Jeff Shields RE/MAX Anchor Realty serving Qualicum Beach, Parksville, French Creek, Coombs of the Oceanside area on Vancouver Island British Columbia

Jeffery Shields - REALTOR

RE/MAX Anchor Realty
(Independently Owned and Operated)
113 West 2nd Avenue, PO Box 1890
Qualicum Beach, BC V9K 1T5 Canada
Cell: 250-240-5021
Bus: 250-752-2466
Fax: 250-752-2433
Toll Free: 800-668-3622

Qualicum Beach, British Columbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Town of Qualicum Beach,
British Columbia
Coordinates: 49°21'N, 124°26'W
Country Canada
Province British Columbia
Regional District Regional District of Nanaimo, British Columbia
Established Village:1943
  Town:1983
Government
 - Governing Body Qualicum Beach Town Council
Area
 - Town 18.00 sq km  (4.80  sq mi)
Population (2006)
 - Town 8,502
 - Density 472.4/sq.km (1,440.0/sq mi)
Time zone Pacific Standard (PST) (UTC-8)
Website: Town of Qualicum Beach Website

Qualicum Beach is a town located in the Regional District of Nanaimo, British Columbia. As of the 2006 census, the town had a total population of 8,502.

Located on the Strait of Georgia on the eastern coast of Vancouver Island in the shadow of Mount Arrowsmith, the community has been a popular tourist destination for residents of Victoria and Vancouver as well as a retirement community. It is served by the Island Highway (the main North-South highway on the Island) and by a daily train. The community is dotted with rental cottages along the coastline. It has the oldest average population in Canada.

History

Qualicum Beach, an attractive seaside town on the east coast of Vancouver Island, began as a lumbering, summer resort and retirement area.

The name "Qualicum" comes from a Coast Salish term that means "where the dog salmon run."

In May 1856 Hudson's Bay Company explorer Adam Grant Horne (b 1831, Edinburgh, Scotland; d August 10, 1901 Nanaimo, BC), with a group of aboriginal guides, found a land route across Vancouver Island from the Qualicum River to the Alberni Inlet. He also discovered the Haida massacre of local Salish natives. Horne Lake is named after him.

In 1864, the botanist and explorer, Dr. Robert Brown lead a group which explored the area. A road was brought to Parksville in 1886 and extended to Qualicum in 1894. The E and N Railway reached Parksville in 1910 and Qualicum in 1914. H.E. Beasley, a railway official, sponsored the creation of The Merchants Trust and Trading Company which organized the original layout of the town and built the golf links and a hotel in 1913.

A private boys' residential school, the Qualicum College was established in 1935 by Robert Ivan Knight. The school grew through the 1960s but attendance diminished and it closed in 1970. The structure exists today as a hotel and its playing fields have been turned into a housing subdivision.

Doukhobor settlers established a communal colony in the adjoining Hilliers farming district from 1946 to 1952.

Qualicum Beach was officially incorporated as a village on May 5, 1942 and was changed to town status on January 7, 1983. The area is growing quickly with new suburbs and major new highway. Currently, it is a favourite retirement and golfing community.

Transportation

Highway 19A, known as the Oceanside route or the Old Island Highway, runs the length of the town along the shore line of the Strait of Georgia. The modern 4 lane Inland Island Highway, (Highway 19), passes nearby. The Qualicum Beach exit is also its junction with Highway 4, which runs through Cathedral Grove to Port Alberni and on to Tofino, Ucluelet, Bamfield and the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve on the west coast of the Island. KD Air offers daily service to Vancouver and other locations from the Qualicum Beach Airport. The E&N Railway offers daily passenger service, departing Victoria each morning, stopping in Qualicum Beach en route to Courtenay and returning to Victoria in the afternoon. The town has no marina or harbour but does offer a launching area for trailered boats. French Creek Harbour, is 5 kilometres (3 mi) south on Highway 19A.

Demographics

According to the 2001 Canadian census, Qualicum Beach had 6,920 residents living in 3,509 households. Qualicum Beach residents' median age of 58.1 years, the highest in all of Canada with 38.0% of residents are over 65 years old, which is much more than the 13.6% province-wide average. Protestantism (51%) and Catholicism (14%) are the dominant religions. About 2.6% of residents reported themselves as being visible minorities (significantly lower than the 21% provincial average). The population density is 556.0 people per square kilometre (1,440/sq mi). Provincial government estimates put the population at 8,807 in 2005.

Geography and climate

According to Statistics Canada, the town has a total area of 12.45 square kilometers (4.80 sq mi) as of 2001.

Qualicum Beach is located on the Nanaimo lowlands, a narrow plain which lies between the Georgia Basin to the east and the Vancouver Island Ranges to the west. Landforms were significantly affected by the most recent advance of glacial ice which occurred about 18,000 to 19,000 years ago.

The area has cool wet winters with 80 to 85% of the precipitation falling between October and April. The average annual precipitation is 1,314 millimetres (51.73 in). Mean daily temperature range from 1°C to 3°C (34°F-37°F) in January with cloud and rain from north Pacific air masses dominating the winter weather. High pressure ridges over the mainland can block easterly air flows bringing snow and freezing temperatures during winter but do not persist as moist westerly winds bring above freezing temperatures. North Pacific high pressure cells influence summer weather which is warm, dry and cloudless. July and August have mean precipitation of 17 millimetres (0.67 in) and mean maximum temperatures of 25°C (77°F). Although winter precipitation results in surplus moisture at the start of the growing season, summer, particularly July and August, are drought prone. With the longest freeze free days in Canada, at 180 days per year, the Nanaimo lowlands area is favourable for agriculture. The area is within the small Coastal Douglas Fir biogeographic zone which is considered to be the finest climate in Canada. The Vancouver Island Ranges, an inland range mountains which includes nearby Mount Arrowsmith, shadows rainfall. This biogeographic area can support Garry Oak and Arbutus which do not exist elsewhere in Canada. Wildlife include: black-tailed deer, Roosevelt elk, black bear, and Cougar; although with the presence of human population deer, racoons and other rodents remain prevalent. Soil types in the area, classified as Orthic Dystric Brunisols, vary from marginal to unsuitable for agriculture as they tend to be gravelly loam with fertility limited by aridity and stoniness but are suitable for urban use.

Copyright (c) Jeffery Shields.
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