GOMPS and Terra Remote Sensing flew to capture LiDAR/ortho on June 24th, 2025
Table of Contents:
What for and why now?
Why GOMPS?
Why LiDAR?
Why Victoria and Saanich UCB?
Project Specifications
Goals
What’s Next?

GOMPS and Terra Remote Sensing flew to capture LiDAR/ortho on June 24th, 2025
Table of Contents:
What for and why now?
Why GOMPS?
Why LiDAR?
Why Victoria and Saanich UCB?
Project Specifications
Goals
What’s Next?

On November 24, 2025, GOMPS Director Jacklyn Jolicoeur presented to the Greater Victoria NatureHood, a collaborative effort by several not-for-profit, public and private organizations. A list of the partners appears below. Representatives from Nature Canada and Canadian Wildlife Service serve as advisors to the partners.
GOMPS is now a proud member, and will join the conversation through collaboration in the Greater Victoria region.
Presentation slides:
Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society. “Letter to Oak Bay Municipality Council,” Nov 24, 2024. Agenda Item #7.3, Uplands Siting and Design (ADP00192) 2830-2850 Lansdowne Road.

On November 1st, GOMPS Board members Ryan Senechal, Carollyne Yardley and Jacklyn Jolicoeur participated in the 2025 Garry Oak Ecosystems Gathering at the University of Victoria, hosted by GOERT. GOMPS provided one of the informational displays available to visitors keen to learn more about the natural environment at our doorstep and the various organizations working to protect and support ecosystem health, especially with so many current threats. Three Garry oak seedlings grown at the nursery were collected for planting. The keynote address was made by Elder SELILIYE Belinda Claxton and Dr. Nancy Turner. With many thanks to the organizers, presenters, and participants. GOMPS looks forward to next year.


Air-Pruned Seedlings Distributed to Saanich, Victoria, and Langford

A total of 117 air-prune pots were distributed to the municipalities of Saanich, Victoria, and Langford. Most of these seedlings were grown from acorns in two growing seasons or less.
The best part is that the recipients are well prepared to provide the establishment care these seedlings need to reach their full potential.
Even more exciting, the City of Victoria’s Supervisor of Horticulture and Manager of Parks visited our nursery to inspect the quality of our air-pruned stock. We are happy to share that they were very pleased with what they saw, expressed strong interest in our trees, and were eager to explore further collaboration—especially around tracking the location and establishment of GOMPS seedlings in the community.
Thank you to everyone who helped pull this order together, as well as those who assisted with the additional orders fulfilled from our nursery stock. It was a true team accomplishment.
It is also wonderful to see two big new gaps on the nursery fabric, making plenty of room for our 2025 acorns.
Times Colonist. Donated acorns help society produce Garry oak crop. Oct 2025.
https://www.timescolonist.com/life/donated-acorns-help-society-produce-garry-oak-crop-11390955
jbell@timescolonist.com
A $13,000 grant from the Victoria Foundation to help preserve the trees in the group’s nursery is a major boost
Acorns collected by the public are being planted to produce more Garry oaks as proponents work to strengthen the depleted tree species.
Arborist and society president of the Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society Ryan Senechal said a $13,000 grant from the Victoria Foundation to help preserve the trees in the group’s nursery is a major boost.
The nursery is on Capital Regional District-owned land off the Pat Bay Highway just north of Sayward Road, and it has now been able to purchase a shelter where volunteers can work on the plants, Senechal said.
The site used to be the location of the City of Victoria’s tree nursery, he said, so the group entered into a partnership with the city to take over the use of the property.



Getting enough acorns to plant is “a community participatory project” that sees the society reaching out via its website, local media and social media for acorn donations, Senechal said.
He said the society has been “overwhelmed” with the amount of acorns gathered this year, so no more are needed for now.
The trees that can grow are from acorns that were “100 per cent” provided by community members, Senechal said.
That fits with the society’s focus on producing the “local ecotype” of Garry oaks to distribute around the region, he said, and added the society is “interested in stewarding the local population.”
The annual request for acorn donations comes in early September.
Guidelines for the public include testing the acorns to see if they float, since acorns that float can’t be used.
Also unsuitable are acorns with caps, which indicate that they aren’t ripe.
Senechal said many of the acorns received have already started root growth, and some will emerge at the potting stage, while some will not.
Once planted, the successful acorns take root and establish a small stem and leaves.
He pointed to a 2006 study on Garry oak ecosystems that looked at their historical range on Vancouver Island and beyond, with the conclusion being that less than five per cent of the original range remained in Canada.
That number refers to areas that are “relatively intact,” and it falls to three per cent for areas in prime condition, he said — making Canada’s Garry oak ecosystems “critically endangered.”
Senchal said the Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society was formed in 1992, a time when there was little in the way of tree-protection bylaws to manage urban forests.
Its society members spent considerable time advocating for the sort of protections we see more of today.
He said the “latest dilemma” for the society is the continuing fragmentation of remaining Garry oak ecosystems, and trees that are vulnerable due to the push for added space for housing in the region.
This leaves them having to “constantly evolve as an advocacy organization.”
The society website is at garryoak.info.
September 11, 2025
Advocacy Contributions
Title: GOMPS Contribution to Rockland Neighbourhood Association OCP Submission
Published by:
Rockland Neighbourhood Association (RNA)
Process:
City of Victoria – Official Community Plan Update
GOMPS Role:
GOMPS contributed ecological analysis, Garry oak ecosystem mapping context, and policy recommendations related to urban forest protection and minimum plantable space.
Context:
This submission formed part of RNA’s formal response to the City of Victoria’s OCP update and was presented to Council on September 11, 2025.
Original Publication:
Rockland Neighbourhood Association OCP Submission
– https://pub-victoria.escribemeetings.com/Meeting.aspx?Id=72025c5f-79f4-4abb-8767-77d1996f4eef&Agenda=Merged&lang=English
https://rockland.bc.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Public_Hearing_OCP_Sept11_RNA_LUC.pdf
Contribution:
URBAN FOREST: CITY-WIDE
Vancouver Island is located within the Coastal Douglas-fir biogeoclimatic zone. Human pressure from development, agriculture and logging make it the most at-risk biogeoclimatic zone in BC.
The Kwetlal food system, colonially known as the Garry oak ecosystem, is a subcomponent of this zone and emerged after the glacial retreat around 10,000 years ago. According to the Canadian Forestry Service, the ecosystem is mostly contained to the Metro Victoria area in Canada.
The open woodland character resulted from millennia of Lekwungen agroecological management and is considered to be a living artifact by the Lekwungen-speaking people. In the absence of these activities, the landscape would be dominated by closed stands of Douglas-fir and Grand fir.
While relatively intact Garry oak ecosystems can be found in Regional Parks, 75% of Garry oak trees and modified ecosystems are located on what the municipality refers to as private land.
The Garry oak tree, a long-lived keystone species, supports over 1,645 co-evolved species of plants, insects, mammals, amphibians, birds, and reptiles (that differ from wildland species), making its preservation crucial. Garry oak and associated ecosystems in this region have a unique local genetic adaption that would be difficult to re-introduce if lost.
Trees exist on private properties in Victoria that exceed 250 years old—the marker which meets the definition of old growth for coastal forests by the Province of BC—and many of those old trees continue to thrive, vibrating with the rich cultural history of the Lekwungen territory.
Naturally adapted to this region’s severe droughts and heat, native Garry oak trees serve as vital nature-based solutions to counteract flood risks and the urban heat island effect, particularly affecting vulnerable populations.
Plant ecologist and Indigenous scholar Robin Wall Kimmerer, in her book Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants, advocates for weaving together Indigenous wisdom and scientific knowledge to help mend the relationship between humans and the natural world.
The City’s OCP Vision 2050 Reconciliation Actions, Understanding Indigenous Land and Water Management, states that the City will “seek to understand the practices that have supported ecosystem conservation for millennia and work collaboratively to braid Indigenous knowledge systems with Western science in preserving and enhancing natural assets, and in advancing a climate-forward city.”
The City of Victoria Draft OCP City bylaws, legislation, and process undermine this objective.
Key Issues
Proposed Urban Forest Policy Recommendations
GOMPS Contribution to Rockland Neighbourhood Association OCP Submission (.pdf)