Love Your Lake

The Southern Interior Land Trust (SILT) has, for over 30 years, worked in the southern interior of British Columbia to protect and preserve habitat for all living things. Natural lake shorelines, with their ribbon of native plants benefit wildlife and animal movement; protect properties from flood and erosion; and support ecological processes essential to clean, drinkable, swimmable, fishable water. Purchasing lakeshore for conservation is prohibitively expensive, so SILT is exploring other ways to spark widespread voluntary care of lakeshores to benefit all living things, including people.

In 2019, SILT partnered with Watersheds Canada and the Canadian Wildlife Federation to pilot the highly successful Love Your Lake (LYL) program for the first time in British Columbia. SILT’s 3-year LYL project provided every lakeshore landowner on Okanagan Lake in Summerland, Skaha Lake, Vaseux Lake, Tuc-el-nuit Lake, Twin Lakes, and Trout Lake near Twin Lakes with access to a free, private evaluation of their shoreline. Every report includes property-specific voluntary suggestions for how to reduce flood and erosion risk and improve lake health while still protecting the waterfront view. These reports ‘run with the land’;  landowners may obtain their shoreline property report by visiting the Love your Lake Report Download Page  or contact SILT at office@siltrust.ca

Over the three years, trained project staff assessed almost 900 (all) shoreline parcels on the lakes listed from a boat on a property-by-property basis using a standardized protocol and data sheet. Following the assessments, each shoreline property owner was sent a personal online access code needed to download their free report. Each owner’s report contains information about the state of their unique shoreline and suggestions of voluntary actions they can take, specifically tailored to their shoreline, to improve the health of their lake. In addition, the LYL Program prepared Lake Summary Reports, available to everyone. These reports summarize the data over the entire lake and identify community values and stewardship opportunities applicable to that lake.

I believe this is a great project to help home owners on Skaha Lake look at ways they can contribute to the lake’s health. I appreciate that the funder(s) have seen the value of this project and supported it, particularly given the number of residences on the shores of Skaha Lake. I look forward to receiving the report on our property along with any recommendations and working with our neighbours to improve and enhance the lakeshore. We have tried to do things already such as encouraging reed growth and building a dock with a flow thru surface to let light through the surface to the water. Any additional suggestions regarding the foreshore, plants, etc. will be helpful. It was also great to receive information about the study in advance and to have the opportunity to talk with the individuals while they were in their boat taking pictures.

  • R.C., Kaleden 

All information contained in the individual shoreline property reports and lake summary reports is non-regulatory. All organizations involved in the LYL program take privacy issues very seriously.

As part of the project, SILT also encouraged several shoreline property owners and public property managers to implement some of their LYL suggestions to create demonstration sites where their neighbours and others can see how lakeshore restoration works. SILT and the LYL Program hope that the benefits of this project will continue on the lakes already assessed, and be carried to other lakes in future. Follow the links below to see SILT’s annual project reports.

Funding and other support for this project was provided by the South Okanagan Conservation Fund administered by the Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen, the Canadian Wildlife Federation, Watersheds Canada, SILT, and other contributors.


 

Love Your Lake Project Reports

Click the Logo to open report

Useful Resources & Links for Shoreline Property Owners

 

Provincial Shoreline Management Information:

Dock Rules and Applications: General Permissions Available or contact Front Counter BC 1-877-855-3222
Shoreline Development: Requirements under Riparian Areas Regulation
Septic Systems: Installing, managing and maintaining them
Retaining walls and erosion control structures: Regulations under Water Sustainability Act and Approval for Work in and about a Stream.

Government Contacts:

Province of BC, Best Management Practices
Regional District of Okanagan Similkameen 101 Martin Street, Penticton, BC Canada V2A 5J9 – Toll Free in BC and Alberta: 1-877-610-3737 Phone: 250-492-0237
District of SummerlandDistrict of Summerland Location: 13211 Henry Avenue, Summerland BC Canada; Mailing Address: Box 159, Summerland BC V0H 1Z0 Phone: 250-494-6451

Organizations to help with Water issues, Shoreline Stewardship and Conservation:

Vaseux Lake Stewardship Association
Osoyoos Lake Water Quality Society
Vaseux Migratory Bird Sanctuary: Information about the sanctuary, and restrictions related to public use of the area.
South Okanagan Similkameen Conservation Program resources for landowners https://soscp.org/caring-for-your-space/
Okanagan Similkameen Stewardship Society: ideas about how to add value for wildlife to your property.
Southern Interior Land Trust
Okanagan Basin Water Board

Other Useful Websites:

Climate Change: Climate Change Guide for Landowners
Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Shoreline Management: Lakeshore Living in the Okanagan
Living with Wildlife in BC: Resource materials to address conflicts with wildlife
Native Plant List: Okanagan Xeriscape Association

Click here To download a complete copy of all these links

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Planting Beach Trees
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Expanding a Strip Buffer
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Lake-Property Assessment
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Okanagan Lakefront Property
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Vaseux Lake Shoreline Assessment
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