Camosun Bog Restoration As early as 5000 years ago, the Camosun Bog started as a lake to a swamp and ending as a bog due to a depression in the land. The bog thrived, until 1929, when drains were installed, completely drying out the bog. The lack of water and nutrients caused the sphagnum moss to die, outcompeted by other invasive species. As a result, in order to restore the bog to its previous glory, volunteers had to remove many hemlock trees, lower the ground, and plant many sphagnum mosses. The Camosun bog was important to Musqueam people. Urbanization was a means of calling the bog useless, unusable to Western people. However, to Musqueam people, it was an essential part of their history. To them, the bog told stories, memories, and was so full of life. Through the loss of the bog, it destroyed all traces of their previous history, as it was something that was always there before urbanization and everything else. It was a part of the land for so long, and to have the ori...
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