© 2011 Bob Bright, All Rights Reserved.
In 2009 the Island Berry Company purchased Panama Flats with the intention of planting blueberries. (They subsequently decided that the property was better suited to cranberry production, though this didn't substantially alter their plans for "improving" it.) They undertook to build a system of berms around and across the field, in an effort to limit the seasonal flooding and prepare it for perennial planting. Evidently, though, they underestimated the water retention capability of the underlying clay subsoil. The berm was completed in the fall of 2010. Add a dollop of unusually wet Pacific Northwest winter weather, and the result is what you see here: the berms which were intended to limit flooding of the property have in fact limited its natural drainage, creating a small lake.
Overall, the project is a nice illustration of the limits on our ability to control nature in predictable ways. Panama Flats has now been purchased by the Municipality of Saanich for the sum of $2.4 million. They intend to insure that the property remains available as a floodplain in order to moderate water flow in the region, but beyond that no firm decisions have been made about potential uses. The seagulls are lobbying hard to keep the berms intact.
USA-Canada / Canada-British Columbia
Lat: 48° 28' 25.69" N
Long: 124° 25' 3.95" W
Precision is: High. Pinpoints the exact spot.