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www.northword.ca | APR / MAY ‘15 | 25 24 | APR / MAY ‘15 | www.northword.ca What does it feel like to stand in the middle of a slagheap? To climb around the innards of an old- but-not-forsaken dam? Or to pick your way across a falling-down power plant whose crumbling floors could swallow you with nary a burp? Barely 24 hours into a tour of Anyox, I had answers to three out of three. How did it feel? Not as I expected. Like most of our group taking the Ghost Towns of Northwest BC tour (part UNBC’s Experiential Tourism Program), this was the first I’d heard of Anyox, an abandoned mining town at Granby Bay on Observatory Inlet, approximately 145 kilo- metres northeast of Prince Rupert. When briefed that this was an abandoned mining operation, I expected a landscape of rusting machinery and environmental degradation: a boomtown gone bust. I was prepared to be enlightened but was surprised by how it would make me feel. Searching for ghosts From Gingolx, it takes about two hours to get to Anyox via water taxi. As we enter Granby Bay, the first sign of past civilization is a smokestack rising up from the coking plant’s remains followed by the white shell of Granby’s company department store. After docking, we drop our bags at the Anyox Hydro Electric Corporation bunkhouse and stretch our legs with a bit of an explore. We cross a small stream that empties into the bay, its bed and banks stained a sickly orange but the wetlands edging it an energetic green. Up and down the valley, the spires of long-dead trees punctuate the forest. Across the estuary, the powerhouse’s skeleton and, beside it, the long, black back of an enormous slagheap are overshadowed by the smelter’s towering smokestack. Exploring that side of the estuary will have to wait. We pile into a truck with Jeff Wolrige, our guide and co-owner of Anyox Hydro. At stops along the graded road, Wolrige shows us the old steam plant, abandoned mine cars and a rail engine inexplicably sitting in a field. At road’s end, we hop out and walk a trail through scruffy aspen. In the valley below we see a— wait—what? Well, I’ll be… Dammed! The Anyox Dam, high and mighty and very concrete, yet somehow hollow, fragile like the bones of a giant bird splayed out across the river. We enter at the base and scatter like a New hope springs from old mine site by Joanne Campbell [email protected] bunch of kids; we explore its hollows, touch its exquisitely worn walls and marvel at the power that could suck whole trees into the ground-level intakes. A couple hours later we are corralled and brought back to camp. There’s more to see. This time, we cross Anyox River to the other side of the estuary where the power plant, smelter and slagheap are located. Who would have thought a slagheap would require not one but two sepa- rate excursions, just for the fun of it? Several hundred photos later, I could go back tomorrow and take a few hundred more. It’s like visiting Mars. Above the slag dump are the remains of the smelter and below, near Anyox Falls, the remains of the power plant. No ghosts here, just old industrial bones of brick, mortar and metal being disarticulated by moss and mist. Success and sacrifice Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting and Power Company built the company town of Anyox to support its copper mining and smelting operation. From 1914 to 1936, ore mined at the nearby Hidden Creek Copper deposit was smelted on site and then transported south by ocean-going cargo ships. Despite its remote location, the Granby mine was one of the top ore producers on the BC coast and its smelter one of the most modern of its time. Anyox dam and powerhouse provided electricity, assisted by a steam plant during winter months when the river was frozen. At the operation’s height, over 3,000 miners plus white-collar and town workers, along with their families, enjoyed a standard of living envied by the rest of Canada. Granby provided its workers with good wages and modern housing; the town boasted schools, hospitals and churches, and resi- dents enjoyed ice hockey, tennis and even golf on the grassless smelter slag. THE PARADOX OF ANYOX “Tracy at Peak Life Coaching helped me look beyond my mental barriers to a greater vision... She kindly, gently and unflinchingly held me accountable to my goals. Making changes in life is an enriching and sometimes difficult journey, and Tracy is both an excellent guide and an encouraging companion.” Tracy McIntyre « Professional Coach 250.847.1987 • [email protected] ... continued on Page 26 ...high and mighty and very concrete, yet somehow hollow, fragile like the bones of a giant bird splayed out across the river. Pilings along Granby Bay speak to the area’s past as a thriving mining community. The Anyox dam’s unconventional-but-elegant arch design. Today, the powerhouse for the Anyox Dam is a mere skeleton, which is slowly being reclaimed by the land. joanne campbell joanne campbell joanne campbell TELKWA BAECKEREI KAFFEEHAUS HWY 16 @ THE COINTÉ RIVER INN 250.846.5400 I NTEGRITY Q UALITY P ROFESSIONALISM for C OMMUNITY S UCCESS . W ORKING LOCATED IN SMITHERS & SERVING THE REGION 250.847.4325 • WWW.EDMISONMEHR.CA

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Page 1: THE PARADOX OF ANYOXunbc.ca/sites/default/files/sections/continuing-studies/anyoxarticle... · the snow on fire (giving new meaning to don’t eat the yellow snow). Anyox survived

www.northword .ca | APR / MAY ‘15 | 2524 | APR / MAY ‘15 | www.northword .ca

What does it feel like to stand in the middle of a slagheap? To climb around the innards of an old-but-not-forsaken dam? Or to pick your way across a falling-down power plant whose crumbling floors could swallow you with nary a burp?

Barely 24 hours into a tour of Anyox, I had answers to three out of three. How did it feel? Not as I expected.

Like most of our group taking the Ghost Towns of Northwest BC tour (part UNBC’s Experiential Tourism Program), this was the first I’d heard of Anyox, an abandoned mining town at Granby

Bay on Observatory Inlet, approximately 145 kilo-metres northeast of Prince Rupert. When briefed that this was an abandoned mining operation, I expected a landscape of rusting machinery and environmental degradation: a boomtown gone bust. I was prepared to be enlightened but was surprised by how it would make me feel.

Searching for ghostsFrom Gingolx, it takes about two hours to get to Anyox via water taxi. As we enter Granby Bay, the first sign of past civilization is a smokestack rising up from the coking plant’s remains followed by the white shell of Granby’s company department store.

After docking, we drop our bags at the Anyox

Hydro Electric Corporation bunkhouse and stretch our legs with a bit of an explore. We cross a small stream that empties into the bay, its bed and banks stained a sickly orange but the wetlands edging it an energetic green. Up and down the valley, the spires of long-dead trees punctuate the forest. Across the estuary, the powerhouse’s skeleton and, beside it, the long, black back of an enormous slagheap are overshadowed by the smelter’s towering smokestack.

Exploring that side of the estuary will have to wait. We pile into a truck with Jeff Wolrige, our guide and co-owner of Anyox Hydro.

At stops along the graded road, Wolrige shows us the old steam plant, abandoned mine cars and a rail engine inexplicably sitting in a field. At road’s end, we hop out and walk a trail through scruffy aspen. In the valley below we see a—wait—what? Well, I’ll be…

Dammed! The Anyox Dam, high and mighty and very concrete, yet somehow hollow, fragile like the bones of a giant bird splayed out across the river. We enter at the base and scatter like a

New hope springs from old mine site

by Joanne Campbell

edi tor ia [email protected]

bunch of kids; we explore its hollows, touch its exquisitely worn walls and marvel at the power that could suck whole trees into the ground-level intakes. A couple hours later we are corralled and brought back to camp. There’s more to see.

This time, we cross Anyox River to the other side of the estuary where the power plant, smelter and slagheap are located. Who would have thought a slagheap would require not one but two sepa-rate excursions, just for the fun of it? Several hundred photos later, I could go back tomorrow

and take a few hundred more. It’s like visiting Mars. Above the slag dump are the remains of the smelter and below, near Anyox Falls, the remains of the power plant. No ghosts here, just old industrial bones of brick, mortar and metal being disarticulated by moss and mist.

Success and sacrifice Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting and Power Company built the company town of Anyox to support its copper

mining and smelting operation. From 1914 to 1936, ore mined at the nearby Hidden Creek Copper

deposit was smelted on site and then transported south by ocean-going cargo ships.

Despite its remote location, the Granby mine was one of the top ore producers on the BC coast and its smelter one of the most modern of its time. Anyox dam and powerhouse provided electricity, assisted by a steam plant during winter months when the river was frozen.

At the operation’s height, over 3,000 miners plus white-collar and town workers, along with their families, enjoyed a standard of living envied by the rest of Canada. Granby provided its workers with good wages and modern housing; the town boasted schools, hospitals and churches, and resi-dents enjoyed ice hockey, tennis and even golf on the grassless smelter slag.

THE PARADOX OFANYOX

“Tracy at Peak Life Coaching helped me look beyond my mental barriers to a greater vision... She kindly, gently and

unflinchingly held me accountable to my goals. Making changes in life is an enriching and sometimes difficult journey, and Tracy is both an excellent guide and an encouraging companion.”

Tracy McIntyre « Professional Coach250.847.1987 • [email protected]

... continued on Page 26

...high and mighty and very concrete,

yet somehow hollow, fragile like the bones

of a giant bird splayed out across

the river.

Pi l ings along Granby Bay speak to the area’s past as a thr iv ing mining community.

The Anyox dam’s unconventional-but-elegant arch design.

Today, the powerhouse for the Anyox Dam is a

mere skeleton, which is s lowly being reclaimed

by the land.

joanne campbel l

joa

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joa

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ell

TELKWA BAECKEREIKAFFEEHAUSHWY 16 @ THE COINTÉ RIVER INN250.846.5400

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Page 2: THE PARADOX OF ANYOXunbc.ca/sites/default/files/sections/continuing-studies/anyoxarticle... · the snow on fire (giving new meaning to don’t eat the yellow snow). Anyox survived

www.northword .ca | APR / MAY ‘15 | 2726 | APR / MAY ‘15 | www.northword .caN

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Success was measured monetarily; negative health and environmental effects were merely collateral damage. When the sulphur fumes from the smelter were especially strong, workers wore gas masks and were limited to two-hour shifts. The resulting acid rain defoliated all vegetation down-wind—trees were stripped and gardening impossible; resident animals left for greener pastures. In winter, one of the kids’ favourite games was lighting the snow on fire (giving new meaning to don’t eat the yellow snow).

Anyox survived World War I, the Spanish flu and a devastating fire, but it was weakened by the economic downturn of the Great Depression. The final blow was dealt by an overly enthusiastic explosives project that resulted in collapsing it forever. Granby gave the men their notice and moved out their equipment. In 1943, a double forest fire finished off what was left of the town, leaving only non-combustible and charred piers.

Acid drainage from the mine still stains the creek bed as it discharges into Granby Bay. Despite the ongoing trickle, locals say the sea life has returned to healthy levels: the crab, salmon and seals are back in good numbers, a sign that nature’s recovery seems well underway.

Power and progressIn the mid-1980s, Vancouver investors purchased Anyox with an eye to

developing remaining mineral deposits. Wolrige, son of one of the investors, and his fishing buddy John Turpin had fished the local rivers and recognized the dam’s potential for green power. The Anyox River is non-fish-bearing and no agricultural land would be impacted. It was the spark the two electrical entrepreneurs needed; the Anyox Hydro Electric Company was born.

For the past 15 years, Anyox Hydro has worked to bring the dam back on line. The major challenge is finding a buyer for the electricity: tying the Anyox Dam into the abandoned Kitsault Dam farther up the Portland Canal could produce enough power to supply up to 40,000 homes or, alternatively, a liquid natural gas (LNG) terminal.

Anyox Hydro is presently under negotiations with a Chinese LNG company. If the deal goes through, and the project approved, LNG silos would be located on the old mine staging area; soil would be capped and the untreated acid run-off would be remediated and controlled.

SlagheapThe slagheap at Anyox is a massive run of black weathered silica dunes, a by-product of the copper smelting process. It is now being mined by True-Grit Abrasives, then cleaned and barged south to the United States where the silica is a key ingredient in roofing shingles.

PowerhouseThe power plant’s shell stands on the estuary opposite the old town site and below the old smelter. Thousands of bricks litter the floor and wildlife wanders through the open walls. Holes punctuate the concrete floor where massive machines once stood.

Anyox DamDesigned by John Eastwood and completed in 1924, the Anyox Dam was controversial in its day because of its fragile-looking multiple-arch design. Proof that beauty and utility need not be mutually exclusive, it supplied power to Anyox for 11 years before the mine shut down and the dam was decommissioned.

N

Little-known Anyox facts…

Tahltan leadership expedit ion part icipants stand on the Kitsu Plateau with Mount Edziza seen behind.

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Encounters of the ancestral kind: A caribou lopes across the f lanks of Mount Edziza.

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Healing trauma on the landWe have all experienced some level of psychological trauma—an injury to the brain as a result of stress from bullying, harassment, discrimination or family violence. Recent studies involving mice indicate that trauma can be inherited from ancestors. If this is possible, it raises questions regarding the intergenerational impacts to aboriginal people from colonization.

Being on the land has elements of risk and when those who have suffered trauma successfully experience an outdoor adventure, it can aid in resolving past trauma as an incidental by-product without having to re-visit the event.

An additional benefit of the Tahltan Outdoor Leadership Program is the ability to empower people to make change and assert their rights. The goal is to provide leadership skills and knowl-edge about networking and connecting to other change agents and resources. This empowers youth to make social change through personal and community development and de-colonization.

All this cannot take place unless people have a strong sense of identity: they must know who they are. One’s inner soul has been described as the “abyss” and the task of peering into it can be daunting; it is for me. All youth today have even more pressure to conform to the images of the super athlete, super model and super star by pop culture standards. Experiences on the land allow youth to get away from these pressures and gain the space to discover their own true essence. The land has the potential to teach those who respect it and who pay attention to what it has to offer.

... continued from Page 15

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What did it feel like to explore a slagheap? A dam? A broken-down power plant? Counter-intuitively, it made me feel hopeful and, strangely, happy. The impression is that of progress, nature reclaiming its territory as a new forest asserts itself around our past mistakes. With a photographer’s lens, I sought—and therefore found—the beauty. Nature’s grace caught me by surprise.

Anyox is private property and because it’s a working site—with occasional blasting—it can be dangerous. Tours are available through the UNBC Experiential Tourism Program or by calling Jeff Wolrige at Anyox Hydro, 604-270-8811. A dona-tion to the Kitsault River salmon enhancement project administered by the Pacific Salmon Foundation is appreciated. N

... continued from Page 25

The Anyox dam and powerhouse provided electricity to the Granby mine unti l i ts closure in 1936. Today, entrepreneurs hope to bring it back on l ine as a green power project.

The Anyox River f lows past the old power plant

and slag heap (behind) into Granby Bay.

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