Welcome to The Brown Property Preservation Society ...

 

The Brown Property comprises approximately 50 acres of Coastal Douglas Fir forest, including a significant stand of over 300 year old trees. It has been assessed as being of outstanding ecological significance because it is relatively undisturbed by human activity and contains many species of endangered and rare plants. The Society and Town successfully purchased 32 acres of the property in the Spring of 1999. At that time an option on the property was negotiated and the society entered its second phase of fund raising.

This property, by definition, is not an old growth forest. It is an older forest with some old growth Douglas Fir. The current executive relies upon a joint sensitive-ecosystems study conducted by Environment Canada (Canadian Wildlife Service), Habitat Conservation Trust Fund and B.C. Environment, Land and Parks when it describes this forest as an "older forest (older than 100 years)...rare in this region."

The second phase concentrated on raising an additional $910,000 to purchase the remaining 15 acres. The Society and Town of Qualicum Beach had an Option to Purchase the remaining 15 acres for that price until July 31, 2002. Through hard work and public support, the Society and the Town succeeded in raising the funds.

The vision of the Society is to preserve the Brown Property Forest, dedicated to the appreciation of nature, accessible by boardwalk trails to minimize disturbance of habitat, with signs to identify various plants and their role in the ecosystem.

The Brown Property Preservation Society was formed in May, 1996, when concerned residents of the community of Qualicum Beach learned that a plan was being set in motion to develop the forested (undeveloped) area of the Brown property, privately owned. A campaign was started to raise public awareness of the situation, and by September, 1997, the Society had over 300 members.

The Brown Property is of special ecological significance because the 50 acres consist of forest that has been relatively undisturbed by human activity. A conservation evaluation of the property in October, 1996, by Andrew P. Harcombe, R.P. Bio, P.Ag., B.C. Conservation Data Centre, states that "the remaining natural part of the property be protected for its conservation values. The two main plant communities are ranked as red listed (endangered) and blue listed (sensitive or vulnerable). The stream and flood plain have high fisheries value. It is clear looking at an aerial photo that the property will provide important green space in an area entirely impacted by residential and golf development. The size of the property and its having 300+ year forests intact both contribute to its high conservation value.

The old growth forest was once common only to the narrow strip of lowland of the east coast of Vancouver Island between Bowser and Victoria and to the adjacent Gulf Islands. It is now one of the most endangered ecosystems in North America, with less than two percent remaining. The Brown Property is an outstanding remaining example of a type of landscape once common on the coastal plain but now severely altered on the east coast of Vancouver Island. The property's ecological value is enhanced because of its size. It is large enough that much of the interior quality of the plant communities have not been compromised by excessive light penetration or exotic species invasion. Acquisition of the Brown Property will provide the public with a unique opportunity to appreciate an endangered ecosystem in an urban setting.”


Click the above image to download a pdf version of Commemorative Donor Plaque


Numerous local volunteers and businesses have been invaluable in increasing public awareness of the Brown Property itself and the need to save it, and in organizing, various fund raising activities ranging from door-to-door canvassing, concerts, house and garden tours, jazz festival, craft fair, construction sale and even an "Antique Roadshow" and auctions. The project became a community issue and has received significant positive attention in the local media in editorials, articles and letters to the editor, as well as exposure on provincial radio and television.

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