Wednesday, November 13, 2019

[EXPLORE] Lieben Land

I love that even after living on this island for over half my life, I am still learning of new hidden gems, secret trails, stories that are new to me. This past Remembrance Day, I discovered such a story and explored the stomping grounds where it took place. Lieben Land - how did I not know about this?? I want to learn everything there is to know about this artist colony on the steep cliffs over the ocean and the artists that visited this heavily forested lot to sculpt, paint, write...wow!!


Geoff, Logan, the hounds and I carefully navigated our way down the steep trail to the site of where Einar's handmade home once stood. Very little remains of this place - a carefully constructed chimney, rock walls and pathways. There's the odd bit of rusted machinery and roofing material but other than that, Lieben has sunk back into the island.

ORIGINAL TEXT FROM THE BOWEN ISLAND MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES Einar Neilson was born in Stavanger, Norway but moved to Manitoba as a child. There he grew up to work as a trader at the Winnipeg Grain Exchange. After many years at the Grain Exchange, Einar chose to leave behind his business life and move westward to seek a quieter life of solitude. He found the peace and quiet he was looking for on Bowen Island, and in 1941 he purchased a 10 acre property in Eaglecliff, and almost immediately began building his beautiful home. Working with his hands, and his unique sense of craftsmanship, Einar constructed a home built of wooden beams, large glass windows looking over Howe Sound, and a huge fireplace.




Along with this, Einar created furniture from driftwood, moulded brass holders for oil lamps, displayed china and pottery on open shelves and hung exquisite tapestries along his wooden walls.

Photo supplied Bowen Island Museum and Archives
He called his home Lieben, and his hope was to create a haven that would welcome poets, writers, and artists. Einar and his wife Muriel only wanted to be the care takers, which made it possible for authors, artists and intellectuals to come write, paint and discuss in relaxation and peace. It was a place where one heard light music, brilliant discussions on theatre, music, literature, politics, philosophy, religion, and enjoyed food and drink. Lieben over the years became popular and hosted such personalities as Earle Birney, Malcome Lowry, Lister Sinclair, Watson and Mary Thomson, Alice Munro, Dorothy Livesay and many many more. Einar and Muriel, true to their wishes were almost invisible to their guests; one particular moment highlights this sentiment. Lister Sinclair once asked “who is that man who comes in time to time?” Earle Birney replied “thats your host”.

(L) Einar Neilson entertaining guests (R) on the deck of Lieben - photo supplied Bowen Island Museum and Archives
As the years went on it was obvious that the Neilsons needed more money in order to maintain and expand Lieben, money which they did not have. Muriel noted “as time passed many friends moved on—and we were getting old”. Thus, the Neilsons boarded up the old house and built on up higher on the cliff. The newer house was safer from vandals and nicer to old legs to get up and down easily. To this day many still reminisce about the magic of Lieben and even yearn for its return for writers and intellectuals who can once again share their ideas.


Even though the structure may be gone, the mountains, ocean, trees still remain. It's a beautiful spot - one that I will go back to visit often. This island is filled with stories - some good, some sad - they are what makes this place unique.


Thursday, November 7, 2019

[FIELDNOTE] Rattlesnake Plantain

Welcome to the Woodland Studio - my little corner of the blogosphere, where I can record my family adventures, share my love of nature and the creative endeavours that are inspired by this little rock in the big sea - Bowen Island, BC Canada.

I have always tried to bring nature into our home - when the kids were little, we would set up 'living labs' inside our house or on the balcony. We've had reptiles, amphibians, insects and lots of different terrariums set up to study throughout the years. We've raised tadpoles, salamander nymphs, crayfish and even caddisfly larvae.

With two dogs going crazy in the house, and the kids now bigger and more interested in their friends and video games, the living labs have ended. We do, however, still find ourselves exploring our seaside bluffs and forest paths on a regular basis and collecting little snippets of nature to record in our journals or house in glass vessels. We (or maybe it's just me) love researching the plants we find and learning more about what makes them unique to this part of the world and how they have been used throughout history. I thought I'd start this blog off with one of my favourites - Rattlesnake Plantain.



RATTLESNAKE-PLANTAIN | Goodyera oblongifolia 

GENERAL: Evergreen perennial from short creeping rhizomes, with fibrous roots; stems 20-45 cm tall, stout and stiff, glandular-hairy; spreads rapidly by vegetative multiplication. 

LEAVES: In basal rosette, thick, dark green, mottled or striped with white, especially along midrib, oval or oblong to narrowly elliptical, 3-10 cm long. 

FLOWERS: Dull-white to greenish, petals and 1 of the sepals form a hood over the lip, numerous in long, dense, downy, terminal spike with most of the flowers oriented to one side. 

ECOLOGY: On humus among mosses in dry to moist, shade, coniferous forests; common from lowlands to middle elevations. 

NOTES: According to the 'Doctrine of Signs' early settlers believed that because the markings on the leaves of the rattlesnake-plantain resembled snakeskin markings, this plant could be used in treatment of rattlesnake bites. Presumably, it was also thought to resemble a plantain because of the similarity of the flattened basal leaf rosettes of the the 2 species. Some northwest coast peoples, such as the Saanich, used the plants as a good luck charm. Stl'atl'imx children used to make 'balloons' from the leaves, by rubbing them until the top and bottom layers separated and then blowing through the stem to inflate them. This plant was known to some interior plateau peoples as a medicine for childbirth, and as a poultice for cuts and sores for which the leaves were split open, and the moist inner part placed over the wound.

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So if you made it through all that, then you MUST be a nerdy nature lover like me. It's a pretty cool little club - and if you glazed over half way through (like my son does) that's okay too...I'm just happy you popped by. xox