Storm Bay (British Columbia)


Storm Bay is a bay in Sechelt Inlet of the Pacific Ocean, near the mouth of Narrows Inlet. It is accessible by boat or seaplane.
Since the mid-1960s Storm Bay has been home to a number of notable artists.

Ecology

Storm Bay is in the Coastal Douglas-fir Biogeoclimactic Zone of British Columbia, which consists of wet, mossy, dense temperate rain forests.

History

shíshálh nation

Storm Bay has been inhabited by the shíshálh nation, specifically the téwánkw sub-group of ?álhtulich, stl'ixwim, and skúpa, for around eight millennia. Existing shell middens indicate ancient and long-term human habitation.

Early twentieth century

Storm Bay was logged intensively and homesteaded early in the twentieth century.
In 1907, the Sechelt Brick & Tile Company Limited built a small brickworks in Storm Bay which closed after two years due to the poor quality of the clay. The Canadian government built a large brick plant in 1921 as a "returned men's project"; it too was short-lived.

1960s and 1970s to present day

Many people loosely associated with the intentional community movement settled in Storm Bay during the late 1960s and early 1970s, including the notable artists Kate Craig David Rimmer, Karen Jamieson, Hank Bull, and Glenn Lewis.
In 1980 a Royal Canadian Mounted Police member from the Sechelt detachment could name only Storm Bay when asked about extant communes in the Sunshine Coast region. Its inhabitants however eschew the word commune, and refer to Storm Bay as a neighbourhood.