Photo by Judith Carder. GOMPS Garry oak seedlings at the Little Spirits Garden in Royal Oak Burial Park. May 2026.
We are delighted to share an update on several Garry oak seedlings that recently found a new home at the Little Spirits Garden in Royal Oak Burial Park. Earlier this year, retired minister David Spence visited the Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society nursery, made a donation in support of our work, and selected a number of locally grown Garry oak seedlings for planting at the Burial Park.
On April 22, Earth Day, after the seedlings had been planted by Royal Oak Burial Park staff, David conducted a Tree Blessing ceremony to mark the occasion and celebrate the beginning of the trees’ long lives in this special place.
The photographs below show the young oaks leafing out in their new home. Seeing fresh growth on these seedlings is always rewarding, particularly when they have been planted in a setting dedicated to remembrance, reflection, and connection with the natural world.
As Garry oak ecosystems continue to decline across their range, every new planting contributes to the future of this remarkable species and the hundreds of plants, insects, birds, and other organisms that depend upon it.
We extend our thanks to David Spence and the staff at Royal Oak Burial Park for helping to create a lasting legacy through the planting and stewardship of these young Garry oaks.
We look forward to watching them grow for generations to come.
Photo by Judith Carder. Retired minister, David Spence gave a Tree Blessing on April 22, 2026, for GOMPS Garry oak seedlings at the Little Spirits Garden in Royal Oak Burial Park.
Tree Blessing
ROB P / ROYAL OAK BURIAL PARK
TREE BLESSING on Earth Day 22 April 2026
LITTLE SPIRIT GARDENS
Under the waning Moon above
(moving from New to Full, as opposed to waxing)
and upon the soil of the Sacred Earth beneath;
where all people hold scared memories, stories, and future hopes.
We gather to bless the young Garry Oak tree saplings
that have been planted in this Little Spirits Garden,
and now are emeging into leaf and fresh vegetation.
We bring our dreams and aspirations
that are grounded in the terra firma —
the terrain — of this Garden of Beauty
This Garden also holds the life of young children
whose Spirits roam in a far and distant realms.
We bring our hearts and souls into this space and this moment
as a sign, a symbol, indeed even a sacrament
to befriend the ancient wisdom of the trees and other living beings
who have brought us to be who we are
and how we are to be one with another.
This is our story. This is our song.
Let the rhythm of the drum be the heart beat of Life and Vitality
Of Resurrection……Reincarnation…..Reviresence……Reciprocity
As we come to meet the Garry Oak
and become acquainted with each of them
in all their manifestations…….the species…….the geniuses
Theses young saplings are today
what is known as those beings who are an integral part of the
UNDERSTORY
who compose a melody wtih mycelium …..
and are bursting forth with energy.
They are not yet the OVERSTORY
of the great canopies of anicent elders…..and memory holders
They are young pioneers
seeking to embody and embolden life
with their particulraity of genes, DNA, Chromosomes
They are playfully engaged with “fungi”
with nutrients, ferns, wildflowers, and other souls;
seeking to find their own voice in this Garden
for they live and move
with a different logic and a different way of knowing.
This is our story. This is our song.
GARRY OAK BLESSING
May the rains fall softly upon your branches and leaves
May the winds blow gently in all your days
May the sunshine radiate warmth on your face
May the soil bring you nourishment to your roots, your trunk, your canopy
May love and kindness, joy and peace,
always abide and abound in your soul
Until we meet again
May the Holy Spirit and the Sacred Quaternity SACRED QUATREAUX
bless you,
and keep you comforted and free among all your siblings
to live in Faith, Fullness of being, and Future ways of wonder and wisdom
This is our story. This is our song
Let your touch remain forever as a kiss upon your cheek
And a prayer in your body.
As we give a BLESSING to trees; the TREES in turn send a blessing back
to those who give in Reciprocity, Conviviality, & Symbiosis.
Thanks to the generosity of videographer Spencer Anderson, the Cowichan Bring Back the Bluebirds Project now has a beautiful film to help share this inspiring work with the community.
This 8-minute video highlights the dedication, collaboration, and care behind the ambitious effort to restore Western Bluebirds to Vancouver Island. Deeply connected to the loss of Garry oak meadows and habitat, the film explores both the challenges these birds have faced and the hopeful work being done to bring them back.
Led by the Garry Oak Ecosystem Recovery Team in partnership with the Cowichan Valley Naturalists Society, this project is a powerful example of conservation in action.
Take a few minutes to watch and learn more about the effort to return these vibrant birds to our landscapes.
The sun shone this past Sunday, May 3rd, on an estimated 750 people who attended Camas (Kwetlal) Day at Uplands Park. GOMPS was one of a dozen organizations on site to share information about Victoria’s naturescapes, to highlight threats to our ecosystems and to provide hands-on experience with plants, animals and insects native to our area.
Attendees enjoyed guided walks, live music from the Bald Eagles, and refreshments, including birthday cake to celebrate the 80th anniversary of Uplands Park and, coincidently, the 80th birthday of one of the founding members of Friends of Uplands Park and current President, Margaret Lidkea.
At the GOMPS booth we had many great conversations about the endangered Garry oak ecosystem our organization seeks to preserve. Our updated presentation materials attracted a lot of interest, as did the information on our LiDAR project. It was very encouraging to meet so many young people studying and working in environmental disciplines. We encourage folks to visit our website for further information about GOMPS’ activities, including volunteering and membership, and to get involved in protecting Garry oaks.
Photo by Susan Grant. Camus (Kwetlal) Day at Uplands Park, May 03, 2026Photo by Susan Grant. Camus (Kwetlal) Day at Uplands Park, May 03, 2026Photo by Susan Grant. Camus (Kwetlal) Day at Uplands Park, May 03, 2026Screenshot
GOMPS Directors were fortunate to join a two-day workshop for the Natural Asset Management Fundamentals Workshop at Natural Assets Initiative on April 7th and April 9th, 2026. Please watch the video to understand what is natural asset management.
Biodiversity loss and climate change constitute a twin crisis in which accelerating habitat destruction, species extinction, and climate disruption reinforce one another in a negative feedback loop. Since 1970, 70% of vertebrate populations have vanished, with land-use change, overexploitation, and climate change driving up to 1 million species toward extinction. Addressing these together is vital, as nature loss hampers carbon absorption, accelerating global warming, while a warming planet destroys ecosystems.
The online course was about how to think about the natural assets of core infrastructure and the value it brings to our communities. Once they are gone, we really can’t replace them with built infrastructure. They have intrinsic value, are irreplaceable, and have no end of useful life.
We all have a responsibility to ensure the services of value provided by the Garry oak ecosystem, and the Garry oak tree can continue to provide multiple service benefits that need to be considered in a holistic approach that supports our communities in an urban environment.
Rather than focusing on aesthetic value, this approach evaluates the stormwater services provided by natural assets—under both current and future climate scenarios—and assigns value to those services. This is especially critical in urban areas, where development pressure often leads to the loss of these systems.
It also requires a direct comparison between the costs of conventional stormwater management infrastructure and the use of natural asset management. In many cases, intact ecosystems such as Garry oak landscapes provide equal or greater long-term performance at a lower cost, while also delivering additional co-benefits that engineered systems cannot replicate.
Thank you all so much for visiting GOMPS at this year’s Seedy Saturday!
Thank you to everyone who stopped by the Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society table at Seedy Saturday on February 14, 2026. It was wonderful to connect with so many people who care deeply about Garry oak ecosystems, native plants, and the future of food systems and biodiversity in our region.
We were especially pleased to soft-launch our new website at the event, and we’re thrilled to welcome many new members to GOMPS. Your interest, conversations, and support help strengthen the growing community working to protect and restore Garry oak trees and the food ecosystem services they provide.
Events like Seedy Saturday remind us how much knowledge, curiosity, and stewardship already exists in this community. We’re grateful to be part of it and look forward to continuing the work together.
Thank you for supporting Garry oak ecosystems. 🌿
Booth ready to meet you at Seedy Saturday, February 14, 2026
GOMPS – Community Association of Oak Bay. Thursday, February 12, 2026, at 7:00 pm. Zoom and in person. Monterey Recreation Centre, Bamboo Room. Oak Bay Talks presents: Exploring Our National Treasure: The State of the Garry Oak Ecosystems in Greater Victoria. Ryan Senechal and Carollyne Yardley, Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society, on the historic significance of the Garry oak ecosystems, the critical services they provide, current policies, gaps in protection, and how GOMPS is responding to Garry oak loss in urban areas. Links Community Association of Oak Bay https://www.oakbaycommunityassociation.org Garry Oak Meadow Preservation Society https://www.garryoak.info
Residents in Nanaimo, B.C., became concerned when they realized that rare — and tiny — slimleaf onion bulbs were dug up to build a new trail. Photos: Supplied by Hunter Jarratt
Michael Geselbracht was out for a Saturday run in Nanaimo, B.C., when he came across soil piled up in a special area he knew was part of a native Garry oak ecosystem.
That particular spot — across from a row of houses on View Street, parallel to a railway — had been an improbably dense and thriving meadow of a native plant called slimleaf onion. The patch was something of a terrestrial island, approximately 50 square metres surrounded by introduced grasses and weeds. Still, the onions persisted. They had given an especially impressive show of white and the rarer pink flowers in the last wet spring.
But in October 2025, thousands of nickel-sized bulbs were turned up by heavy machines and strewn like pebbles across the soil’s surface when the meadow became a construction site. The transformation was part of an effort to develop a multi-use trail corridor along the railway route by a group called the Island Corridor Foundation — a trail that, unbeknownst even to many local conservationists, routed through the rare patch of slimleaf onions.
The biodiverse and fire-adapted Garry oak ecosystem has been tended by Indigenous Peoples for thousands of years. But after 150 years of settlement, less than five per cent of the Garry oak ecosystem remains in a near-natural state. Some also hang on in remnants like the one on View Street, adulterated by invasive plants, mostly forgotten, hard to spot out of season, disconnected from other Garry oak plant communities and, more often than not, totally legal to destroy.
‘No Garry oak ecosystem that has been unimpacted’
Geselbracht spends most days outside teaching kids to love the natural world in the Nanaimo Forest School. He’s helped restore the local Cat Stream for salmon, and has spent more than 70 hours pulling invasive plants like trailing blackberry and English ivy from his neighbourhood.
Like many Nanaimo residents, he was thrilled with the prospect of more trails — for cycling and for access to more community projects, like the food forest he helped clear from a weedy abandoned lot. It all seemed worth a bit of mud and machines.
“It’s the connectivity, you know — the more that we have these connected trails, the more people start to use them,” Geselbracht says.
But he hadn’t expected the route to go through the native plants; he knew something should be done. So he spread the word and texted pictures of the bulldozed area to others in Nanaimo. Some people salvaged bulbs — a pair of cupped hands can hold more than 50. A biologist living in the neighbourhood stopped by with specific suggestions to prevent further harm. The Nanaimo Area Land Trust sent a letter to the city, imploring them to mitigate the damage. “Even when there’s this tiny remnant, you just feel the loss of it, in terms of death by a thousand cuts,” Linda Brooymans, stewardship manager for the land trust, told The Narwhal.
Since the City and the Island Corridor Foundation were alerted to the presence of the onion, workers have put in small culverts to direct water to the remaining bulbs — the plants rely on seasonal wetlands called vernal pools. They also replaced the soil, laid straw in an effort to protect the site and built a fence to protect the area from foot traffic. By January some of the bulbs were sprouting.
But native plant advocate Hunter Jarratt says the fence caused further disruption and, positioned at the back of the patch, won’t do anything to keep people from walking on the plants. Jarratt knew that spot for the rare slimleaf onion and was shocked to find it scraped to bedrock.
Only the spring will tell if the ground will hold water like it did before, how many of the plants will survive and whether the straw or site disturbance will result in a weed boom. No matter what, Jarratt says the slimleaf onion population will never again be what it was in numbers or genetic diversity.
“It was beautiful, and it’s all gone. And what was the reason, you know?”
At the heart of the ecosystem disappearing act is a simple conflict — the inviting flower-filled meadows occur where people want to live. Fire suppression, aggressive invasive plants and the impact of off-road vehicles adds to the threat.
But there is little legal protection for Garry oak ecosystem remnants — and plants like slimleaf onion often fall through the cracks.
Slimleaf onion isn’t protected under the Species At Risk Act, leaving most habitat in B.C. subject to patchwork rules and largely voluntary protection. Photo: Supplied by Thomas Bevan
No environmental assessment needed for trail construction
Advocates worry the slimleaf onion, though rare, is not meaningfully protected by any level of government.
Locally, the City of Nanaimo has bylaws protecting trees, like the Garry oaks themselves, and has included known ecosystems for plants like slimleaf onion in environmentally sensitive zoning, which triggers extra requirements like professional assessment and protection during development. Some municipal ecosystems are protected from development by park areas like Nanaimo’s Lotus Pinnatus Park or Victoria’s Beacon Hill Park.
Provincial legislation includes mandates for threatened plant species — but only applies within specified areas, like designated ecological reserves or in public forests (Crown land). The often-narrow parameters for designating protection can also lag behind — for example, the Forest and Range Practices Act hasn’t updated its list of protected plants since 2006. In any case, none of the existing provincial rules would apply to the View Street slimleaf onion.
Neither is slimleaf onion on the list of plants recognized by the federal Species At Risk Act. The plant could potentially benefit tangentially from an ecosystem recovery plan created for five other Garry oak ecosystem plants, though that plan is only automatically enforceable on federal lands — that’s just four per cent of Canada and around one per cent of land in B.C. On private land in B.C.— such as the rail corridor — enforcement is voluntary. On public land, there is “piecemeal legislation” and “non-legal recommendations and guidance,” according to a 2022 audit.
The federal government has the power under the Species At Risk Act to make emergency protection orders, but rarely does.
When City of Nanaimo councillors unanimously approved the path extension in July of 2025, none of the laws protecting species at risk applied. And at just over 700 metres of gravel path, the Island Corridor Foundation project — on private land and not zoned as environmentally sensitive — didn’t require a permit or an environmental assessment.
Charlotte Davis, Nanaimo’s Parks and Natural Areas deputy director, says the small area wasn’t zoned for protection because it wasn’t found during the last assessment — but she’s hopeful imaging advancements will make it easier to find small areas like these in the next one, as early as 2028.
Davis also notes the project has increased access to safe trail for locals but that more engagement before construction “would have allowed us to be more aligned with the local naturalist community, with whom we share so many values, from the outset.”
The plant advocates want to protect the slimleaf onion — and other rare plants — even when they grow outside legislated or bylawed protection areas, like the View Street meadow.
“It wasn’t perfect, but there’s no Garry oak ecosystem that has been unimpacted. This is the best we have left,” Jarratt says.
“How do we control [the disturbance of native ecosystems] if we don’t even have them mapped, or we don’t even know where they are?” he asks.
But B.C.’s Garry oak ecosystem hasn’t been comprehensively mapped since 1993. The last analysis, noting only five per cent of the ecosystem remaining, came from a 2006 study.
With population growth and urban development, advocates say that measurement has changed in the last 20 years.
There are proposed projects in known Garry Ook ecosystem around Nanaimo; residential and industrial development in Cable Bay, nearly 200,000-square-foot data centre on East Wellington Road, housing in Linley Valley and a new subdivision in Harewood Plains — city council has asked provincial and federal governments for help protecting the latter.
Nanaimo zoning bylaws require developers to take extra measures in noted sensitive areas but don’t prohibit new construction.
What is harder to measure are the unmapped survivors on private land — they can be legally built over, perhaps without anyone knowing they were there. “There’s just examples of this kind of stuff happening all the time, everywhere,” Jarratt says.
Vancouver Island railway project hopes to promote sustainability and recreation
The Nanaimo trail expansion is one small part of a larger vision for Vancouver Island’s rail corridor.
“We are the little railway that could,” Island Corridor Foundation Chief Executive Officer Thomas Bevan says. A team of just four people, including himself, manage nearly 300 kilometres of rail corridor on Vancouver Island.
The foundation has a vision for sustainable transportation — passenger and freight rail service, alongside walking and cycling paths. Considering environmental and financial concerns as well as the interests of Indigenous groups and diverse local stakeholders — such as native plant advocates — is fraught. As Bevan puts it, nobody’s going to get everything they want.
Still, environmental concerns figure strongly in the foundation’s mandate, and Bevan says they do what they can, like the $600,000 the group spent clearing invasive Scotch broom and blackberry along 125 kilometres of rail corridor, from Victoria to Qualicum Beach, B.C., in 2024 and 2025. Bevan says they are looking for funding to deal with the regrowth and other areas of the corridor.
Finding out too late
If there had been a voluntary environmental assessment of the trail expansion in Nanaimo, a qualified biologist would have done a survey, perhaps even checked the iNaturalist database where multiple slimleaf onion and other Garry oak plants were logged on View Street. They would have established a baseline for the existing population and potentially found other threatened species. They may have recommended shifting or narrowing the course of the path to avoid the most sensitive habitat.
Instead, Bevan found out about the slimleaf onion after the fact, and says, as someone who follows Jarratt’s native plant advocacy, he felt awful.
Going forward, Bevan says the Island Corridor Foundation will work on new policy for sensitive areas and has allocated $10,000 for restoration efforts — potentially weeding or reintroducing native plants. They are seeking a community partner to execute the work.
Geselbracht, the forest school teacher, imagines a future where all the neighbours know more about the Garry oak ecosystem plants and remnants in their backyard, and help to bolster them — like he wishes he had done sooner.
For four years Geselbracht has been tending Garry oak seedlings with hopes to eventually reintroduce them in the View Street native plant patch, with his students. “If I’d had them doing some planting then maybe, on their walk to school, when they saw the excavator there, they would have said something.”
GOMPS was pleased to participate in the Southern Vancouver Island Wildlife Corridor Workshop on February 12, 2026, joining a growing network of community members, researchers, and organizations working to strengthen habitat connectivity across the region.
The day was full of thoughtful discussion, collaborative mapping, and shared insights—helping translate community knowledge into both physical and digital mapping outputs. We’re encouraged to see this work continue, with ongoing updates and opportunities emerging from this expanding network.
We look forward to contributing to future efforts that support ecological connectivity and the protection of Garry oak ecosystems across Southern Vancouver Island.