Saanich News, July 05, 2013

Page 1

Bombing foiled

Former Victoria man charged with terrorist plot Page A3

NEWS: Clay court debate delayed to fall /A3 ARTS: Brighton Beach at Blue Bridge /A6 SPORTS: Top athletes at UVic for track classic /A12

SAANICHNEWS Friday, July 5, 2013

One colonist’s trash is another man’s treasure, given a century or so. Hunt around long enough in the Gorge Waterway and antique bottles can emerge from the muck. For Reece Hygh, the Gorge remains a treasure trove of old handmade bottles and clay jugs produced in breweries and factories dating to the earliest days of Fort Victoria. “The Gorge is one of the first places people partied. For Fort Victoria, the British colonists drank there and would toss in their bottles,” Hygh said. “You can still find really old bottles, embossed pop and beer bottles. We’ve found bottles marked ‘poison’. We’ve found U.S. Navy mustard bottles that date to 1858, dried mustard bottles. That is cool.” Probing the grasses and mud using a rake and a snorkel, Hygh and friend Chris Hill recently found a shard of a bottle stamped with ‘VB’ for Victoria Brewery, which is circa 1868. That early brewery first used water from Swan Lake and then moved into downtown Victoria. They’ve found ginger beer and pop bottles from Alex Phillips, the first bottler of soda pop in Western Canada, and from Christopher

Morely, who had his factory in Waddington Alley in a building since refurbished into condos. The practice of hunting through silt and muck is called mudlarking, and dates back two centuries to impoverished Brits who scavenged the shores of the Thames River. Hygh, 54, has collected antique bottles for 40 years and enjoys the thrill of treasure hunting and its connection to local history. “I’m a history buff. I like relics like embossed bottles from Victoria or Nanaimo or Vancouver or San Francisco,” he said, noting that Alex Phillips first imported his bottles from San Francisco. “I do this as a hobby. We are the keepers of relics. We keep them for a while, then pass them on.” He normally hunts for old bottles “above the falls,” otherwise known as west of the Tillicum Bridge. Many sections of the Gorge were popular for swimming and socializing in the early 1900s, before the era of industry and pollution. “I walk the Gorge a couple times per year,” said Hygh, who lives in Nanaimo. “Other collectors walk it every day and still find stuff. Some people go in the water with (fishing) boots and wetsuits. That’s not for me. I scrounge around along the side.” --with reporting from Sharon Tiffin

Connected to More

®

18 months for man who defrauded seniors

Century-old bottles reflect long tradition of brewing beer in Victoria News staff

250 744 7034

www.graymatters.ca

Watch for breaking news at WWW.VICNEWS.Com

Relics of history remain hidden in Gorge waterway Edward Hill

Gray Rothnie

Sharon Tiffin/News staff

Reece Hygh holds a Victoria Brewery beer bottle shard from the 1880s he found in the Gorge. Hygh and friend Chris Hill use snorkles and a rake to find the old bottles buried under silt and grasses. He also found a black and a blue glass bottles from the same era, when bottles were made by hand and imported from England.

A man who bilked tens of thousands of dollars from seniors around the region pleaded guilty to eight counts related to fraud and was handed 18 months in jail last Thursday. Kevin Thomas Gordon, 38, of Victoria, scammed seniors by going doorto-door and offering power-washing, painting or driveway resealing services. Among the victims was an 88-yearold Saanich man, whose credit and debit cards were stolen by Gordon, who charged upwards of $15,000 on the cards. He defrauded an 85-yearold woman in Saanich for about $900 for pressure-washing services. He also scammed an Oak Bay resident out of $1,220 for driveway resealing that he never started. A joint investigation in 2012 by the Oak Bay, Saanich and Central Saanich police determined Gordon was responsible for a series of similar frauds across Greater Victoria. He pleaded guilty to two charges of theft from incidents in Colwood; fraud over $5,000, using a stolen credit card and fraud under $5,000 from incidents in Saanich; and three charges of fraud under $5,000 from incidents in Oak Bay, Victoria and Saanichton. “This is a file that our detective section took an active interest in from the start,” said Oak Bay Police Chief Mark Fisher. “In this instance the offender actually took the victim to the bank to get cash from her account before doing the work. This type of exploitation of the elderly is despicable.” In Victoria provincial court, Gordon received an 18-month sentence, and was ordered to make restitution upon his eventual release, as a condition of the court imposed probation. editor@saanichnews.com

PERSONAL REAL ESTATE CORPORATION

Marketing Homes Since 1985 with Trust ... Service ... Integrity Prime Building Lot - Gordon Head

$409,900

Recently Updated 5 Bed/3 Bath Home - Northridge Excellent Investment Property or First Home - Mt. Tolmie

MLS#318716

RE/MAX Camosun’s #1 Realtor

www.mcmullenhomes.ca

$505,000 MLS#323775

$519,900 MLS#324889

Thinking of selling? Call 250-881-8225


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.