you, and towards evening the sky
around Mount Baker lights up in the southeast.
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The sun,
the wind, and the beautiful waters of
Boundary Bay
call the young at heart to experience the sheer
exhilaration of
Windsurfing. In
Tsawwassen, on
the south side of the BC Ferries causeway that carries
travelers out to the ferry terminal is a beach that
attracts anglers and windsurfers. Best time to catch the
breeze here is following a storm blowing from the south.
Although this small bay empties at low tides, at other
times you can rip out here. Take Hwy 17 south to the
beginning of the causeway, and then follow the service
road that parallels the causeway. You’ll find portable
toilets for changing and rough picnic spots where you can
build a fire to dry out. For wind conditions, call
Environment Canada, (900) 565-5555. Also in Tsawwassen is
Boundary Bay Regional
Park located on the east side of the isthmus.
The winds can blow just as hard across its surface as out
by the BC Ferries jetty. A good place to launch is the
vehicle-accessible ramp at the east end of 1A Avenue via
67th Street, several blocks south of the park’s main
entrance
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If it
were summer year-round, Boundary Bay Regional Park might
lose some of its seasonal appeal to migratory birds. The
bay is one of the most important stops on the Pacific
Flyway. Each spring and fall, more than 250,000 birds pass
through the area—between 20,000 and 30,000 brant alone.
Together with the sight of the annual salmon migration in
the nearby Fraser River, this north-south passage is one
of the most stimulating natural events in the region.
Throughout the year, the Friends of Boundary Bay run
numerous natural history interpretive programs in the
vicinity of the bay and nearby Burns Bog. For more
information and a brochure, telephone (604) 940-1540.
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A dike
trail follows the perimeter of the bay from Boundary Bay
Park east to Mud Bay. There are many good viewpoints for
birding along the way. Drive to the south end of 64th or
72nd Avenue from Ladner Trunk Road, and walk up onto the
dike from here. This is the
Boundary Bay Regional
Trail, all 12 miles (20 km) of which is Public
Park. In winter, watch for
snowy owls —
they are often seen sitting motionless on fenceposts. Or a
pair of oval-faced barn
owls may fly overhead. There’s always magic at
work on the shoreline and in the skies above Boundary Bay.
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There
aren’t many places in the world where you can swim between
two countries with such ease as at
Boundary Bay. A
metal-scaffolded tower marks the place where the 49th
parallel slices across the sandy beach. In summer, when
the bay is a bathtub of sun-warmed seawater, you can make
like a dolphin as you skip back and forth between Canada
and the United States. When you’re ready to dry off,
stroll the beach and experience the same thrill. Visitors
can’t venture far into the United States. From the town of
Point Roberts, Washington State’s portion of the beach —
known locally as Maple Beach — peters out to rock and
cobblestone as it nears an escarpment. Although there is
public access to Maple Beach, almost the entire beach is
privately owned. In summer, many swimmers gather near the
border tower. The swimming is better here, especially at
high tide when the bay fills to a greater depth than
elsewhere. In 1792, the Spanish explorer Galiano named
this Ensenada del Engaņo, Mistake Bay, since he made the
mistake of thinking there was a way inland from the end of
the bay.
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When a
low tide
drains Boundary Bay,
its sandy bottom is as mottled as the moon. Little pools
of seawater are trapped in sandy depressions and reflect
the sky in an endless array of mirrors. Walk out and
explore the expanse but be sure to keep an eye on the
shoreline where you may have left your picnic basket. It’s
easy to lose track of your spot unless you have a landmark
such as a large umbrella or a distinctive piece of
driftwood. The temptation is to stroll far out at low tide
into the middle of the bay, where some of the most
interesting wildlife features are revealed, either in the
pools, beneath the sand, or on the shoreline. Thousands of
birds—dunlin and sandpipers, herons and brants—follow the
twice-daily rise and fall of the ocean as it rinses the
bay. You can walk so far out into Boundary Bay that the
vapour rising off the sand obscures the horizon and you
feel very remote from land indeed. If you are here later
in the day, sit back and watch the setting sun colour
Mount Baker’s snow cone to the southeast, the most visible
landmark on the horizon. Plan to be here in the days
leading up to and immediately following the full moon, to
watch it rise from behind the semi-dormant volcano. After
dark, Boundary Bay Park is a great place to count stars.
Although the park remains open throughout the night, if
you plan to linger, make sure that you leave your vehicle
outside the nearby park gates that close at dusk.
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Neighbouring Ladner to the south is Tsawwassen, and the
Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal.
From here ferries cross the Strait of Georgia, bringing
visitors to the Gulf Islands and Vancouver Island. Getting
there is half the fun, as the route offers a spectacular
journey over clear water and through beautiful islands. On
a sunny day, take a stroll on the deck - you may see
seals, killer whales or bald Eagles.
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Golf:
There a few golfing options in the area. Delta offers the
Sunshine Hills Golf
Course, an 18-hole, par 54 (2,082 yards) public
golf course on 64th Avenue and Tsawwassen has 2 courses:
Beach Grove Golf Club
in the heart of sunny Tsawwassen is a par 71 championship
golf course, playing 6,200 yards from the back tees. The
tree-course offers well-groomed fairways and manicured
greens. The clubhouse is a great venue for weddings,
anniversaries, and business meetings, or just relaxing
with friends; and
Tsawwassen Golf & Country Club, a public
18-hole, par-65 golf course with practice areas that
include a 22-stall covered driving range, putting green,
chipping green, and sand trap.
Anglers can
catch salmon, trout,
and numerous other species from the shores of Deas Island
Regional Park. The Riverside picnic area is one of the
most popular areas from which to fish. A
Tidal Waters Sports
Fishing License is required by all anglers and
available at most fishing shops..
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Many
farms on Westham Island
also feature fresh fruit, vegetables, and flowers from
June to October. You can hand-pick berries, or purchase
vegetables and fresh flowers from a number of roadside
stands. Watch for Westham Island Herb Farm's prominent
sign soon after you begin your trip across Westham Island.
The Ellis family has been farming on Kirkland Road since
the turn of last century. Dried flowers, herbs, and
vegetables are for sale from late May to early November.
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Contact us
anytime. We'll be happy to hear from you.
Bob
Dymont
604-603-0203
Email to Bob
Linda Dymont
604-618-9355
Email to Linda |