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House Beautiful: Splendid isolation in Cowichan

Every house has a story to tell. It may be about a聽challenging building site, a shocking overrun during renovations or some interesting architectural elements. But this house is more self-effacing.

Every house has a story to tell.

It may be about a聽challenging building site, a shocking overrun during renovations or some interesting architectural elements.

But this house is more self-effacing. It doesn鈥檛 scream 鈥渓ook at me鈥 or boast about showy countertops, engineered floors and glazed walls. Instead, it reveals the story of two globetrotting owners and is a storehouse of memories of their far-flung travels and careers.

Goetz Schuerholz built the house in 1977, carefully leaving most of the surrounding two-hectare forest property untouched.

He envisioned a home that would disappear into the landscape.

鈥淚 adapted it to the geomorphology,鈥 said Goetz, who was born in Germany, has a doctorate in wildlife ecology and studied at both the University of Freiburg and UBC.

Stationed in Rome, he first worked for the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and was responsible for wildlife conservation projects in Africa and Asia. He then transferred to Santiago, Chile, where he led wildlife and conservation activities in Latin and Central America,

His wife, Beate Weber Schuerholz, has had an equally interesting career. As mayor of Heidelberg, Germany, from 1990 to 2006, she guided that city to reduce its CO2 emissions by a staggering 30 per cent during her term of office and聽is credited with helping that nation move toward energy sustainability.

She has been named Honourary Freeman of the city of London, Chevalier de l鈥橭rdre National de la L茅gion d鈥橦onneur (France鈥檚 highest decoration) and Woman of the Year in Germany.

She also just won the Gothenburg award for sustainable development in the field of energy efficiency 鈥 previously won by Norwegian prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland and 聽former Secretary-General of the UN聽Kofi Annan.

The two live in what they call 鈥渟plendid isolation鈥 in a 2,800-square foot, metal-roofed home overlooking Cowichan Estuary.

Rather than being on the water, their elevated property offers a more acute angle on 鈥渁 very dynamic estuary that teems with wildlife,鈥 said Goetz.

Designed in the California style, with naturally weathered exterior wood and cedar ceilings, the house features three wings radiating from a central hub.

Goetz also built a smoke-house, sauna, woodshed, adobe oven and deck that juts out over the sloping property. 鈥淚 wanted to live in the canopy of the forest. Here we are in the treetops where there is totally different wildlife and we are well hidden.鈥

Their home is casual, comfortable and crammed with everything from the skins of a giant anteater, python and zebra to spears given to Goetz by natives of the south Sudan and shields from Afghanistan. The coffee table is carved from a single piece of wood and was once a bushman鈥檚 bed.

鈥淲herever I went, I would collect pieces,鈥 said Goetz.

The couple鈥檚 museum-like home includes a shaman stick from South America, exotic masks, a whale skull, the skin of a caiman (alligator) and one of Beate鈥檚 favourites 鈥 a raft of hippos sculpted in African wood and stone.

One of his most treasured items is a toucan feather headband given to Goetz when he was made honourary chief of the Achuar Indian tribe, a remote culture in the upper Amazon.

Because the conservation ecologist鈥檚 passion is art, he is also adding to the world鈥檚 culture himself by creating paintings and sculptures in a new, high-ceilinged studio he recently built.

The two have been together almost seven years 鈥 鈥淣ot long enough,鈥 said Beate with a chuckle 鈥 and met at an environmental conference when she headed a German commission on the environment. 鈥淲e started talking and never stopped.鈥

Goetz had loved sa国际传媒 since studying at UBC 鈥 鈥渋t was a childhood dream to come back 鈥 Jack London and all that.鈥 After leaving the UN, he moved to sa国际传媒 and formed an environmental consultancy business, working on biodiversity conservation and sustainable management with agencies worldwide.

He bought land at Cowichan and聽a聽guiding area in the Cariboo Chilcotin, which he later helped convert into a class A provincial park called Tsylos 鈥 the highest conservation status of any protected area in sa国际传媒

Beate always loved sa国际传媒 too, after visiting as a European MP and chairwoman of the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives鈥 commission on the environment. The international group of local government organizations is committed to sustainable development and has a membership of more than 1,200 cities, towns and associations in 84 countries.

鈥淎t that time, sa国际传媒 was very, very environmentally concerned and a leader in environmental issues,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淣ow the Harper government is driving us backwards, destroying the environmental and military reputation of this country.鈥

While Goetz and Beate are now retired, they are working to restore the ecological integrity of Cowichan Estuary. (See story, Page E9)

鈥淣either of us care about countertops; we care about other things,鈥 said Beate, who speaks five languages and doesn鈥檛 watch television. 鈥淲e are interested in people, in ecology and in equality.

鈥淣ever in history have we seen such displacement of people, such terrible urban sprawl, such drying up of rivers and desertification.鈥

Fundraiser aims to help restore estuary

What: Cowichan Estuary Restoration & Conservation Association dinner and auction

Where: Arbutus Ridge Golf Club

When: 6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 9

Tickets: $150. For information call Beate or Goetz Schuerholz at 250-748-4878, or see cowichanestuary.com

Cowichan estuary is one of the most important ecosystems on earth and one of its key roles is carbon sequestration 鈥 removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, says Goetz Schuerholz, founding member of Cowichan Estuary Restoration and Conservation Association.

The group is holding a fundraising dinner Oct. 9 to support reclamation projects in the estuary, as well as construction of an open classroom and nature trails.

The evening will feature a buffet dinner with matching wines and an art auction. Former Irish Rover Will Millar will provide entertainment, along with Grammy-nominated pianist Michael Creber.

Schuerholz says about half the estuary has been negatively affected by forestry-related industries, but it still has 鈥渉igh restoration potential.鈥

鈥淭he Crofton paper mill takes up to 36 million gallons a day out of the lower Cowichan River, and discharges treated water into the sea. It would be a great help if some of this water could be recycled. If, for instance, only five or 10 million gallons could be used from the river.鈥

Fresh water is essential in the estuary, as it mixes with salt water and enables mud flats, marshes and tidal areas to thrive.

鈥淲e want to make it a working estuary again, and by that I don鈥檛 mean industry,鈥 he says. 鈥淎n estuary should be a cradle of life in the ecological sense.鈥

The estuary is the fourth largest and one of the most precious on sa国际传媒鈥檚 coast, Schuerholz says, because of its size and the fact it is enclosed in a bay and two rivers flow into it 鈥 the Cowichan and Koksilah. One of his biggest concerns is log booms that 鈥済round out鈥 at low tide, destroying the 鈥渁bsolutely crucial eel grass.鈥

This prevents a unicellular algae forming on the surface and, through photosynthesis, taking carbon dioxide out of the air and releasing oxygen.

Last year, the association used $320,000 in government funding to breach an artificial dyke built in the estuary in the early 1900s.

The dam previously had a rail line running along it to a now-decommissioned dock.

The hole allows water to circulate freely on both sides of the estuary again, which helps salmon, too, Schuerholz says.

鈥 Grania Litwin