|
North Saanich DJ Park: November 28, 2004
The
creation of a DJ park in North Saanich has been a long process.
While we still have a way to go, the park is taking shape. I don't
want to rehash the last two years of political challenges that have
brought us this far. I will say it has been a learning opportunity
and leave it at that. I will add that the process left me with a
deeper respect for Mark's ability to stick with a project and to
mobilize the resources to see it through. Way to go dude!
Before
any jumps could be placed on the property, a fence had to be put
in place. With the help of Reg and Jarrett Moore, we pounded in
about 70 fence posts. This was a full day project. Good thing that
Reg brought his tractor and fence-post pounder. It made the job
so much easier. In fact, it would have been impossible without it.

Once that was completed, we needed to get the fencing
on the posts.
Over the past couple weeks we assembled the pieces
and put up more than 700 feet of chain link fence. This was all
done with volunteer labour. I'm not sure if you know what this takes.
The best word is commitment. One of the challenges is the material
we had to deal with. The fencing was donated and not always in "new"
shape or even the correct dimensions.
Some of the material came from the Inter-river site
on the North Shore where Jay Hoots is building a DJ Park. Thanks
for the support Jay! Another large chunk of the material came from
John Plant Excavating. John is a great guy who has donated much
more than just fence, more on that later. The posts for the project
were purchased with the money we received from the IMBA / Kona grant.
Thanks again to the good people with Kona and at IMBA.
With all of the material on site, we needed to get
the fence in place. Mark rallied the troops and got a crew of people
in place. Russ Campbell showed up with a much needed generator and
a come-along. Everyone else showed up with pliers, hammers, and
a great attitude.
The majority of the donated fencing was 10 feet high.
As we only needed it to be 5 feet high, we had to cut it in half.
This was labour intensive work. We had a work party with a crew
of guys cutting the fence, a crew laying out poles and drilling,
a crew bolting on rails, and everyone coming together to stand up
the chain link, stretch it, and attach it to the posts. This was
a couple of serious days of labour but the fence is now in place.
On
to the next phase.. building the jumps. I told you about John Plant.
He owns the property adjacent to the DJ Park, and he owns an excavator
with an articulating bucket. This is a very cool machine and John
has been right there donating his time, machine, and expertise.
John's contribution is huge. So far he has supplied fence, dirt,
trucking, and machine time. All of this was donated free of charge.
John has committed to staying with us until the park is complete.
His generosity is a major factor in our success.
We started massaging the dirt around the site today.
There were about 15 loads of earth on site at the start of the day
and it is very clear that we will need a whole lot more than that.
We will need 45-50 more loads to have enough for the planned park.
For now we had enough to get a start moving it into place.
We decided to move the dirt we have into one long
straight berm (a whale back). The idea is to create one of these
for each row of jumps we want. We are planning on 7 lines. You can
see this in the picture. The flags represent some of the additional
lines that will be going in.

Once we have 7 whale backs in place we will sculpt
them into runs with 4 - 8 jumps in each line. Ya, I know. that's
one hell of a lot of jumps, cool. At the top end there will be a
start ramp.
The start ramp will be about 5 feet high at the "beginner" end
and 15 feet at the "advanced" end. Here's is a rough idea of what
we are building (courtesy of Patrick Henry).

The drawing we have here shows 6 lines but we will
be installing 7 lines. The 2 advanced lines will be side-by-side
and offset so riders can transfer sets. We are also hoping to place
a large wall-ride at the end of the advanced set, subject to approval
of North Saanich
The drawing above will be modified based on what we
discovered while doing layout today. The 7 runs will be like this:
1 - Beginner - 6 jumps (tables)
2 - Beginner - 8 jumps (tables)
3 - Intermediate - 8 jumps (tables)
4 - Intermediate - 8 jumps (tables)
5 - Intermediate - 6 jumps (some gaps)
6 - Advanced - 4 jumps (gaps)
7 - Advanced - 4 jumps (gaps)
Yes my friends.. that's 44 jumps, no waiting!
For all you trials riders, we are hoping to negotiate
a trials area. There is a very nice treed area next to the jumps
and on the same site. It includes an open flat area with some large
rocks. It has trials written all over it.
At this point I bet you are saying to yourself, "wow
how can I help?" Great question!
Give us a call:
George Matthews - george@simbs.com
- 655-4887
Mark Matthews - tomark@telus.net
- 655-4887
Matt Grossnickle - matt@simbs.com
- 655-9155
Patrick Henry - phenry@sd62.bc.ca
We will be out on the site most Sundays working on
the site. I will post dates on the SIMBS site and Matt at Russ Hayes
Sidney will always have the information. When in doubt, give us
a shout.

|