Gazette See student scholarship essays, p. 12
Ente r our ba by ! c o nte st
NORTH ISLAND
Publications Mail Agreement No. 391275
49th Year No. 17
April 24, 2014
• Diamond dog
‘Elvis’ a hit while headlining sold-out diamond dinner. Page 4
• Ears to you
North Island youth treated to egg hunts on Easter. Page 9
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Mammoth returns ‘home’
Gazette staff COAL HARBOUR—After a hundred years and thousands of kilometres, the Hornsby has finally found its permanent home in Coal Harbour. Last week, a pair of forklifts and an excavator eased the multiton Mammoth off a trailer and eased it to the ground behind the Coal Harbour Heritage Hall, currently under refurbishment with the aim of creating a community museum around the historic tractor. “It was a one-of-a-kind machine; it was steam tractor, one of the first tracked vehicles in existence,” explained Regional District Director, Area C, Andrew Hory. Originally exported from England as a prototype in 1910, the Hornsby worked in the Yukon before coming to the North Island. “It did work in Quatsino Sound for a few years, and ended up being abandoned out by Apple Bay,” said Hory. “It sat there for
See page 4 ‘Community hall’
Andrew Hory climbs up to survey the Hornsby Mammoth while Steve Carlisle inspects the track A O’Toole as the gigantic steam crawler arrives in Coal Harbour last Wednesday.
Land farmed fish go to market • The winner is...
Port Hardy Minor Hockey hosts AGM, awards event. Page 11 Opinion Page 6 Letters Page 7 Sports Page 11 Classifieds Page 13-15
Gerry Alfred, left, and Mike Jolliffe process Atlantic salmon during the first market harvest at the Kuterra closed-containJ.R. Rardon ment fish farm south of Port McNeill Saturday.
media looked on, Cranmer gave a welcome in English and Kwakwala and then sang a Kwakwala celebration song before presenting the ceremonial first fish to Safeway, Sobeys executive Renée Hopfner. “The effects of conventional farming on the marine environment are very real to us,” Cranmer said. “This enterprise shows the way forward for the industry. It also fits with our economic plans and with our history as a fishing and trading people.” Kuterra announced late last
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Gazette staff RICHMOND—The ‘Namgis First Nation created its land-based fish farm with the idea of making a positive environmental difference while raising Atlantic salmon for market. So it was perhaps fitting that Kuterra unveiled its first harvest on Earth Day. ‘Namgis Chief Bill Cranmer joined representatives of Safeway, Sobeys Inc. and Albion Fisheries Tuesday at Albion’s Richmond headquarters to present the first fish from its closed-containment farm, located just south of Port McNeill. As other visitors, guests and
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