Advance with Courage: Lord and Lady Aberdeen in the Okanagan Valley Advance with Courage: Lord and Lady Aberdeen in the Okanagan Valley Central Okanagan Heritage Society
Hops were grown to help with expenses while the Aberdeens were waiting for the fruit trees to mature.
“When we came here, irrigation was not considered a necessity either for fruit or hops but our own experience & that of the settlers who have bought lots […]
This is a view of the Nez Perce Indigenous encampment on the Coldstream Ranch. The Nez Perce, Indigenous people of the Plateau, lived on the Columbia River Plateau in […]
The packinghouse was built on the Coldstream Ranch in the 1890s. The building, although its use has changed, still exists today.
Man standing on the back end of a wagon loaded with the Coldstream Ranch prune plum harvest.
The Coldstream Ranch continues as a working ranch for cattle, horses, grains, and some fruit orchards. Coldstream Ranch
Lord Aberdeen, followed by an Okanagan Mission Priest and John Morrison, are inspecting the animal barn. “We are glad we came down here as we have found there […]
Guisachan Farm’s hop fields taken by photographer Ernest Brown, c. 1892.
Young hop fields at Coldstream Ranch, with three men with horse teams walking the edge of the field.
Photographer Ernest Brown took this photograph when he visited the Okanagan Valley around 1892. The young fruit trees are planted in rows in the plowed fields around Guisachan […]
This advertisement was aimed at attracting new settlers to the Okanagan Valley, for its good weather and lifestyle in fruit farming.
Mackay negotiated the sale of the Coldstream Ranch. It became known later, that he had also accepted a commission from the seller. Lord Aberdeen’s solicitor and hired agricultural […]