Land transfer completes Okanagan’s Skaha Bluffs Provincial Park

The world-class rock-climbing destination and provincial park near Penticton is growing.

Jon Ablett and Yvonne Wong of Edmonton scale one of the rock faces at Skaha Bluffs last year. The popular climbing venue was also the site of the first Skaha Climbing Festival in 2011.

Jon Ablett and Yvonne Wong of Edmonton scale one of the rock faces at Skaha Bluffs last year. The popular climbing venue was also the site of the first Skaha Climbing Festival in 2011.

A world-class rock-climbing destination and provincial park soon will be bigger, thanks to a land transfer to BC Parks from the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) and TLC, The Land Conservancy of British Columbia, Environment Minister Terry Lake announced today.

The 308-hectare private property adjacent to Skaha Bluffs was purchased in 2008 for a total of $5.25 million. B.C.’s Ministry of Environment provided $1.25 million, NCC, with support from the Government of Canada, through the Natural Areas Conservation Program, provided $2.3 million and TLC raised $1.7 million.

Today’s agreement allows the land to be added to Skaha Bluffs Provincial Park and managed for its important conservation and recreation values. The lands contain coniferous forest, riparian areas, rugged terrain and some shrub-steppe grasslands. This habitat also helps support up to 15 species-at-risk, including bighorn sheep.

B.C. has one of the largest parks and protected areas systems in North America. There are 1,000 provincial parks, recreation areas, conservancies, ecological reserves and protected areas covering approximately 14 per cent of the provincial land base – more than 13 million hectares.

TLC is a non-profit land trust that engages people in protecting and caring for B.C.’s natural areas, historic sites, farms and ranches, and places of community and recreational importance.

NCC is the nation’s leading not-for-profit private land conservation organization, working to protect important natural areas and the species they sustain. Since 1962, NCC and its partners have helped to protect one million acres in B.C.

 

Penticton Western News