Category Archives: Swim Drink Fish

2011 Best and Worst Beaches

With summer coming to a close, we decided to report on the best and worst beaches in BC. We base our report on coliform levels tested by BC health authorities all summer and reported in our free SWIM GUIDE app, known debris and litter from shoreline cleanups, isolated incidents (sewage/oil leaks or spills), and water sampling done by Fraser Riverkeeper’s Doug Chapman.

Let’s start with the bad news first. Our worst beaches in the lower mainland are easily Trout Lake and False Creek East–both consistently higher in coliform counts than provincial or federal guidelines recommend. Note that False Creek East technically is not considered a swimming beach or primary contact water body, but wading is allowed and immersion/contact with the water is inevitable for boaters and others. Airborne effects from coliforms may also affect people close to but not immersed in the water. Our Riverkeeper’s water sampling also shows toxic levels of PCBs, PAHs, and heavy metals in False Creek East.

False Creek photo credit: Suzanne Rushton

This year, Fraser Riverkeeper is also doing our BC Rivers Day cleanup at False Creek East, due in part to the fact “Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup” described it as being a rocky shoreline with a large amount of medical and personal hygiene items. We all know that litter on a beach may make its way into our marine environment. Cleaning up shorelines helps to prevent further plastic and other debris from entering our oceans and amassing in our oceans.

The annual Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup collects statistics each year for trash collected in all of its cleanups on BC Rivers Day. Their recent report showed that three Metro-Vancouver parks were in the list of the most trash-infested shorelines. They list BC’s most littered beach as Kanaka Creek Regional Park, where volunteers collected 3,200 kg per kilometers of trash last year. The Kanaka Creek Watershed is also the site of Fraser Riverkeeper’s first Riverwatcher project; we are helping to map the watershed and are working with Riverwatcher Larry McMillan, from Maple Ridge, to find solutions for cleaning up the watershed, which feeds into the Fraser River. The report also listed Tom Hopkins Ravine Park in Surrey and Brownsville Bar Park along the Fraser in Surrey, in the top four worst beaches for litter in Canada.

We would also have to include in our report of “worst beaches” the Pegleg Gravel Bar beach in Chilliwack. For the past four years, Fraser Riverkeeper has cleaned up the bar on Earth Day, and over time we have collected 26 tonnes of scrap metal and other debris left on the bar. Our yearly collection outweighs any beach cleanup reported by the Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup, but is also due to pre-freshet trash exposed on the bar. We should note that other bars along the river are most likely just as littered, but we do not have data on them.

Another beach worth mentioning is White Rock Beach, which was closed in late July due to a sewage spill. A blocked sewer line on Marine Drive caused sewage to overflow and end up in the nearby swimming area. Crescent Beach was also closed temporarily due to a sewage leak. And finally, Maple Beach in Belcarra has not been cleaned up completely since the Kinder Morgan oil leak in 2007. Fraser Health Authority noted that they found oil there from both the 2007 leak and an earlier leak from the 1960s.

Now on to the good news! Vancouver has some great beaches that are consistently very low in coliforms (less than 30cfu/100 ml water). The most consistently low-count beaches are Whytecliff Park, Dundarave Beach, and Stanley Park’s Third Beach. Iona Beach Park also scored very low each week, but it’s in close proximity to the Iona Wastewater Treatment Plant, where there are potentially toxic discharges into the surrounding water. This facility treats sewage from Vancouver, the University Endowment Lands, and parts of Burnaby and Richmond before discharging it through a 7.5 km, deep-sea outfall into The Strait of Georgia.

Third Beach photo credit: Suzanne Rushton

Most beaches were open all summer, with only a few closed due to high coliform counts, including Elk Lake on Vancouver Island and Okanagan Lake Beach in the interior. These beaches were only posted for a week and later were fine.

Also, we’ve spent part of the summer going directly to beaches in Vancouver to talk with people and promote SWIM GUIDE. Our beach team reported that English Bay and Kitsilano Beach have had more litter than usual, especially during this late season (i.e. warm) August weather we’ve been having, with higher bather-loads than earlier this summer.

We encourage everyone to get to know their clean, swimmable water and enjoy the rest of the summer!

Swim Drink Fish Music

SDFM is an online music club where musicians and environmental advocates come together to support Canadian Waterkeeper groups. Fraser Riverkeeper awards SDFM memberships occasionally as perks for donations or at events, such as the Gord Downie concert last fall in Vancouver.

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club is an online music and audio experience developed by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper in collaboration with other Waterkeeper organizations across Canada.

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club brings together artists, activists, and citizens just like you who care about clean water. By celebrating the Club’s exclusive and rare music, you are contributing to the fight for swimmable, drinkable, fishable water in your community.

Your annual membership fee gets you access to the website for one year from the time you first login. You can download audio tracks and play the music on any personal device you choose, even after your membership expires.

New Featured Tracks are uploaded about once a month. You’ll get at least twelve of these exclusive songs in a year. These are songs created by artists who care about clean water for you! You’ll also get rare tracks from indie artists about once a week. That’s more than 50 extra tracks this year!

Our catalogue of tracks from the Club’s predecessor, a compilation CD called “At the Barricades: Volume 1″, is also available for your listening pleasure. The artists on this album were the first to speak up for clean water and are the founding members of the Swim Drink Fish Music Club. They are: Broken Social Scene, Sarah Harmer, Bill Frisell, Boi Brasileiro & Scotty Hard, Chris Brown, Kate Fenner, Stars, Dave Bidini, and Tony Scherr. Also found on the compilation are songs from Bruce Cockburn, Pete Seeger, Mads Mouritz, Gordon Downie & Atom Egoyan, and Sex Mob.

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club also gives you new spoken word tracks every week. These range from 2 minutes to half and hour and will help connect you to the people and issues at the forefront of the clean water cause.

You’ll find episodes of Living At the Barricades, the weekly radio program produced by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and broadcast around southern Ontario. If you like this show, we encourage you to subscribe to the podcast, available via the iTunes Music Store or the show website.

Many of our Music Club members are frequent guests on the show, and we think you’ll like it.

Your annual membership fee helps Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and participating Waterkeeper organizations, including Fraser Riverkeeper and Ottawa Riverkeeper. We’ll make every effort to ensure that funds are directed to the participating Waterkeeper organization closest to you.

Every song has its story. Thanks for taking part.

Swim Drink Fish Interactive Map

Welcome to Fraser Riverkeeper’s interactive map, an educational tool that allows you to find the best places to swim, drink, and fish in British Columbia. The first phase of this map concentrates on beaches in the Fraser River basin, and parallels the launch of the Swim Guide, with the Fish and Drink stages to be come later.

This water quality tool shows fun places to visit, such as parks, historical locations, fishing locations, and beaches. The map also shows a few areas of potential water quality degradation: major industry, aquaculture, combined sewer outfalls, wastewater treatment plants, and more. The map is not comprehensive, and though we will continue expanding the map in time, we have already made a big head start in the Fraser River basin and mapped all the beaches tested regularly for coliforms and/or E.coli by BC’s health authorities. The sample results, if known, are included in the description of the beaches. Please all read our Swim Drink Fish FAQ for more detailed information on the state of our water.

Warning: Please wait a few seconds for the map to completely load before clicking on a point of interest.


Click here to pop out of the frame.

 

Simply check the box next to one or more points of interest or layer controls that you’d like to view. Uncheck a box to disable viewing for that particular area. You can scroll with your mouse wheel to zoom in or out, and click and drag the map around.

Tony Dekker’s “Ballad of a Fisherman’s Wife”

This week on Swim Drink Fish Music, Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and our Canadian partner groups on the Fraser and Ottawa Rivers launched the newest song in our music club. This is an important one.

http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com

The song is called Ballad of a Fisherman’s Wife, and it was inspired by the situation in the Gulf. The group Great Lake Swimmers (awesome name) led by Tony Dekker wrote and recorded the song JUST for us.

Here’s Tony’s quote:

“Great Lake Swimmers’ “Ballad Of A Fisherman’s Wife” was written after hearing, with great dismay, news about the oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Most striking and heart-felt to me were the sentiments of outrage from those who made their living in and along these waters, especially the fishermen, and especially their wives. I wanted to comment on this ongoing crisis from that very specific viewpoint,” says singer-songwriter Tony Dekker.

Please check out the song at http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com. It’s an incredible honour to see artists from one area stepping up to support the issues of Waterkeepers in other areas.

Ohbijou as Feature Artist

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club Announces Ohbijou as Feature Artist

Indie-pop sensation donates “Tour Song” to support clean water

http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com/

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club is an online music and audio experience @ http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com developed by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper in collaboration with other Waterkeeper organizations across Canada. Bringing together artists, activists, and citizens who care about clean water, the Swim Drink Fish Music Club invites people to become members and celebrate the Club’s exclusive and rare music while at the same time contributing to the fight for swimmable, drinkable, fishable water in their community.

New featured exclusive songs are created by artists who care about clean water and uploaded once a month. Artists such as Broken Social Scene, Sarah Harmer, Bill Frisell, Gord Downie, Chris Brown, Kate Fenner, Stars, Dave Bidini, Bruce Cockburn and Tony Scherr all founding members of the club.

Artists confirmed for upcoming features include, Apostle of Hustle, Ghost Bees, Tony Dekker of Great Lake Swimmers, Holy Fuck, Land of Talk, Matt & Jill Barber, Neko Case, and Wintersleep as well as artists such as Brent Randall, Brian Borcherdt, Green Go, Immaculate Machine, and Julie Fader.

This month’s featured artist is Ohbijou:

“We are very proud to be a part of the Swim Drink Fish Music Club, and to support the good work done by a growing number of dedicated Waterkeepers in Canada.  Tour Song was inspired by our first trip as a band to the east coast, and a late night dip in the Bay of Fundy.  It will forever remind us of summer adventuring and enjoying the good and golden things that are so easily taken for granted in this world.  We are very pleased to have Tour Song counted among the many wonderful songs available to SDFM Club Members, who generously support the vital cause of preserving and restoring the heath of our lakes and waterways, and all things near and dear.”

“Ohbijou’s ‘Tour Song’ is a perfect complement to the Swim Drink Fish Music Club” says Mark Mattson, Waterkeeper & President of Lake Ontario Waterkeeper. “It captures the spirit of travel, of the sea, and of moving towards a place worth being. That’s the life of the musician as well as the life of an environmentalist.”

In addition to the featured songs, Swim Drink Fish Music Club membership provides other great material:

- new bonus tracks from Lameck Williams vs Harbour Sharks available now

- additional bonus tracks coming in May from Lady Hayes and The Mermaids

- episodes of Living At the Barricades, the weekly radio program produced by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and broadcast around southern Ontario. Many of the Music Club members are frequent guests on the show.

- a made-for-Canada edition of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s Ring of Fire program, broadcast on Air America radio in the United States.

The $10 annual membership fee allows unlimited access to the website for one year. Members can download the songs and play them on any portable music device. Plus event invitations. Plus more.

Every song has its story.

Swim Drink Fish Music Club: Ohbijou as Feature Artist

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club Announces Ohbijou as Feature Artist

Indie-pop sensation donates “Tour Song” to support clean water

http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com/

The Swim Drink Fish Music Club is an online music and audio experience @ http://www.swimdrinkfishmusic.com developed by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper in collaboration with other Waterkeeper organizations across Canada. Bringing together artists, activists, and citizens who care about clean water, the Swim Drink Fish Music Club invites people to become members and celebrate the Club’s exclusive and rare music while at the same time contributing to the fight for swimmable, drinkable, fishable water in their community.

New featured exclusive songs are created by artists who care about clean water and uploaded once a month. Artists such as Broken Social Scene, Sarah Harmer, Bill Frisell, Gord Downie, Chris Brown, Kate Fenner, Stars, Dave Bidini, Bruce Cockburn and Tony Scherr all founding members of the club.

Artists confirmed for upcoming features include, Apostle of Hustle, Ghost Bees, Tony Dekker of Great Lake Swimmers, Holy Fuck, Land of Talk, Matt & Jill Barber, Neko Case, and Wintersleep as well as artists such as Brent Randall, Brian Borcherdt, Green Go, Immaculate Machine, and Julie Fader.

This month’s featured artist is Ohbijou:

“We are very proud to be a part of the Swim Drink Fish Music Club, and to support the good work done by a growing number of dedicated Waterkeepers in Canada.  Tour Song was inspired by our first trip as a band to the east coast, and a late night dip in the Bay of Fundy.  It will forever remind us of summer adventuring and enjoying the good and golden things that are so easily taken for granted in this world.  We are very pleased to have Tour Song counted among the many wonderful songs available to SDFM Club Members, who generously support the vital cause of preserving and restoring the heath of our lakes and waterways, and all things near and dear.”

“Ohbijou’s ‘Tour Song’ is a perfect complement to the Swim Drink Fish Music Club” says Mark Mattson, Waterkeeper & President of Lake Ontario Waterkeeper. “It captures the spirit of travel, of the sea, and of moving towards a place worth being. That’s the life of the musician as well as the life of an environmentalist.”

In addition to the featured songs, Swim Drink Fish Music Club membership provides other great material:

- new bonus tracks from Lameck Williams vs Harbour Sharks available now

- additional bonus tracks coming in May from Lady Hayes and The Mermaids

- episodes of Living At the Barricades, the weekly radio program produced by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper and broadcast around southern Ontario. Many of the Music Club members are frequent guests on the show.

- a made-for-Canada edition of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s Ring of Fire program, broadcast on Air America radio in the United States.

The $10 annual membership fee allows unlimited access to the website for one year. Members can download the songs and play them on any portable music device. Plus event invitations. Plus more.

Every song has its story.