We have enjoyed the Six Mile area for quite a few years, orienteering, running, and hiking through the hills. In the middle of the area are 3 smaller lakes. The road starts just past the Tobiano turn-off. This gravel road is the old Trans Canada Highway which used to go up through the hills over to the Tunwka Road and down to Savona. When the Six Mile bypass was cut through the bluff, the old road was still there and today we can see paved sections, but most of the asphalt is breaking up. Then, Ducks Unlimited dammed and raised the level of Pat Lake and the Slough and sections of the road are now under water so rough side roads were created by users.
Much (most) of the land is owned by the Haywood Farmer families of Indian Gardens Ranch who have been generous in allowing anglers (and others) to continue to use the area for non-motorized recreation.
The Indian Gardens Ranch was one of the properties built up by Johnny Wilson, the “Cattle King” who also had properties near Walhachin, Six Mile Point, Westwold, Cache Creek, and Copper Creek. He married a Lillooet Indian girl who subsequently died and by about 1885 he married a girl from the Indian Gardens Ranch and had 3 children.
Wilson became a rich and influential man in his life and was well respected. He died in 1904 in a buggy accident and the Indian property was divided among his family. All the Savona properties were taken over by his wife Nancy and their children. According to Peggy Haywood Farmer, an Argentinean family named Hemstock bought the Indian Gardens Ranch from the Wilson’s daughter and George Haywood Farmer bought the land from the Hemstocks.
George Haywood Farmer was born in 1915 in New Westminster and moved with his family to the Interior of B.C. In 1932, they moved to the present location of the Indian Gardens Ranch, south of Savona. By 1935, he was a full time rancher and cowboy. Conditions were often hard in the early days. George and a partner at one time moved 50 head of cattle from Taylor Lake to Savona in -45 degree F temperatures. George married Peggy Higginson in 1942 and they raised six children together over the next 60 years. George was a leader in the ranching community, serving on the BC Cattlemen’s Association, 4H, and the Savona Community Association until his death in 2003 and has since been inducted into the BC Cowboy Hall of Fame. Peggy has been involved with the community in Savona, the Girl Guides (she has her 55 year pin and a lifetime membership), Sunday School, and the Savona Elementary School PTA.
Peggy recalled some of their years at Indian Gardens.
“We were snowed in every year by November. We had to get all of our supplies in by the fall. When I had my first baby, I had to travel by sledge down to Savona and take the train to Kamloops a month early just to make sure. George did manage to get the car through the snow the day was she was born and was there with me.
In the summer, we moved the whole family up to the summer range near Guichon Creek (3 miles west of Tunkwa Lake). We took the children, chickens, cows, ducks, horses, and cattle and whatever we needed to the high country. The travelling was hard, but our life was good. Later on, this did make it easier to backpack with the kids on camping trips.
We have been good caretakers of the land. We have preserved water. We reintroduced beavers back to the Tunkwa-Leighton Lakes area after trappers cleared them out. We planted clover in the high country for forage. We established water holes wherever we could. We have tried to get along with all the groups who have an interest in the area. We have set up and allowed access to Balancing Rock and Six Mile Lake and have worked with Ducks Unlimited. Our family continues to work the land and we have been good neighbors.” (written by the another for another publication)
We call the easternmost pond “Turtle Lake” because western painted turtles could be seen sunning themselves on logs on a sunny day. On this last visit to the pond, the pond levels had been increased and no logs were in sight, but a number of dabbling ducks were enjoying the still waters.
Pat Lake (Six Mile) is only a 2km paddle around the shoreline so I did it twice, changing direction after the first loop. The lake is surrounded by grasslands and has some marshy shallows. The water was clear and small fish could be seen in the pond weeds. This is a quiet spot for an afternoon paddling retreat.
“Launch quietly without a splash, turn the paddle and dip and cycle the stroke with rhythm, soundlessly cutting the rippled flatwater, close to the shoreline, observing, not intruding. Glide toward wildlife, camera ready, expectant, but never intrusive. See the pond reeds, aquatic plants, insects, and small fish, only known by silence and wonder. Allow yourself to become part of the marine ecology, just a small wave on the surface of the lake.” (das)