A tree and a church

By 
 on June 1, 2021
Tree planting
Pictured (from left to right) are Sulin Milne, incumbent at St. Peter, Comox; Karen Cummins, wetlands restoration director at Comox Valley Nature; and Bill Henderson, a member of the parish, who donated the tree.

St. Peter, Comox, and Garry oaks have one thing in common: longevity. A Garry oak can live 300 years. St. Peter celebrates its 130th anniversary this year.

To mark this occasion, Bill Henderson and Karen Cummins, two members of Comox Valley Nature, a not-for-profit society dedicated to conserving these unique trees, planted a Garry oak in the church garden next to the giant stump of an ancient maple. The six-year-old tree was a gift from Mr. Henderson, a retired architect and a member of the parish.

The similarity doesn’t end with longevity. The society’s motto is “to know nature and keep it worth knowing” St. Peter’s is “to know God the Father, as revealed in His Son, Jesus Christ… and to make Him known…”

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Pandemic restrictions permitting, on September 12, St. Peter will host a “Home-Coming Celebration” to mark its 130th anniversary. This event is for the hundreds of families throughout the valley whose lives have been touched at some point by this sanctuary in the heart of the town.

The Garry oak was an important part of food production for First Nations on Vancouver Island. Their root systems nurture a fungal network in humus soils conducive to growing Camas lilies and native rhizomes that were cultivated by the K’òmoks First Nation in the ancient Garry oaks meadow lands across the Comox Valley. The Camas lily bulbs, along with the acorns from the Garry oaks, were harvested as a vital food source for thousands of years by the Coast Salish First Nations.

Intentional burning was practised to control invasive species, so Garry oak forests flourished. But early British settlers did not understand the inter-species relationships, and over time the island lost 90% of its Garry oaks.

Today, and for decades to come, a Garry oak will grow in the garden of St. Peter, a tribute to the resilience of the church and a token of the reconciliation being sought between Indigenous and settler peoples of this island.

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