
Wigwam Inn
[Photo: Harvey Oberfeld]
A Trip Up Indian Arm
Thursday, July 24, 2008
This was a memorable day. Harvey Oberfeld and I were the guests of
Brian Forst aboard Brian’s lively 26-foot Sea Ray, the Thai
Dancer, on a trip to the head of Indian Arm, site of the famous
Wigwam Inn. After 64 years in this neck of the woods I had never been
up Indian Arm. Harve and Brian had both been, often. (One thing we
did have in common: all three of us are former broadcasters.)
We left the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club’s Coal
Harbour station at 1:40,, but before heading to Indian Arm were
treated, thanks to Brian, to a leisurely cruise along the eastern
half of Burrard Inlet. The expansion to the city’s Convention
Centre is well underway and the building makes a dramatic lunge
over the water. It’s big: the project is going to triple the
Centre’s available space. What’ll it look like when
it’s finished? Like this:
http://www.vccep.bc.ca/
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Ice
[Photo: Harvey Oberfeld] |
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One eye-popping episode was a slow drift past the 90-metre-long
yacht Ice, a German-built beauty owned by Russian billionaire
Suleyman Kerimov. She was moored at the Rogers Sugar Refinery. You
can enjoy a look inside this lavish boat—like something from
a science fiction movie— here.
The Wikipedia article on Kerimov says “He is an enigmatic
figure who claims to eschew publicity but advertises a lavish lifestyle
in the media.”
The inlet’s waters were choppy, but once we swung north into
Indian Arm they smoothed out. At a steady 21 knots (the speed shown
on a GPS screen Brian has aboard, a satellite-supported system that
can actually show the boat moving over a map of the region) we headed
north, Deep Cove on our left, Belcarra on our right. I showed off
my knowledge of local history by pointing out the area on the north
shore of the inlet where the late novelist Malcolm Lowry worked (in
a squatter’s shack) on his novel Under the Volcano.
Indian River Road wiggles north for a short distance past Deep Cove,
paralleling Indian Arm, but north of road’s end all the people
whose houses line the Arm get to them via boat. There are dozens of
houses sprinkled along the shore, sometimes by themselves, sometimes
in groups of half-a-dozen or more, and some are obviously expensive
places. (And, incidentally, I can’t recall seeing a single person
in or around those houses.)
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Brian “Frosty”
Forst, our skipper
[Photo: Harvey Oberfeld] |
Because it was a weekday water traffic was light, so we were able
to keep up a good pace right to the Inn. It’s owned by the RVYC,
and is for members and their guests only. There were just two other
boats there, so snuggling up to the pier and securing the Thai
Dancer was easy work.
Wigwam Inn was built in 1909, financed by Prussian-born
financier Alvo von Alvensleben. He’d come here in 1904 with
$4 in his pocket, and five years later was one of Vancouver’s
most prominent realtors. You can read more about this fascinating
fellow on my web site here.
The Inn is three storeys high, but smaller than I had expected.
We sat on the verandah and munched on sandwiches we’d brought
along, washed down with soft drinks.
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Harve
Oberfeld
[Photo: Chuck Davis] |
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While Brian and Harve talked boats with another
visiting yachtsman (who was staying overnight with his family on
his boat), I wandered through the Inn’s deserted (and somewhat
dark and gloomy) rooms where I found, among other things, a Province
newspaper clipping on the Inn dated April 9, 1910 that I’ll
read more carefully at the library soon, and a copy of the April
15, 1911 register that showed the signatures of two financial titans
of the time, John D. Rockefeller and John Jacob Astor. Exactly one
year to the day later Astor would be one of the victims of the Titanic
tragedy. A lot of famous folk stayed at this place during its heyday.
There are two floors of rooms, but this day except for the caretaker’s
they appeared to be vacant.
I also found—incised for some reason on a stretched piece
of leather on one of the Inn’s walls—a proclamation
of the sale of the Wigwam to the RVYC on June 23, 1985.
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Powerhouse No.
1
[Photo: Harvey Oberfeld] |
A highlight of the trip back to town was passing two old BC Hydro
powerhouses on the eastern shore. One of them has been there for
more than a century, and they’re still in use. A Wikipedia
article and other sources tell us they’re fed by water from
Buntzen Lake, about 150 metres up the hill. That lake, in turn,
is replenished through a tunnel by water from the much larger Coquitlam
Lake to the east and above Buntzen. Hydro controls virtually all
of that Coquitlam Lake water, but the water authorities at Metro
Vancouver (formerly known as the GVRD) apparently want more of it
for domestic use. They’re talking.
Meanwhile, that Wikipedia article continues: “Penstocks direct
water down from the lake to the power plants . . . Buntzen No. 1,
with an initial capacity of 1,500 kW, was built in 1903 to provide
electricity for the Vancouver area. It was upgraded in 1951 to boost
capacity to 55,000 kW. Buntzen No. 2 [a stone’s throw north
of No. 1] was built in 1914 to supply 26,700 kW of power . . . The
stations are unmanned, operated by remote control from a BC Hydro
facility atop Burnaby Mountain.” We got close enough to read
Vancouver Power Company 1903 on No. 1, but big signs cautioned
us from coming too close: apparently sudden outflows of water can
occur.
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Chuck
Davis, landlubber
[Photo: Harvey Oberfeld] |
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Incidentally, the Buntzen for whom the lake was
named is Johannes Buntzen, a Dane who’s called “the
grandfather of electricity” in British Columbia. He was the
first general manager of the BC Electric Railway.
There was a nice coincidence associated with this
trip. The morning mail that very day brought the latest issue of
British Columbia History, the quarterly publication of
the British Columbia Historical Federation, edited by John Atkin.
In it was an article by Janet Nicol on Alvo von Alvensleben and
the Wigwam Inn! I brought it along to show my boatmates.
Coming back, we dodged a couple of float planes
taking off from the Inlet, then Brian brought us slowly back in
to the RVYC station to end a terrific and illuminating day.
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