Eighteen Mile on Kamloops Lake
Rousseau Creek runs down from Red Plateau on the western side of Rousseau Hill. A fan-shaped gentle slope fills an area of 500 sq meters by 500 sq m next to the creek, the site of the former Eighteen Mile Ranch. Little is known about the ranch, but I spent a day paddling over to the beach in front and then hiked the lands, looking for artifacts and signs of the former homesteader(s).
From Tobiano I paddled over to the steep cliffs of Rousseau Hill, then along the shoreline to the west. A beach fronts the Eighteen Mile bench and a concrete block building sits on the edge of the grassy terrace overlooking the lake.
There is a good beach at low water near the creek’s mouth. Six Mile Point is across the lake 1.8 km to the west.
From the point at Eighteen Mile, Painted Bluffs Provincial Park is 2.5 km to the northwest.
Above the terrace the slopes of Rousseau Hill rise on grassy slopes. In this photo is a small concrete block building just above the creek, possibly a pumphouse. An old double track can be seen climbing into the hills above.
In late September there was water flowing down Rousseau Creek so any ranchers/farmers would have had water for the fields with the use of some hoses/pipes. On the property. I found some old rubber hoses and some small structures to anchor them.
On the creek’s bank was a skeleton of a bighorn sheep, the current residents of the slopes.
There were fences on the former pasture lands, some still standing, but most fallen.
The CN line was built along the north shore of Kamloops Lake in 1915, separating the pasture from the lake. A 7589 foot siding was built on the property and the station was named Jaleslie. The siding is no longer there, but there is a dirt track below the rail line. The lower area is now a mass of prickly pear cactus.
The concrete block building might have been built by CN. In Mona Saemerow’s book “Then and Now”, she writes that the CN built station houses and storage sheds at Copper Creek and this may have been a storage/maintenance building for the railway siding operation. It could also have been built by the rancher/farmer who lived there. Homesteading started early in the twentieth century and most did not say past 1919 so the resident could have occupied the land anytime after that.
Above the section of land the slopes of Rousseau Hill rise up, ragged with volcanic features overlooking the lake. Mr. E. Rousseau had a ranch and kept a store at Copper Creek, buying it from Mr. Ballantyne in 1934. His children got their education by correspondence.
The Hudson Bay Brigade Trail (1843) dropped from the Dewdrop Range down to Red Point then came across this area on its way to Copper Creek before climbing up the Carbine Creek Valley.
The area above the CN right of way is now part of the Dewdrop -Rousseau Creek Wildlife Management Area, managed by the Ministry of Lands., Forest, and Natural Resource Operations.
After hiking the section, I returned to my kayak and paddled back to Tobiano.
I will return to this area by driving the outer Dewdrop Range Road to the Peregrine Bluffs area, then traversing the slopes above Eighteen Mile in a loop route around Rousseau Hill.
Note – In a previous version I called this Twelve Mile. I returned to this site a few years later by hiking from the east (hiking the length of Kamloops Lake) and came across a sign referring to it as Eighteen Mile and I revised this post accordingly.
I believe the block house was actually built by a man who owned the property until his death, maybe 10…15 years ago? and the property was returned to crown land. He used it to house his trailer. I think he grew potatoes on the property.
We were on the property again this month and it appears this was called 18 Mile Ranch. We found an old sign at a private Railway Crossing. Another article on the area will be published on May 13, 2019.