fbpx
Wikipedia

Okanagan

The Okanagan (/ˌkəˈnɑːɡən/ OH-kə-NAH-gən),[3] also called the Okanagan Valley and sometimes the Okanagan Country, is a region in the Canadian province of British Columbia defined by the basin of Okanagan Lake and the Canadian portion of the Okanagan River. It is part of the Okanagan Country, extending into the United States as Okanogan County in north-central Washington. According to the 2016 Canadian census, the region's population is 362,258. The largest populated cities are Kelowna, Penticton, Vernon, and West Kelowna.

Okanagan
Okanagan Valley
Vineyards of the central Okanagan Valley
Location of the Okanagan in British Columbia
Coordinates: 49°44′52″N 119°43′02″W / 49.74778°N 119.71722°W / 49.74778; -119.71722
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
Principal cities
Area
 • 3 Districts20,822 km2 (8,039 sq mi)
Population
 (2016)
362,258[2]
 • Density28.8/km2 (75/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)
Postal code prefixes
Area codes236, 672, 778, 250

The region is known for its sunny climate, dry landscapes and lakeshore communities and particular lifestyle.[4] The economy is retirement and commercial-recreation based, with outdoor activities such as boating and watersports, skiing and hiking. Agriculture has been focused primarily on fruit orchards, with a recent shift in focus to vineyards and wine.

The region stretches northwards via the Spallumcheen Valley to Sicamous in the Shuswap Country, and reaches south of the Canada–United States border, where it continues as Okanogan County. The Okanagan as a region is sometimes described as including the Boundary, Similkameen, and Shuswap regions, though this is because of proximity and historic and commercial ties with those areas.

Etymology edit

The name is derived from the Okanagan-language place name ukʷnaqín.[5] An alternate explanation from Washington proposes "People living where you can see the top", ostensibly of Chopaka Peak in the Lower Similkameen.[6]

Geography edit

 
View of McIntyre Bluff from Highway 97

The area was occupied by Pleistocene glaciation, and a widespread mantle of glacial drift covers the underlying bedrock. At the end of the Pleistocene, marginal lakes formed along the sides of the melting ice lobe and streams deposited their loads in them as deltas and accumulations of silt. These accumulations now form the white cliffs which are particularly prominent along the southern end of Okanagan Lake.[7]

Geographic features include:

Major highways edit

Provincial parks edit

Climate edit

 
Dry forest of Knox Mountain Park, just north of Kelowna
 
Semi-arid shrubland near Osoyoos

The Okanagan has a mild, relatively dry climate that varies depending on latitude. Most of the Okanagan lies within the rain shadow of the Cascade Mountains to the southwest. Areas in the north end of the valley receive more precipitation and cooler temperatures than areas to the south. Generally, Kelowna is the transition zone between the drier south and the wetter north.

The Okanagan north of Kelowna has a humid continental climate (Köppen: Dfb) with warm, sometimes hot summers and cold winters with highs around freezing, though mild by Canadian standards. Precipitation is well distributed year round. Some regions of the Okanagan, most notably near Kelowna, border on an inland oceanic climate due to it having an average temperature slightly above −3.0 °C (26.6 °F) and below 0 °C (32 °F).[8][9] Dry forests of ponderosa pine and low grasses dominate the valleys and mountains in this region.

The Okanagan south of Kelowna has a semi-arid climate (Köppen: Bsk) with hot, dry summers and cool winters. The average daytime temperature in this region is about 15.0 °C (59.0 °F), which is the warmest in Canada. The average annual precipitation in this region is also the second driest in Canada outside of the Arctic, the driest being the Thompson River Valley west of Kamloops. The southern Okanagan is dominated by northern reach of the Columbia Plateau ecoregion and is the only xeric shrubland ecosystem in Canada. Dry forests of ponderosa pine and low grasses can be found at higher elevations to the east. Despite being located in a xeric shrubland, areas near Osoyoos and Oliver claim to be part of Canada's only desert.[10]

Between 2000 BCE and 1900 CE, the climate and vegetation of the Okanagan had changed little. However, historical records from the Pacific Agrifood Research Station in Summerland indicate that the Okanagan climate had warmed by about 1 °C between 1908 and 1994.[11]

History edit

The Okanagan Valley is home to the Syilx, commonly known as the Okanagan people, an Interior Salish people who live in the valley from the head of Okanagan Lake downstream to near the river's confluence with the Columbia River in present-day Washington, as well as in the neighbouring Similkameen Valley and the Upper Nicola to the north of that, though the whole of their traditional territory encompasses the entire Columbia River watershed and includes areas east of the Okanogan River in Washington, i.e. the Colville Reservation. At the height of Okanagan culture, about 3000 years ago, it is estimated that 12,000 people lived in this valley and surrounding areas. The Okanagan people employed an adaptive strategy, moving within traditional areas throughout the year to fish, hunt, or collect food, while in the winter months, they lived in semi-permanent villages of kekulis, a type of pithouse.[12] Today the member bands of the Okanagan Nation Alliance are sovereign nations, with vibrant natural resource and tourism based economies. Their annual August gathering near Vernon is a celebration of the continuance of Syilx life and culture.

In 1811, the first non-natives came to the Okanagan Valley, in the form of a fur trading expedition voyaging north out of Fort Okanogan, a Pacific Fur Company outpost at the confluence of the Okanogan and Columbia Rivers. Within fifteen years, fur traders established, known as the Brigade Trail via the Cariboo Plateau and Thompson Country to Fort Kamloops and through the Okanagan, from Fort Alexandria at the southern end of the New Caledonia fur district in the Central Interior to the north, to Fort Vancouver, the HBC's headquarters in the Columbia Department, for passing furs between New Caledonia and the Columbia River for shipment to the Pacific. The trade route lasted until 1846, when the Oregon Treaty laid down the border between British North America and the United States west of the Rocky Mountains on the 49th parallel. The new border cut across the valley, bisecting Osoyoos Lake. To avoid paying tariffs, British traders forged a newer route that bypassed Fort Okanogan via the Fraser Canyon from Spuzzum up over the Cascade Mountains, then via the Nicola, Coldwater and Fraser rivers to Fort Langley instead of to Fort Vancouver, which had come into being in American territory. The Okanagan Valley did not see many more outsiders for a decade afterward.

 
View of the Okanagan Valley from the hills above Kelowna

In 1859, the first European settlement was established when Father Charles Pandosy led the making of an Oblate mission at Okanagan Mission, now a neighbourhood of Kelowna. The Fraser Canyon Gold Rush of 1858 eventually encouraged more settlement as some prospectors from the United States took the Okanagan Trail route on their way to the Fraser Canyon, although at the height of the rush the American adventurers who used the route did not settle because of outright hostilities from the Syilx, whom a few of the parties traversing the trail had harassed and brutalized. A few staked claims around the South Okanagan and Similkameen valleys and found gold and copper in places, with another trail from Fort Hope to newer goldfields at Rock Creek and Wild Horse Creek in the East Kootenay, skirting the US border and crossing Osoyoos Lake at Osoyoos, which was a customs post and also the location of the gold commissioner's office. The Dewdney Trail, surveyed and built by Edgar Dewdney, was constructed to prevent trade in the region from going north-south instead of remaining firmly under British control, and also for military mobility purposes should the need arise. In the decades following the gold rushes, ranchers, mostly on military land grants, came to settle on Okanagan Lake; notable ones included the Coldstream Ranch near Vernon, the Ellis Ranch, which formed the basis of the City of Penticton once subdivided, and the Richter Ranch, which continues in operation today, in the mountains between the Town of Oliver and the Village of Keremeos in the Similkameen.

A mining industry began in the southern Okanagan region, with Fairview, now an empty benchland on the western side of Oliver, the best-known and largest of the boomtowns created in the later part of the 19th century. More farmers, as well as a small service industry, came to meet the needs of the miners.

Fruit production is a hallmark of the Okanagan Valley today, but the industry began with difficulty. Commercial orcharding of apples was first tried there in 1892, but a series of setbacks prevented the major success of commercial fruit crops until the 1920s.

 
SS Aberdeen

Until the 1930s, the demand for shipping fruit and other goods did drive a need for ongoing operations of the sternwheeler steamboats that serviced Okanagan Lake, operated by a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway, linking the Southern Mainline with the original transcontinental mainline at Sicamous: the SS Aberdeen from 1886 and then the SS Sicamous and SS Naramata from 1914, and others. The Sicamous and Naramata survive as a tourist attraction on Okanagan Beach on the north side of Penticton, the Sicamous serving both as a museum and also an event facility. Other steamboats operated on Skaha Lake to the south of that city. The club lounge and wheelhouse, without any keel or hull, of the SS Okanagan are in the same park as the Sicamous and Naramata.

While the last half-century has grown several resource-based enterprises in the region, primarily forestry, though mining had played an important role in earlier times. The fastest-growing industries in the Okanagan today are real estate, tourism accommodations and services, and retirement-driven real estate development as well as the ripping up of orchards and their replacement by wineries and vineyards.[citation needed] Favoured by its sunny climate, lakes, and winery attractions, the valley has become a popular destination for vacationers and retirees. The area also attracts seasonal fruit-picking labourers, primarily from Quebec and Mexico.[13][14]

Demographics edit

The population of the region was 362,258 as of the 2016 Canadian census. The three regional districts within the Okanagan and their populations were: Central Okanagan (194,822), North Okanagan (83,022) and Okanagan-Similkameen (84,354).

The statistical figures below are based on the 2011 Canadian census, 2016 Canadian census, and the British Columbia Ministry of Communities, Sport and Cultural Development.[15][16]

Municipalities edit

Municipalities in the Okanagan
Name Type Regional district Population
(2016)
Area (2011) Density (2011)
(Pop./km2)
Incorporated
Armstrong City North Okanagan 5,114 5.24 km2 (2.0 sq mi) 920 1913
Coldstream District North Okanagan 10,648 67.25 km2 (26.0 sq mi) 155.6 1906
Enderby City North Okanagan 2,964 4.26 km2 (1.6 sq mi) 690 1905
Kelowna City Central Okanagan 127,380 211.82 km2 (81.8 sq mi) 553.8 1905
Lake Country District Central Okanagan 12,922 122.19 km2 (47.2 sq mi) 95.8 1995
Lumby Village North Okanagan 1,833 5.27 km2 (2.0 sq mi) 301.6 1955
Oliver Town Okanagan-Similkameen 4,928 4.88 km2 (1.9 sq mi) 990 1945
Osoyoos Town Okanagan-Similkameen 5,085 8.76 km2 (3.4 sq mi) 553.1 1946
Peachland District Central Okanagan 5,428 15.75 km2 (6.1 sq mi) 330.2 1909
Penticton City Okanagan-Similkameen 33,761 42.10 km2 (16.3 sq mi) 780.9 1908
Spallumcheen District North Okanagan 5,106 255.77 km2 (98.8 sq mi) 19.8 1892
Summerland District Okanagan-Similkameen 11,615 74.06 km2 (28.6 sq mi) 152.3 1906
Vernon City North Okanagan 40,116 95.76 km2 (37.0 sq mi) 398.4 1892
West Kelowna City Central Okanagan 32,655 123.51 km2 (47.7 sq mi) 250.1 2007

Statistics Canada. 2017. Armstrong, CY [Census subdivision], British Columbia and Okanagan, RD [Census division], British Columbia (table). Census Profile. 2016 Census. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-316-X2016001. Ottawa. Released February 8, 2017. http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2016/dp-pd/prof/index.cfm?Lang=E (accessed April 16, 2017).

Designated places edit

Designated places in the Okanagan
Name Regional district Population
(2011)
Area (2011) Density (2011)
(Pop./km2)
Kaleden Okanagan-Similkameen 1,224 4.32 km2 (1.7 sq mi) 283.6
Naramata Okanagan-Similkameen 1,647 7.99 km2 (3.1 sq mi) 206.2
Olalla Okanagan-Similkameen 401 0.49 km2 (0.2 sq mi) 826.3

Unincorporated communities edit

North Okanagan edit

Central Okanagan edit

South Okanagan edit

Indian reserves edit

The Indian reserves of the Okanagan first peoples also form identifiable communities:

The Osoyoos and Westbank Indian Reserves have large non-native populations because of band-governed residential and commercial development on their lands. The Osoyoos Indian Reserve leases large swathes of land to commercial vineyard developments and is where 40% of wine grapes used in the Okanagan come from.

Ghost towns edit

Sport edit

Ice hockey is a popular sport in the region with WHL team Kelowna Rockets playing in the region's most populated city. The Jr. A teams are the Vernon Vipers, West Kelowna Warriors and the Penticton Vees of the BCHL. Penticton were the 2012 national Jr. A champions, after they ousted the Woodstock Slammers for the title. Jr. B sides Kelowna Chiefs, Sicamous Eagles, Summerland Steam, Osoyoos Coyotes and North Okanagan Knights play in the KIJHL, Osoyoos having won the 2010/11 KIJHL season. Penticton and Summerland are both home to Chicago Blackhawks and Edmonton Oilers Defenceman Duncan Keith.

The area has been host to multiple junior hockey championships, including the Memorial Cup in Kelowna in 2004 and RBC Cup in Vernon in 1990 (then called the Centennial Cup) and 2014.

Kelowna is home to junior Canadian football team Okanagan Sun, and Jr. Baseball team Kelowna Falcons, including the UBC Okanagan Heat university program.

Agriculture edit

The continued growth and operation of the agricultural industry in the Okanagan absolutely depends on the employment of temporary migrant workers.[17]

In 2009, there were 3,000 Mexican migrant labourers working in the Okanagan.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-07-24. Retrieved 2019-10-23.
  2. ^ Population Estimates – Province of British Columbia
  3. ^ OHK-ə-NAH-gən
  4. ^ The Main Report of the Consultative Board. Canada – British Columbia Okanagan Basin Agreement (PDF) (Report). Victoria, British Columbia: British Columbia Water Resources Service. March 1974. p. 11. Retrieved 2015-10-25. the region is both scenically attractive and climatically desirable, and has consequently experienced a rapidly expanding resident and tourist population growth
  5. ^ Bright, William (2004). Native American placenames of the United States. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-8061-3598-4. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
  6. ^ Tales of the Okanogans: Collected by Mourning Dove; Hines, Donald M. ed, Ye Galleon Press, Fairfield Washington, 1976; ISBN 0-87770-173-3; p. 15. (Footnote prepared by L.V. McWhorter and Dean Guie, possibly with material supplied by Mourning Dove.)
  7. ^ Stuart S. Holland (1976). (PDF) (Report). Province of British Columbia. pp. 74–75. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  8. ^ Canada, Environment and Climate Change (2013-09-25). "Canadian Climate Normals 1981–2010 Station Data – Climate – Environment and Climate Change Canada". climate.weather.gc.ca. Retrieved 2020-05-19.
  9. ^ "Canadian Climate Normals or Averages 1981–2010". Environment Canada. Retrieved 2014-04-24.
  10. ^ John B. Theberge. "What's in a Name". Osoyoos Desert Society. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  11. ^ Ian R. Walker (2004). "Chapter 6: Climate Change, the last 15000 years in the Okanagan". In John D. Greenough, Murray A. Roed (ed.). Okanagan Geology. Kelowna Geology Committee. pp. 51–62. ISBN 0-9699795-2-5.
  12. ^ John D. Greenough, Murray A. Roed, ed. (2004). Okanagan Geology. Kelowna Geology Committee. pp. 71–83. ISBN 0-9699795-2-5.
  13. ^ O'Donoghue, Annie (2001). "Okanagan Dreams". Documentary. National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  14. ^ Couture, Hugo (2009). "LES MIGRATIONS SAISONNIÈRES DES QUÉBÉCOIS DANS LES VALLÉES FRUITIÈRES DE LA COLOMBIE-BRITANNIQUE" (PDF). Mémoire. Université Laval. Retrieved 2011-08-28.
  15. ^ "Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2011 and 2006 censuses (British Columbia)". Statistics Canada. May 28, 2012. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  16. ^ "British Columbia Regional Districts, Municipalities, Corporate Name, Date of Incorporation and Postal Address" (XLS). British Columbia Ministry of Communities, Sport and Cultural Development. Retrieved December 8, 2012.
  17. ^ a b Tomic, Patricia, Ricardo Trumper & Luis L. M. Aguiar. "Housing Regulations and Living Conditions of Mexican Migrant Workers in the Okanagan Valley, BC." Canadian Issues. 78. Link (accessed April 5, 2011).

External links edit

  • Okanagan Historical Society Reports—A visual record of the Society's Annual Report from its first issue in 1926 from the UBC Library Digital Collections
  • Digitized Okanagan History—A repository of digitized photographs and records related to the history of B.C.'s Southern Interior

okanagan, this, article, about, region, british, columbia, extended, cross, border, region, inclusive, washington, state, country, other, uses, okanogan, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, c. This article is about the region in British Columbia For the extended cross border region inclusive of Washington state see Okanagan Country For other uses see Okanogan This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Okanagan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Okanagan ˌ oʊ k e ˈ n ɑː ɡ en OH ke NAH gen 3 also called the Okanagan Valley and sometimes the Okanagan Country is a region in the Canadian province of British Columbia defined by the basin of Okanagan Lake and the Canadian portion of the Okanagan River It is part of the Okanagan Country extending into the United States as Okanogan County in north central Washington According to the 2016 Canadian census the region s population is 362 258 The largest populated cities are Kelowna Penticton Vernon and West Kelowna Okanagan Okanagan ValleyRegion of British ColumbiaVineyards of the central Okanagan ValleyLocation of the Okanagan in British ColumbiaCoordinates 49 44 52 N 119 43 02 W 49 74778 N 119 71722 W 49 74778 119 71722CountryCanadaProvinceBritish ColumbiaPrincipal citiesList KelownaVernonPentictonWest KelownaArea 1 3 Districts20 822 km2 8 039 sq mi Population 2016 362 258 2 Density28 8 km2 75 sq mi Time zoneUTC 08 00 PST Summer DST UTC 07 00 PDT Postal code prefixesVArea codes236 672 778 250The region is known for its sunny climate dry landscapes and lakeshore communities and particular lifestyle 4 The economy is retirement and commercial recreation based with outdoor activities such as boating and watersports skiing and hiking Agriculture has been focused primarily on fruit orchards with a recent shift in focus to vineyards and wine The region stretches northwards via the Spallumcheen Valley to Sicamous in the Shuswap Country and reaches south of the Canada United States border where it continues as Okanogan County The Okanagan as a region is sometimes described as including the Boundary Similkameen and Shuswap regions though this is because of proximity and historic and commercial ties with those areas Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Major highways 2 2 Provincial parks 3 Climate 4 History 5 Demographics 5 1 Municipalities 5 2 Designated places 5 3 Unincorporated communities 5 3 1 North Okanagan 5 3 2 Central Okanagan 5 3 3 South Okanagan 5 4 Indian reserves 5 5 Ghost towns 6 Sport 7 Agriculture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymology editThe name is derived from the Okanagan language place name ukʷnaqin 5 An alternate explanation from Washington proposes People living where you can see the top ostensibly of Chopaka Peak in the Lower Similkameen 6 Geography edit nbsp View of McIntyre Bluff from Highway 97The area was occupied by Pleistocene glaciation and a widespread mantle of glacial drift covers the underlying bedrock At the end of the Pleistocene marginal lakes formed along the sides of the melting ice lobe and streams deposited their loads in them as deltas and accumulations of silt These accumulations now form the white cliffs which are particularly prominent along the southern end of Okanagan Lake 7 Geographic features include Kalamalka Lake Mabel Lake Mahoney Lake Mara Lake McIntyre Bluff Monashee Mountains Mount Boucherie Okanagan Highland Okanagan Lake Okanagan River Osoyoos Lake Shuswap River Skaha Lake Swan Lake Thompson Plateau Tuc el nuit Lake Vaseux Lake Wood Lake Major highways edit Highway 97 Okanagan Highway Highway 3 Crowsnest Highway Highway 97C Okanagan Connector Highway 33 Highway 6 Highway 97A Provincial parks edit Main article List of provincial parks of the Okanagan nbsp Kalmalka Lake Provincial Park nbsp Fintry Provincial Park nbsp Wrinkly Face Provincial Park nbsp Bear Creek Provincial Park nbsp Trepanier Provincial Park nbsp Okanagan Mountain Provincial Park nbsp Darke Lake Provincial Park nbsp Okanagan Lake Provincial Park nbsp Skaha Bluffs Provincial Park nbsp Nickel Plate Provincial ParkClimate edit nbsp Dry forest of Knox Mountain Park just north of Kelowna nbsp Semi arid shrubland near Osoyoos The Okanagan has a mild relatively dry climate that varies depending on latitude Most of the Okanagan lies within the rain shadow of the Cascade Mountains to the southwest Areas in the north end of the valley receive more precipitation and cooler temperatures than areas to the south Generally Kelowna is the transition zone between the drier south and the wetter north The Okanagan north of Kelowna has a humid continental climate Koppen Dfb with warm sometimes hot summers and cold winters with highs around freezing though mild by Canadian standards Precipitation is well distributed year round Some regions of the Okanagan most notably near Kelowna border on an inland oceanic climate due to it having an average temperature slightly above 3 0 C 26 6 F and below 0 C 32 F 8 9 Dry forests of ponderosa pine and low grasses dominate the valleys and mountains in this region The Okanagan south of Kelowna has a semi arid climate Koppen Bsk with hot dry summers and cool winters The average daytime temperature in this region is about 15 0 C 59 0 F which is the warmest in Canada The average annual precipitation in this region is also the second driest in Canada outside of the Arctic the driest being the Thompson River Valley west of Kamloops The southern Okanagan is dominated by northern reach of the Columbia Plateau ecoregion and is the only xeric shrubland ecosystem in Canada Dry forests of ponderosa pine and low grasses can be found at higher elevations to the east Despite being located in a xeric shrubland areas near Osoyoos and Oliver claim to be part of Canada s only desert 10 Between 2000 BCE and 1900 CE the climate and vegetation of the Okanagan had changed little However historical records from the Pacific Agrifood Research Station in Summerland indicate that the Okanagan climate had warmed by about 1 C between 1908 and 1994 11 History editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is chronology unclear beyond the mid 19th century Please help improve this section if you can August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Okanagan Valley is home to the Syilx commonly known as the Okanagan people an Interior Salish people who live in the valley from the head of Okanagan Lake downstream to near the river s confluence with the Columbia River in present day Washington as well as in the neighbouring Similkameen Valley and the Upper Nicola to the north of that though the whole of their traditional territory encompasses the entire Columbia River watershed and includes areas east of the Okanogan River in Washington i e the Colville Reservation At the height of Okanagan culture about 3000 years ago it is estimated that 12 000 people lived in this valley and surrounding areas The Okanagan people employed an adaptive strategy moving within traditional areas throughout the year to fish hunt or collect food while in the winter months they lived in semi permanent villages of kekulis a type of pithouse 12 Today the member bands of the Okanagan Nation Alliance are sovereign nations with vibrant natural resource and tourism based economies Their annual August gathering near Vernon is a celebration of the continuance of Syilx life and culture In 1811 the first non natives came to the Okanagan Valley in the form of a fur trading expedition voyaging north out of Fort Okanogan a Pacific Fur Company outpost at the confluence of the Okanogan and Columbia Rivers Within fifteen years fur traders established known as the Brigade Trail via the Cariboo Plateau and Thompson Country to Fort Kamloops and through the Okanagan from Fort Alexandria at the southern end of the New Caledonia fur district in the Central Interior to the north to Fort Vancouver the HBC s headquarters in the Columbia Department for passing furs between New Caledonia and the Columbia River for shipment to the Pacific The trade route lasted until 1846 when the Oregon Treaty laid down the border between British North America and the United States west of the Rocky Mountains on the 49th parallel The new border cut across the valley bisecting Osoyoos Lake To avoid paying tariffs British traders forged a newer route that bypassed Fort Okanogan via the Fraser Canyon from Spuzzum up over the Cascade Mountains then via the Nicola Coldwater and Fraser rivers to Fort Langley instead of to Fort Vancouver which had come into being in American territory The Okanagan Valley did not see many more outsiders for a decade afterward nbsp View of the Okanagan Valley from the hills above KelownaIn 1859 the first European settlement was established when Father Charles Pandosy led the making of an Oblate mission at Okanagan Mission now a neighbourhood of Kelowna The Fraser Canyon Gold Rush of 1858 eventually encouraged more settlement as some prospectors from the United States took the Okanagan Trail route on their way to the Fraser Canyon although at the height of the rush the American adventurers who used the route did not settle because of outright hostilities from the Syilx whom a few of the parties traversing the trail had harassed and brutalized A few staked claims around the South Okanagan and Similkameen valleys and found gold and copper in places with another trail from Fort Hope to newer goldfields at Rock Creek and Wild Horse Creek in the East Kootenay skirting the US border and crossing Osoyoos Lake at Osoyoos which was a customs post and also the location of the gold commissioner s office The Dewdney Trail surveyed and built by Edgar Dewdney was constructed to prevent trade in the region from going north south instead of remaining firmly under British control and also for military mobility purposes should the need arise In the decades following the gold rushes ranchers mostly on military land grants came to settle on Okanagan Lake notable ones included the Coldstream Ranch near Vernon the Ellis Ranch which formed the basis of the City of Penticton once subdivided and the Richter Ranch which continues in operation today in the mountains between the Town of Oliver and the Village of Keremeos in the Similkameen A mining industry began in the southern Okanagan region with Fairview now an empty benchland on the western side of Oliver the best known and largest of the boomtowns created in the later part of the 19th century More farmers as well as a small service industry came to meet the needs of the miners Fruit production is a hallmark of the Okanagan Valley today but the industry began with difficulty Commercial orcharding of apples was first tried there in 1892 but a series of setbacks prevented the major success of commercial fruit crops until the 1920s nbsp SS AberdeenUntil the 1930s the demand for shipping fruit and other goods did drive a need for ongoing operations of the sternwheeler steamboats that serviced Okanagan Lake operated by a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway linking the Southern Mainline with the original transcontinental mainline at Sicamous the SS Aberdeen from 1886 and then the SS Sicamous and SS Naramata from 1914 and others The Sicamous and Naramata survive as a tourist attraction on Okanagan Beach on the north side of Penticton the Sicamous serving both as a museum and also an event facility Other steamboats operated on Skaha Lake to the south of that city The club lounge and wheelhouse without any keel or hull of the SS Okanagan are in the same park as the Sicamous and Naramata While the last half century has grown several resource based enterprises in the region primarily forestry though mining had played an important role in earlier times The fastest growing industries in the Okanagan today are real estate tourism accommodations and services and retirement driven real estate development as well as the ripping up of orchards and their replacement by wineries and vineyards citation needed Favoured by its sunny climate lakes and winery attractions the valley has become a popular destination for vacationers and retirees The area also attracts seasonal fruit picking labourers primarily from Quebec and Mexico 13 14 Demographics editThe population of the region was 362 258 as of the 2016 Canadian census The three regional districts within the Okanagan and their populations were Central Okanagan 194 822 North Okanagan 83 022 and Okanagan Similkameen 84 354 The statistical figures below are based on the 2011 Canadian census 2016 Canadian census and the British Columbia Ministry of Communities Sport and Cultural Development 15 16 Municipalities edit Municipalities in the Okanagan Name Type Regional district Population 2016 Area 2011 Density 2011 Pop km2 IncorporatedArmstrong City North Okanagan 5 114 5 24 km2 2 0 sq mi 920 1913Coldstream District North Okanagan 10 648 67 25 km2 26 0 sq mi 155 6 1906Enderby City North Okanagan 2 964 4 26 km2 1 6 sq mi 690 1905Kelowna City Central Okanagan 127 380 211 82 km2 81 8 sq mi 553 8 1905Lake Country District Central Okanagan 12 922 122 19 km2 47 2 sq mi 95 8 1995Lumby Village North Okanagan 1 833 5 27 km2 2 0 sq mi 301 6 1955Oliver Town Okanagan Similkameen 4 928 4 88 km2 1 9 sq mi 990 1945Osoyoos Town Okanagan Similkameen 5 085 8 76 km2 3 4 sq mi 553 1 1946Peachland District Central Okanagan 5 428 15 75 km2 6 1 sq mi 330 2 1909Penticton City Okanagan Similkameen 33 761 42 10 km2 16 3 sq mi 780 9 1908Spallumcheen District North Okanagan 5 106 255 77 km2 98 8 sq mi 19 8 1892Summerland District Okanagan Similkameen 11 615 74 06 km2 28 6 sq mi 152 3 1906Vernon City North Okanagan 40 116 95 76 km2 37 0 sq mi 398 4 1892West Kelowna City Central Okanagan 32 655 123 51 km2 47 7 sq mi 250 1 2007Statistics Canada 2017 Armstrong CY Census subdivision British Columbia and Okanagan RD Census division British Columbia table Census Profile 2016 Census Statistics Canada Catalogue no 98 316 X2016001 Ottawa Released February 8 2017 http www12 statcan gc ca census recensement 2016 dp pd prof index cfm Lang E accessed April 16 2017 Designated places edit Designated places in the Okanagan Name Regional district Population 2011 Area 2011 Density 2011 Pop km2 Kaleden Okanagan Similkameen 1 224 4 32 km2 1 7 sq mi 283 6Naramata Okanagan Similkameen 1 647 7 99 km2 3 1 sq mi 206 2Olalla Okanagan Similkameen 401 0 49 km2 0 2 sq mi 826 3Unincorporated communities edit North Okanagan edit Cherryville Grindrod LavingtonCentral Okanagan edit Carr s Landing part of Lake Country Okanagan Centre part of Lake Country Okanagan Mission part of Kelowna Oyama part of Lake Country Lakeview Heights part of West Kelowna Rutland part of Kelowna Westbank part of West Kelowna Winfield part of Lake Country South Okanagan edit Faulder Fairview part of Oliver Shingle Creek Okanagan FallsIndian reserves edit The Indian reserves of the Okanagan first peoples also form identifiable communities Osoyoos Indian Band Penticton Indian Band Westbank First Nation Kelowna Okanagan Indian Band Vernon The Osoyoos and Westbank Indian Reserves have large non native populations because of band governed residential and commercial development on their lands The Osoyoos Indian Reserve leases large swathes of land to commercial vineyard developments and is where 40 of wine grapes used in the Okanagan come from Ghost towns edit Yankee FlatsSport editIce hockey is a popular sport in the region with WHL team Kelowna Rockets playing in the region s most populated city The Jr A teams are the Vernon Vipers West Kelowna Warriors and the Penticton Vees of the BCHL Penticton were the 2012 national Jr A champions after they ousted the Woodstock Slammers for the title Jr B sides Kelowna Chiefs Sicamous Eagles Summerland Steam Osoyoos Coyotes and North Okanagan Knights play in the KIJHL Osoyoos having won the 2010 11 KIJHL season Penticton and Summerland are both home to Chicago Blackhawks and Edmonton Oilers Defenceman Duncan Keith The area has been host to multiple junior hockey championships including the Memorial Cup in Kelowna in 2004 and RBC Cup in Vernon in 1990 then called the Centennial Cup and 2014 Kelowna is home to junior Canadian football team Okanagan Sun and Jr Baseball team Kelowna Falcons including the UBC Okanagan Heat university program Agriculture editSee also Racialization Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program and Racialization of Labour in the Okanagan The continued growth and operation of the agricultural industry in the Okanagan absolutely depends on the employment of temporary migrant workers 17 In 2009 there were 3 000 Mexican migrant labourers working in the Okanagan 17 See also editOkanagan Basin Water Board Okanagan Country Sunshine taxReferences edit 2016 British Columbia Census Total Population Results Archived from the original on 2019 07 24 Retrieved 2019 10 23 Population Estimates Province of British Columbia OHK e NAH gen The Main Report of the Consultative Board Canada British Columbia Okanagan Basin Agreement PDF Report Victoria British Columbia British Columbia Water Resources Service March 1974 p 11 Retrieved 2015 10 25 the region is both scenically attractive and climatically desirable and has consequently experienced a rapidly expanding resident and tourist population growth Bright William 2004 Native American placenames of the United States University of Oklahoma Press p 346 ISBN 978 0 8061 3598 4 Retrieved 16 September 2011 Tales of the Okanogans Collected by Mourning Dove Hines Donald M ed Ye Galleon Press Fairfield Washington 1976 ISBN 0 87770 173 3 p 15 Footnote prepared by L V McWhorter and Dean Guie possibly with material supplied by Mourning Dove Stuart S Holland 1976 Landforms of British Columbia A Physiographic Outline Bulletin 48 PDF Report Province of British Columbia pp 74 75 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 14 November 2015 Canada Environment and Climate Change 2013 09 25 Canadian Climate Normals 1981 2010 Station Data Climate Environment and Climate Change Canada climate weather gc ca Retrieved 2020 05 19 Canadian Climate Normals or Averages 1981 2010 Environment Canada Retrieved 2014 04 24 John B Theberge What s in a Name Osoyoos Desert Society Retrieved 18 February 2019 Ian R Walker 2004 Chapter 6 Climate Change the last 15000 years in the Okanagan In John D Greenough Murray A Roed ed Okanagan Geology Kelowna Geology Committee pp 51 62 ISBN 0 9699795 2 5 John D Greenough Murray A Roed ed 2004 Okanagan Geology Kelowna Geology Committee pp 71 83 ISBN 0 9699795 2 5 O Donoghue Annie 2001 Okanagan Dreams Documentary National Film Board of Canada Retrieved 2009 03 23 Couture Hugo 2009 LES MIGRATIONS SAISONNIERES DES QUEBECOIS DANS LES VALLEES FRUITIERES DE LA COLOMBIE BRITANNIQUE PDF Memoire Universite Laval Retrieved 2011 08 28 Population and dwelling counts for Canada provinces and territories and census subdivisions municipalities 2011 and 2006 censuses British Columbia Statistics Canada May 28 2012 Retrieved April 4 2013 British Columbia Regional Districts Municipalities Corporate Name Date of Incorporation and Postal Address XLS British Columbia Ministry of Communities Sport and Cultural Development Retrieved December 8 2012 a b Tomic Patricia Ricardo Trumper amp Luis L M Aguiar Housing Regulations and Living Conditions of Mexican Migrant Workers in the Okanagan Valley BC Canadian Issues 78 Link accessed April 5 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Okanagan nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Okanagan Okanagan Historical Society Reports A visual record of the Society s Annual Report from its first issue in 1926 from the UBC Library Digital Collections Digitized Okanagan History A repository of digitized photographs and records related to the history of B C s Southern Interior Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Okanagan amp oldid 1177172965, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.