Being in the Main a Blog of the Life and Times of the Wood, Robertson, Pilling, McLoone, Johnson, and Bates Families
Wednesday, June 30, 2021
Monday, June 28, 2021
A Short Video Of Photos From Arta's Life
Monday, June 21, 2021
Saying Goodbye to Arta Johnson (May 8th, 1940 - June 17th, 2021)
Arta Blanche Pilling Johnson May 8, 1940 - June 17th, 2021 |
June 18, 2021
Arta Blanche Johnson was born May 8, 1940, in Calgary
Alberta, in the traditional territories of the Niitsitapi (Blackfoot
Confederacy), the people of the Treaty 7 region, and home to the Métis Nation
of Alberta. She died surrounded by loved ones on June 17th, 2021, in Victoria,
BC, traditional territory of the Songhees, Esquimalt and WSÁNEC peoples.
Arta's greatest joys were in her connections to others. She will be missed by her children, grandchildren, dear siblings who were her best friends, along with many nieces, nephews, and extended family. Arta's circle of friends was wide. She made many special connections working at the University of Calgary, in feminist activism, with the Calgary Status of Women Action Committee, sharing with her writing group, her spiritual community, her international boarders, and the many people who sat at her dinner table enjoying cinnamon buns, butter horns, or hot bread.
In lieu of flowers, Arta asks that people support Indigenous communities in any way they can. She hopes that we will all reach further in giving life to the Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action.
Arta's ashes will rest near her much loved Shuswap home in Secwépemc'ulucw.
Arta understood the power of creating memories. We would love to hear any memories you want to share. She loved words and connecting with others in this shared space. Her posts on the larchhaven blog will remain a tender gift to those she loved and is freely shared with any who find their way to this space of sharing, learning, and loving.
The year she turned 80, she wrote 80 blogposts celebrating 80 memories for 80 years. You can find them here. https://grandmotherarta.wordpress.com/2021/05/16/80-memories-for-80-years/.
"Remembering Arta"
An on-line funeral service for Arta was held on Saturday, June 26, 2021. You can watch it at the youtube channel below:
Click here to watch Arta's funeral service
Click here for a link to Arta's "Grandmother Arta" blog, where you will find a copy of the Program
Click here to see Arta's Funeral Program
Arta and the 94 Calls to Action
Rainbows in a blue sky, inviting us to imagine otherwise |
The moon closeup with RJ's new camera! |
They were drafting a document to post on the Canadian Newsroom to help Latter-day Saints celebrate National Indigenous Peoples Day on June 21st. The document was intended to mark a "day of reconciliation to honour, care, share and heal and acknowledge that we are all brothers and sisters and children in the Creator's family." The hope was to open a dialogue and invite Latter-day Saints to be part of this change.
If you would like to read the product of this special moment, it can be found here:
Thursday, June 17, 2021
THREAD - A love letter to Arta
Arta Paved the Way...Construction LaRue
Arta paved the way!
When Doral Pilling was dying in 1982 he passed the reigns of LaRue over to Arta telling her that it was her job now to carry the torch. Doral left Arta with the responsibility of taking care of what he called 'the most beautiful place on earth'; our land and his legacy in British Columbia. For two decades Arta managed and she encouraged us all to get involved with LaRue. Arta became the corporate memory. Management style changed in 2003 so LaRue has evolved and changed in a number of ways since then. It is a going concern.
In 1995 the most amazing thing happened; Arta built a house to lock up. For 5 years Arta and family slept in what she called 'a wooden tent'. There was no electricity and no water to her cabin but there was plenty of floor space. Arta did hook up to the electricity from the cabins but she paid the electricity bills for the panabode for five years until she had water and electricity of her own.
When I saw that Arta had built a house, I hired Roy, the backhoe owner who put in Arta's basement to work on my lot so that my family could pitch tents and live on my lot. Glen then built his home. Moiya followed a few years later. Arta paved the way for the rest of us to build. The dream became a reality.
Here is today's work. The backhoe is building a rock wall to support a road to Lot #9.What a view from the 66' road!
Did someone say "Grow up Glen!"
And a good wave to all! Where have all the children gone?