Thanks to everyone for another successful year 
Please return next year for information about our 25th Anniversary Celebration
Photos - ©2003 northvancouver.com/westvancouver.com Cannot be reproduced without permission | |  |
Coho Race Results - click here
Started in 1980 as a local initiative by West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce, the Annual Coho Festival has grown over the years to be the major environmental happening on the North Shore. This popular North Shore family affair attracts large crowds of local residents and visitors from across the Lower Mainland and elsewhere. Join in and help restore North Shore salmon streams for present and future generations. - Coho Family Walk down the Capilano River
-Entertainment local and visiting performers
-Coho Run Kitsilano/Stanley Park to Ambleside
-Youth Programs games and contests
- Blessing of the Salmon Ceremony by members of the Squamish Nation | - Beach & Field Activities action events and demonstrations
- Famous Salmon Barbecue with Celebrity Chefs
- Environmental Displays fish culture challenges
- Beer Garden refreshments with a classic rock band
- Visual Arts Exhibition displays by North Shore artists and photographers |
Welcome to the Coho Society of the North Shore When you stand at the side of a river or a creek with your children or grandchildren, wouldn't it be wonderful if the waters were teaming with salmon? So many, that the scene in front of you was a churning, thriving mass of life? It wasn't very long ago that North Shore streams were teaming with salmon. So many, in fact, that community elders say you could walk across, from one side to the other, and not touch the water. Today, we don't even notice that they are gone. Slowly, over the years, rapid urban development, pollution and lack of care, in general have depleted the stocks.We've become used to what we don't see.
The Coho Society believes we will see such abundance again. We nurture this belief by raising money and awareness so that we can fund stream and habitat enhancement programs, teach our children in schools, as well as our neighbours in the community about the importance of protecting and preserving our waterways and fisheries. We are stirring the waters of change and the possibility that one day, in the not too distant future, we will all see what our elders saw from the edge of a riverbank. And our children and grandchildren will benefit. |