The Lure of the Chilcotin
by
Book Details
About the Book
In 1967, Christine and Mark leave New York State and drive out to British Columbia, looking for a remote place to disappear from civilization. Christine teaches in a one-room school in the Chilcotin, where ranchers and Indians still live the old-time way.
Then they venture up the coast of B.C. in March in an unseaworthy boat, only to get shipwrecked and go ten days without food or warmth. When their son is born, they return to the Chlcotin and stake land. They have a misadventure of getting lost in hostile country, and spend two nights sitting by a fire.
Mark finds the lakeshore too confining, so they travel by horseback and develop two homesteads in remote places. They hunt, fish, cut hay with scythe, store food up in a cache, build cabins, and spend three winters living in a tent pitched on logs.
Christine falls in love with Sage, and walks forty miles to the trapline where he is wintering. Over the next eight years, they homebirth two boys, trap, and build their homestead, including goats and gardens.
Once again she breaks up her relationship, and over the next ten years, gives birth to another son, raises her boys on her own, motivates them to be creative outdoor kids, and asks Jesus to be Lord of her life.
She meets and marries George, and the family moves to 100 Mile. George hits the bottle and goes berserk, so Christine moves back to her cabin in the Chilcotin.
Simon re-enters her life and she moves to Quesnel with him. That relationship falls apart, and she moves back to her cabin at Tatia Lake in 2004. The four boys are grown up, Christine is 59 years old and a grandmother of five, and finally has time to write this unusual autobiography.
About the Author
As a child, Christine Peters longed for a simple life. She hungered for moving north after growing up at a bushy summer place among the north shore of Lake Erie.
While attending Cornell University, she often felt different from the other students and out of step with maintream life. In 1967 she and her partner left the United States for British Columbia, Canada.
Their goal was to live off the land. Christine has spent her adult life homesteading in several locations, while trapping, hunting fishing, raising four sons with out running water, and searching for the right relationship.
Christine still resides in her rustic cabin near Tatla Lake in the dry Chilcotin Plateau, west of Williams Lake, B.C. Her log home is made of unpeeled jack pine logs chinked with moss, and is full of cherished memories.