Taman Stanley: Perbezaan antara semakan

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Md. Farhan (bincang | sumb.)
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[[Imej:Stanley_Park_Aerial.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Pandangan udara Stanley Park. Brockton Point di kanan dan kumpulan air di pinggiran kota adalah "Lost Lagoon". [[Lions' Gate Bridge]] di atas menghubungkan [[Vancouver Barat]].]]
{{Otheruses}}
{{Infobox park
|park=Taman Stanley
|image=Stanley Park Labeled Aerial Map.png
|image size=350px
|caption=Pemandangan aerial pada Taman Stanley
|type=Majlis perbandaraan
|location=[[Vancouver]]
|coordinates={{coord|49.30|N|123.14|W|display=title,inline|scale:20000}}
|size={{convert|404.9|ha|km2 sqmi}}
|opened=1888
|operator=Badan Taman Vancouver
|annual visitors=8 juta
|status=Dibuka sepanjang tahun
}}
[[Image:Vancouver Stanley Park-map.jpg|thumb|220px|Lokasi Taman Stanley di Vancouver.]]
[[Image:Indian Village at Coal Harbour.gif|thumb|right|300px|Gambar ini menunjukkan rumah panjang [[Sḵwx̱wú7mesh]] yang sekali terletak pada 1886 di [[Coal Harbour]].]]
'''Taman Stanley''' adalah sebuah [[taman bandar]] {{convert|404.9|ha|km2 sqmi|lk=in}} bersempadan dengan [[Downtown (Vancouver)|downtown]] [[Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]], [[Kanada]]. Ia dibuka pada 1888 oleh [[Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby|Lord Stanley of Preston]], [[Gabenor-Jendral Kanada]].<ref>{{cite book| last =Steele| first =R. Mike| title =The Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation: The First 100 Years| publisher = Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation| year =1988| location =| pages =3}}</ref>
 
'''Taman Stanley''' merupakan sebuah [[taman]] sebesar 4 km&sup2; (1,000 acre) di [[Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]], [[Kanada]]. Taman ini merupakan ketiga terbesar di Amerika Utara, menonjolkan banyak tumbuhan [[Douglas-fir]], [[Western Redcedar]], dan [[Tusag|Western Hemlock]] yang besar. Tumbuhan-tumbuhan ini dapat mencapai ketinggian 100 meter (300 kaki) dan umurnya sudah ratusan tahun. Diperikirakan taman ini menerima lebih dari 8 juta pengunjung setiap tahunnya.
Ia adalah 10% lebih besar daripada [[Central Park]] New York City dan hampir setengah saiz [[Taman Richmond]] di London.<ref>{{cite web| last =Foss| first =Lindsay| title =A Walk through Stanley Park| work = Travel| publisher =Canadian Geographic| url =http://www.canadiangeographic.ca/travel/tourism/explorer/ja04/default.asp| accessdate =2006-12-10 }}</ref> The park attracts an estimated eight million visitors every year,<ref name=vpb>[http://www.vancouver.ca/parks/parks/stanley/index.htm Vancouver Park Board Parks and Gardens: Stanley Park] Retrieved on 2008-06-15.</ref> including locals and tourists, who come for its recreational facilities and its natural attributes. An {{convert|8.8|km|mi}} [[Seawall (Vancouver)|seawall]] path circles the park, which is used by 2.5 million pedestrians, cyclists, and inline skaters every year.<ref>{{cite web | title = Seawall getting face-lift| publisher = Globe and Mail| date =2004-02-21| url =http://evalu8.org/staticpage?page=review&siteid=6915| accessdate = 2006-12-16 }}</ref> Much of the park remains forested with an estimated half million trees that can be as tall as {{convert|76|m|ft}} and hundreds of years old.<ref>{{cite book| last =Parkinson | first =Alison| coauthors =Terry Taylor, Vancouver Natural History Society|title =Wilderness on the Doorstep: Discovering Nature in Stanley Park| publisher =Harbour Publishing| year =2006| location =Vancouver| pages =54, 52| isbn = 1-55017-386-3}}</ref><ref> {{cite web|title =Welcome to Stanley Park| work =Parks and Gardens| publisher =Vancouver Park Board| url = http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/parks/parks/stanley/index.htm| accessdate =2006-12-20}}</ref>
There are approximately {{convert|200|km|mi}} of trails and roads in the park, which are patrolled by the [[Vancouver Police Department]]'s [[horse|equine]] mounted squad.<ref>{{cite web| title = The Mounted Squad Today| work = Mounted Squad, Patrol District One| publisher =Vancouver Police Department| url = http://vancouver.ca/police/operations/mounted/index.htm | accessdate = 2006-12-16}}</ref> The [[Project for Public Spaces]] has ranked Stanley Park as the sixteenth best park in the world and sixth best in North America.<ref>{{cite web| title =The World’s Best and Worst Parks| work =Making Places| publisher =Project for Public Spaces| month =September | year =2004| url =http://www.pps.org/info/newsletter/september2004/september2004_best_worst| accessdate = 2006-12-16 }}</ref>
 
==Sejarah Pautan luar ==
* [http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/parks/parks/stanley/index.htm Vancouver Parks web site]
The area of the park is the traditional territory of a few different indigenous peoples. On the [[Burrard Inlet]] and [[Howe Sound]] regions, [[Sḵwx̱wú7mesh]] or [[Squamish]] had many villages in this park. On the lower [[Fraser River]] area, [[Musqueam]] used the area for resource gathering.<ref name=Barman20>Barman, Jean (2005). ''Stanley Park's Secrets''. Habour Publishing, 20. ISBN 978155074205</ref> Where Lumberman's Arch is now in Stanley Park, a large Sḵwx̱wú7mesh village once presided called [[X̱wáýx̱way]] meaning ''Place of masks.'' The dwellings traditionally used was a longhouse built from cedar poles and slabs. One longhouse was measured at {{convert|200|ft|m}} long by {{convert|60|ft|m}} wide.<ref>Barman, Jean (2005). ''Stanley Park's Secrets''. Habour Publishing, 46. ISBN 978155074205</ref> These houses were occupied by large extended families living in different quadrants of the house. The larger houses were used to ceremonial [[Potlatch|potlachs]] where a host would invite guests to witness and participate in ceremonies and the giving away of property.<ref name=Barman43>Barman, Jean (2005). ''Stanley Park's Secrets''. Habour Publishing, 43. ISBN 978155074205</ref>
 
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The park itself was a rich resource for gathering food and materials. The Sḵwx̱wú7mesh "cut down large cedar trees in Stanley Park for making canoes and other purposes" utilizing "nothing but stone chisels and a big round stone for a hammer."<ref name=Barman20/> Where present Second Beach is, a place called "St’i’teke<u>k</u>w’" to Sḵwx̱wú7mesh was used to gather "a clay material or muddy substance formally obtained right in the bed of a small creek... which, when rolled into loaves, as (my people) did it, and heated or roasted before a fire, turned into a white like chalk"<ref>Barman, Jean (2005). ''Stanley Park's Secrets''. Habour Publishing, 21. ISBN 978155074205.</ref> This material was used in the making of mountain goal wool and dog wool blankets. The Sḵwx̱wú7mesh name references this material. Another home for local natives was where present Prospect Point is. This place is called "Schi'lhus" meaning ''High Bluff.'' Coal Harbour or "Ch’elxwa’7elch" meaning ''Gets dry at times'', was known as a fishing spot for herring. [[August Jack]], a local historian who once lived at Schi’lhus, remembered his early days when him and his brother were "fish-raking in Coal Harbor" and "got lots of herring in (the) canoe".<ref name=Barman43/> [[Deadman's Island (Vancouver)|Deadman's Island]] located in Coal Harbour was once used a burial island, possibly a reason for its macabre name. The popular landmark [[Siwash Rock]] is called "Slhxi’7elsh" meaning "he is standing up." In their oral history, a man was transformed into this rock by the three Transformer brothers. The hole in the rock was where Slhxi'7elsh kept his fishing tackle, according to [[Andy Paull|Andrew Paull]].<ref>{{cite book| last =Barman| first =Jean| title =Stanley Park's Secret: The Forgotten Families of Whoi Whoi, Kanaka Ranch and Brockton Point| publisher =Harbour Publishing| year =2005| location =Vancouver| pages =19| isbn = 1-55017-346-4}}</ref>
[[Image:Siwash sillouette.jpg|thumb|200px|left|View of Siwash Rock, taken from the hiking trail above.]]
First contact between Europeans occurred in 1791, with Spanish Captain [[Jose Maria Narvaez]] and British Captain [[George Vancouver]]. Captain Vancouver recorded in his journal "Here we met about fifty Indian's, in their canoes, who conducted themselves with the greatest decorum and civility, presenting us with many cooked fish, and undressed, of the sort already mentioned as resembling the smelt. These good, people, finding we were inclined to make some return for their hospitality, shewed much understanding in preferring copper to iron." In his ''A Voyage of Discovery'', Vancouver describes the area as “an island ... with a smaller island [Deadman's Island] lying before it,” indicating that it was originally surrounded by water, at least at high tide.<ref>{{cite book| last =Nicol| first =Eric | title =Vancouver| publisher =Doubleday| year =1970| location =Toronto| pages =13}}</ref> No other contact was recorded for decades, until around the time of the [[Crimean War]] when [[Royal Navy|British admirals]] arranged with Sḵwx̱wú7mesh [[Joe Capilano]] that in the case of an invasion, the British would defend the south shore of [[Burrard Inlet]] and the Squamish would defend the north.<ref>{{cite book| last =Nicol| first =Eric | title =Vancouver| publisher =Doubleday| year =1970| location =Toronto| pages =15–16}}</ref>
 
According to Capilano’s daughter, the British gave him and his men 60 [[musket]]s. Although the attack anticipated by the British never came, the guns were used by the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh to repel an attack by an [[Indigenous peoples of North America|indigenous]] raid from the north. Stanley Park was not attacked but this was the beginning of it being considered a strategic military location by the British.<ref>{{cite news| last =Paull| first =Andy|title =The Battle-Ground of Stanley Park| publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =26 March 1938}}</ref>
 
The [[peninsula]] was designated as a military reserve in the early 1860s in a survey conducted by the [[Royal Engineers]]. It was again considered a strategic point in case Americans might attempt an invasion and launch an attack on [[New Westminster]] (then the colonial capital) via Burrard Inlet. Although the area was logged by six different companies between the 1860s and 1880s, this military designation saved the land from development.<ref>{{cite web|title =Forest – Monument Trees| work =Stanley Park Nature| publisher =Vancouver Park Board| url = http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/parks/parks/stanley/nature.htm| accessdate =2006-12-20}}</ref> In 1886, as its first order of business, Vancouver’s City Council voted to petition the [[Government of Canada|Dominion]] government to lease the reserve for use as a park.
 
To manage their new acquisition, city council appointed a six-man park committee, which was replaced with the Vancouver Park Board in 1890 that was to be elected rather than appointed (a rarity in North American cities). The Vancouver Park Board manages 192 parks on over {{convert|12.78|km2|acre}} of land, but Stanley Park remains by far the largest.<ref>{{cite book| last =Steele| first =R. Mike| title =The Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation: The First 100 Years| publisher = Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation| year =1988| location =| pages =1}}</ref>
 
[[Image:StanLordly.jpg|thumb|left|170px|A statue of [[Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby|Lord Stanley]] at the quoted moment.]]
On September 27, 1888 the park was officially opened, where it was named after [[Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby|Lord Stanley]], [[Governor General of Canada]] at the time.<ref name=vpb/> The following year, Stanley became the first [[Governor General of Canada|Governor General]] to visit British Columbia when he officially dedicated the park. An observer at the event wrote:
<blockquote>{{cquote|Lord Stanley threw his arms to the heavens, as though embracing within them the whole of one thousand acres of primeval forest, and dedicated it 'to the use and enjoyment of peoples of all colours, creeds, and customs, for all time. I name thee, Stanley Park.'<ref> {{cite book| last =Davis| first =Chuck| coauthors =Heather Conn| title =The Greater Vancouver Book: An Urban Encyclopedia| publisher =Linkman Press| year =1997| location =Surrey, BC| pages =52| url = http://www.discovervancouver.com/GVB/stanley-park.asp| isbn =1-896846-00-9}}</ref>}}</blockquote>
 
[[Image:StormDamageThreatensSP.jpg|thumb|200px|''[[Vancouver Province]]'' photo of debris left by 1935 storm and warning of the fire hazard if not cleaned up.]]
When Stanley made this declaration, there were still a number of indigenous people living on lands he had claimed for the park. Some, who had built their homes less than twenty years earlier, would continue to live on the land for years. Most of the dwellings at the Squamish village of [[X̱wáýx̱way]] were reported as vacant by 1899, and in 1900, two of such houses were purchased by the Park Board for $25 each and burned. One Sḵwx̱wú7mesh family, “Howe Sound Jack,” and Sexwalia “Aunt Sally” Kulkalem, continued to live at X̱wáýx̱way until Sally's death in 1923. Sally's ownership of the property surrounding her home was accepted by authorities in the 1920s, and following her death, the property was purchased from her heir, Mariah Kulkalem, for $15,500 and resold to the Federal government.<ref>[http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/parks/board/2003/031006/sp_cis.pdf Historical and Geographical Contexts], Stanley Park Commemorative Integrity Statement, [[Parks Canada]].</ref>
 
In 1908, twenty years after the first petition for the lease, the federal government renewed the lease of Stanley Park to [[Vancouver]] for ninety-nine years, renewable in 2007.<ref>[http://www.vancouverhistory.ca/chronology5.htm The History of Metropolitan Vancouver: 1908] Retrieved on 2008-06-15.</ref>
 
[[Deadman's Island (Vancouver)|Deadman's Island]], a small island off Stanley Park and now the site of the naval reserve unit [[HMCS Discovery]]. During the 1860s to early 1880s, early settlers along Burrard Inlet also used the island, along with Brockton Point, as a burial ground and cemetery. Burials ceased when the [[Mountain View Cemetery (Vancouver)|Mountain View Cemetery]] opened in 1887, just after Vancouver had become a city. During a [[small pox]] outbreak in the late 1880s, Deadman's Island became a "pest house" for quarantined victims of the disease and burial site for those who did not survive.<ref> {{cite book| last =Davis| first =Chuck| coauthors =Heather Conn| title =The Greater Vancouver Book: An Urban Encyclopedia| publisher =Linkman Press| year =1997| location =Surrey, BC| pages =169| url = http://www.discovervancouver.com/gvb/vancouver-islands.asp| isbn =1-896846-00-9}}</ref>
 
The park was designated a [[National Historic Site of Canada]] by the federal government in 1988. It was deemed significant because the relationship between its "natural environmental and its cultural elements developed over time" and because "it epitomizes the large urban park in Canada."<ref>{{cite paper| author = Parks Canada/Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation| title = Stanley Park: Commemorative Integrity Statement| date = 2002-11-26| url =http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/parks/board/2003/031006/sp_cis.pdf| format = [[PDF]]| accessdate = 2006-12-28}}</ref>
 
== Tarikan ==
{{see|Senarai tarikan dan pengingatan di Taman Stanley}}
Stanley Park contains numerous natural and man-made attractions that lure visitors to the park. Unlike other large urban parks, Stanley Park is not the product of a [[landscape architect]], but has evolved into its present, mixed-use configuration.<ref>{{cite book| last =Stephan| first =Bill| coauthors =Vancouver Natural History Society| title =Wilderness on the Doorstep: Discovering Nature in Stanley Park | publisher =Harbour Publishing| year =2006| location =Vancouver| pages =17| isbn = 1-55017-386-3}}</ref>
 
=== Hutan ===
[[Image:Regeneration.jpg|thumb|175px|left|Trees growing out of stumps show the regeneration of the park forest.]]
The forest gives the park a more natural character than most other urban parks, leading many users to consider it an urban [[oasis]].<ref>{{cite web| title =Stanley Park - Vancouver's Urban Oasis| publisher =Tourism Vancouver| url =http://www.tourismvancouver.com/pdf/self_guided_itinerary_stanley_park.pdf | format =[[PDF]]| accessdate = 2006-12-20}}</ref> It is primarily [[Second growth forest|second and third growth]] and contains many huge [[Douglas-fir]], [[Thuja plicata|Western Red cedar]], [[Tsuga|Western Hemlock]], and [[Sitka Spruce]] trees.
[[Image:Uprooted tree.jpg|thumb|right|One of the large trees knocked down by the wind storm on December 15, 2006.]]
In addition to logging in the nineteenth century, large swathes of the park were deforested by natural causes on three occasions in the city’s history. The first was a combination of an October windstorm in 1934 and a subsequent snowstorm the following January that felled thousands of trees, primarily between Beaver Lake and Prospect Point.<ref>{{cite news| title = The Damage in the Park| publisher = Vancouver Daily Province| date = 9 February 1934}}</ref> Another storm in October 1962, the remnants of [[1962 Pacific typhoon season#Typhoon Freda|Typhoon Freda]], cleared a {{convert|6|acre|m2|adj=on}} virgin tract behind the children's zoo, which opened an area for a new miniature railway that replaced a smaller version built in the 1940s. In total, approximately 3,000 trees were lost in that storm.<ref>{{cite news|last=Hazlitt|first=Tom | title = It's for real &ndash; this railroad | publisher = Vancouver Daily Province| date = 22 May 1964}}</ref>
 
[[Hanukkah Eve Wind Storm of 2006|Another storm]] ravaged the park on December 15, 2006 with {{convert|115|km/h|mph}} winds. Over 60% of the western edge was damaged; the worst part was the area around Prospect Point.<ref>{{cite news | last =Rook| first =Katie| title =Stanley Park ‘looks like a war zone’|publisher =National Post| date =2006-12-19| url = http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=2277e4c8-e3c6-4f78-9841-24e3ce7538b3&k=24902&p=1| accessdate = 2006-12-20}}</ref> In total, about 40% of the forest was affected, with an estimated 3,000 trees damaged. Large sections of the seawall were also destabilized by the storm, and many areas of the park were closed to the public pending restoration. The cost of restoration has been estimated at $9 million, which will be covered by contributions from all three levels of government and private and corporate donations.<ref>{{cite news| title = Stanley Park restoration cost rises to $9 million| publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =2007-01-27| url = http://www.canada.com/topics/finance/story.html?id=183f84cd-673a-4025-ae82-b71e286ee161&k=36282|accessdate = 2007-02-08}}</ref>
 
Since 1992, the tallest trees have been topped and otherwise pruned by park staff for safety reasons.
[[Image:SP restoration.jpg|thumb|right|Logging operation at Prospect Point, the area most damaged by the 2006 storm.]]
Because the park has been subjected to such dramatic changes, several landmark trees have been affected. The Hollow Tree was probably the most photographed park element in bygone years, an obligatory stop for locals, tourists and dignitaries alike, and a professional photographer was on hand to capture the visit for a fee. The tree was saved from road widening in 1910 through the lobbying efforts of the photographer who made his living at the tree.<ref>{{cite news|last =Koshevoy|first =Himie| title =Saga of Stanley Park|publisher =Vancouver Daily Province|date =7 June 1962}}</ref> Automobiles and horse-drawn carriages would frequently be backed into the hollow, demonstrating the immensity of the tree for posterity. While the remaining 700-800 year-old stump still draws viewers and is commemorated with a plaque, it is no longer alive and has shrunk considerably over the years, from a circumference of {{convert|18.3|m|ft}} many decades ago, to a more recent {{convert|17.1|m|ft}}.<ref>{{cite book| last =Steele| first =Mike| title =Vancouver's Famous Stanley Park: The Year-Round Playground| publisher =Heritage House| year =1993| location =Vancouver| pages = 108| isbn = 1-895811-00-7}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last =Parkinson| first =Alison| title =Wilderness on the Doorstep: Discovering Nature in Stanley Park| publisher =Harbour Publishing| year =2006| location =Vancouver| pages = 46| isbn = 1-55017-386-3}}</ref> Damaged by the December 2006 windstorm and leaning forward at a dangerous angle, on March 31, 2008, the tree was targeted by the Vancouver Park Board for removal due to potential safety hazards.<ref>"[http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2008/04/01/bc-stanley-park-tree.html Stanley Park's hollow tree gets the axe]." CBC News. April 1, 2008.</ref> However, on January 19, 2009, the Board accepted a proposal to save the tree by realigning and stabilizing it at a cost of $250,000, funded entirely by private donations.<ref>"[http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2009/01/19/bc-hollow-tree-vote.html?ref=rss Stanley Park's Hollow Tree spared the axe for good]." CBC News. January 19, 2009.</ref>
 
[[Image:NationalGeographicTree.jpg|thumb|left|170px|The ''[[National Geographic]]'' [[Western Red cedar]] about two months before it was uprooted by a storm.]]
Another tree that has achieved fame is the ''[[National Geographic]]'' Tree, so named because it appeared in the magazine’s October 1978 issue. With a circumference of 13.5 m (44½ ft), it was once one of the more impressive big Western Red cedars of the park. It diminished over time, ravaged by storms, a lightning strike, and topped by park staff to a height of {{convert|39.6|m|ft|abbr=off}} before being uprooted in October 2007.<ref>{{cite news|publisher=CBC|date=2007-10-11|title=Ancient cedar falls in Vancouver's Stanley Park|url=http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2007/10/11/bc-cedar.html| accessdate=2007-10-11}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last =Steele| first =Mike| title =Vancouver's Famous Stanley Park: The Year-Round Playground| publisher =Heritage House| year =1993| location =Vancouver| pages = 108| isbn = 1-895811-00-7}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last =Parkinson| first =Alison| title =Wilderness on the Doorstep: Discovering Nature in Stanley Park| publisher =Harbour Publishing| year =2006| location =Vancouver| pages = 46| isbn = 1-55017-386-3}}</ref> A small stand of tall trees that has not survived but was once a popular attraction, “The Seven Sisters,” is memorialized by a plaque and new replacement trees. The death of the distinctive fir tree atop [[Siwash Rock]] has also been memorialized with a replacement. The original died in the dry summer of 1965, and through the persistent efforts of park staff, a replacement finally took root in 1968.<ref>{{cite news | title =Park Tree's Loss Stirs Memories| publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =10 August 1965}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title =Park Still Feels Frieda's Punch| publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =6 August 1968}}</ref>
 
=== Perbadanan air ===
In addition to being nearly surrounded by the [[Pacific Ocean]], Stanley Park is home to several other [[bodies of water in Vancouver]]. Beaver Lake is a small lake, mostly covered by [[lily pad]]s, home to fish and water birds. As of 1997 its surface area was 3.95 hectares, but the lake is slowly shrinking in size.<ref name="beaverlake">{{web cite | url=http://vancouver.ca/parks/board/1997/970616/amd-2441.pdf | title=Beaver Lake Environmental Enhancement Project | publisher=Vancouver Park Board | date=1997-05-30 | accessdate=2008-07-22}}</ref> One of Vancouver's few remaining free-flowing streams, Beaver Creek, joins Beaver Lake to the Pacific Ocean and is one of two streams in Vancouver where [[salmon]] still return to [[spawn (biology)|spawn]] each year.<ref name="beaverlake"/><ref name="loststreams">{{cite web | url=http://www.ariverneversleeps.com/backissues/december00/writing.shtml | title=The Lost Streams | last=Hume | first=Mark | accessdate=2008-07-22 | month=December | year=2000}}</ref>
 
[[Image:Vancouver-stanley-park.jpg|thumb|right|Lost Lagoon dengan Downtown Vancouver di latar belakang.]]
 
[[Lost Lagoon]] is a captive 16.6 hectare (41 acre) body of water, west of [[Georgia Street]], near the Georgia Street entrance to the park. Surrounding the lake is a {{convert|1.75|km|mi}} trail, and it features a lit fountain that was erected to commemorate the city's golden jubilee. It is a nesting ground to many species of bird, including [[swan]], [[Canada goose]], [[duck]] and [[great blue heron]].
 
=== Recreational facilities ===
Recreational facilities are abundant in the park, having long co-existed, albeit uneasily, with the aesthetic and more natural park features preferred by those looking to the park as an enclave of nature in the city.<ref>{{cite journal| last =McDonald| first =Robert A. J.| title ="Holy Retreat" or "Practical Breathing Spot"? Class Perceptions of Vancouver's Stanley Park, 1910-1913 | journal =Canadian Historical Review| volume =LXV| issue =2| pages =139–140| year =1984}}</ref> The most heavily used and the favourite facility of park users is the [[Seawall (Vancouver)|seawall]] encircling the park’s perimeter. Construction of the {{convert|8.8|km|mi}} seawall around the park began in 1917, but was not declared finished until September 26, 1971, and did not fully circle the park until 1980.<ref>{{cite news| title =Last stone laid in park's seawall|publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =27 September 1971}}</ref>
 
James "Jimmy" Cunningham, a master mason, dedicated 32 years of his life to the construction of the seawall from 1931 until his retirement in 1963. Even after he retired, Cunningham kept coming down (once in his pyjamas) to monitor the wall's progress, until his death at 85 on September 29, 1963.<ref name="Griffin">{{cite news| last =Griffin| first =Kevin| coauthors =Terri Clark| title =Grand Old Man of the Seawall| publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =2005-02-04}}</ref>
 
The seawall is a popular destination for [[walking]], [[running]], [[cycling]], and [[inline skating]]. There are two paths, one for inline skaters and cyclists and the other for pedestrians. The section around the outside of the park is one-way for cyclists and inline skaters, running counter-clockwise.<ref name="Griffin"/> The walkway has been extended several times and is currently 22 kilometres from end to end, making it the world's longest uninterrupted waterfront walkway.<ref>{{cite news | last =Pleiff| first =Margo| title =Vancouver seawall links city's urban and natural delights| publisher = San Francisco Chronicle| date =2005-05-15| url =http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/05/15/TRGVBCNILC1.DTL| accessdate = 2006-12-01 }}</ref> Unofficially, it starts at [[Canada Place]] in the downtown core, runs around Stanley Park, along [[English Bay (Vancouver)|English Bay]] beach, around [[False Creek]], and finally to [[Kitsilano Beach]]. From there, a trail continues 600 metres to the west, connecting to an additional 12 kilometres of beaches and pathways which terminate at the mouth of the [[Fraser River]]. The December 2006 storm subjected parts of the park portion of the seawall to mudslides and falling debris, forcing park staff to close it for an extended repair period.<ref>{{cite news| last =Shore| first =Randy| title =Storm closes seawall for weeks| publisher =Vancouver Sun| date =2006-12-20| url =http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=e35a6397-dce5-4be6-bb4a-c9a411e922bd&k=74278| accessdate = 2006-12-20}}</ref>
 
[[Image:Duck lake.jpg|thumb|right| Lily-covered Beaver Lake.]]
 
The miniature railroad was built in an area leveled by Typhoon Freda in the 1960s and is especially popular as the “Halloween Train” and the “Christmas Train” during those seasons. The park also contains tennis courts, an 18-hole [[Pitch and putt]] golf course, a seaside swimming pool at Second Beach, and the Brockton Oval for track sports, rugby, and cricket. For entertainment, there is the [[Vancouver Aquarium|Aquarium]], Canada’s first and largest since it opened in 1956, and the Malkin Bowl, rebuilt after a fire in the 1980s and home to the local [[Theatre Under the Stars (Vancouver)|Theatre Under the Stars]].<ref>{{cite web| last =Foss | first =Lindsay | title =A Walk through Stanley Park| work =Travel| publisher =Canadian Geographic| url = http://www.canadiangeographic.ca/travel/tourism/explorer/ja04/default.asp| accessdate = 2006-12-10 }}</ref>
 
=== Haiwan ===
[[Image:Avison feeding bear VPL 6699.jpg|thumb|160px|left|Henry Avison, the first zookeeper and park ranger, feeding a bear.]]
Until 1996, a main attraction in the park was a [[zoo]], which grew out of the collection of animals begun by the first park superintendent, Henry Avison, after he captured a black bear and chained it to a stump. Avison was subsequently named city pound keeper, and his collection of animals formed the basis for the original zoo, which eventually housed over 50 animals, including [[snake]]s, [[wolf|wolves]], [[emu]]s, [[bison|buffalo]], [[kangaroo]]s, [[monkey]]s, and [[Humboldt penguin]]s.<ref>{{cite book| last =Steele| first =R. Mike| title =Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation: The First 100 Years| publisher =Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation| year =1988| location =Vancouver| pages =13}}</ref>
 
In 1994, when plans were developed to upgrade Stanley Park's zoo, Vancouver voters instead decided to phase it out when the question was posed in a [[referendum]]. The Stanley Park Zoo closed completely in December 1997 after the last remaining animal, a [[polar bear]] named Tuk, died at age 36. He had remained after the other animals had left because of his old age. The polar bear pit, often criticised by [[animal rights]] activists, was converted into a demonstration salmon spawning [[hatchery]].<ref>{{cite news | title =Vancouver residents say no to Stanley Park Zoo| publisher =Edmonton Journal| date =28 April 1996}}</ref> Captive animals can still be viewed at the Children’s Farmyard. Numerous varieties of animals live in the park, including 200 bird species, such as [[peacock]]s descended from the old zoo, as well as other non-native species.
 
The [[Vancouver Aquarium]] is also located in the park. Since its establishment in 1956, the Aquarium has become the largest in Canada and houses a collection of marine life that includes [[dolphin]]s, [[Beluga whale|belugas]], [[Steller's Sea Lions|sea lions]], [[Common Seal|Harbour seals]], and [[sea otter]]s. The popular children's song, "[[Baby Beluga]]", was inspired by one of the whales at the facility. In total, there are approximately 300 species of fish, 30,000 invertebrates, 56 species of amphibians and reptiles, and around 60 mammals and birds.<ref>{{cite web| title =Aquafacts - Frequently Asked Questions| publisher =Vancouver Aquarium| url =http://www.vanaqua.org/education/aquafacts/index.html| accessdate = 2006-12-28}}</ref> The park board approved an $80 million expansion of the Aquarium in November 2006, following considerable public debate and despite a vocal opposition concerned about animal rights and the loss of park trees required by the expansion.<ref>{{cite web| last =Vancouver Park Board | title =Board of Parks and Recreation Special Board Meeting| publisher =Vancouver Park Board| date =2006-11-27| url =http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/parks/board/2006/061127/index.htm| accessdate =2006-12-28}}</ref>
 
Mammals include a large raccoon population, coyotes, rabbits descended from discarded pets, and a thriving [[Grey squirrel]] population descending from eight pairs given as a gift from [[New York City|New York's]] [[Central Park]] in 1909.<ref>{{cite web| title =Stanley Park - Vancouver's Urban Oasis| publisher =Tourism Vancouver| url =http://www.tourismvancouver.com/pdf/self_guided_itinerary_stanley_park.pdf | format =[[PDF]]| accessdate = 2006-12-20}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last =Steele| first =Mike| title =Vancouver's Famous Stanley Park: The Year-Round Playground| publisher =Heritage House| year =1993| location =Vancouver| pages =108| isbn = 1-895811-00-7}}</ref>
 
=== Pengingatan ===
[[Image:Totem poles.jpg|thumb|right|180px|The totem poles are one of the largest tourist draws in the province.]]
Over the years a large collection of monuments has accumulated in Stanley Park, consisting of statues, plaques, and various other memorials commemorating a large variety of things. Among these are statues of Lord Stanley, poet [[Robert Burns]], [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] runner [[Harry Jerome]], and [[Warren G. Harding|President Harding]]; plaques commemorating the wreck of the ''[[Beaver (steamship)|SS Beaver]]'', the sinking of the ''Chehalis'' (a tugboat that collided with the ''[[MV Princess Victoria]]'' off Stanley Park), [[Pauline Johnson]]’s burial site, and the [[Salvation Army]]; a replica of the [[RMS Empress of Japan (1891)|RMS ''Empress of Japan'']] figurehead; and a timber-and-stump archway that replaced the original Lumbermen’s Arch built by lumber workers <!--and actually it was paid for by forestry barons, though yes, built by their crews--> for a visit by the [[Duke of Connaught and Strathearn|Duke of Connaught]], which ultimately succumbed to rot. The original arch was a copy of the Parthenon's front, using whole trees for the columns and gable, and was originally located on the Duke's carriage route at Homer and Pender Streets before it was moved to the park. The new Lumberman's Arch <!--dating from the early '50s I think but I'll find out--> was built with public washrooms and change rooms, with open-air showers adjoining the former Lumberman's Arch Pool, now a waterpark.
 
Gardens are also a common form of commemoration in the park.<ref>{{cite journal| last =Osbourne| first =Stephen| title =Monuments and Memories | journal =Canadian Geographic| volume =124| issue =4| pages =47–50| date =July/August 2004| url =http://www.canadiangeographic.ca/Magazine/ja04/exploration.asp| accessdate = 2006-12-10| format ={{dead link|date=April 2009}} &ndash; <sup>[http://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=author%3AOsbourne+intitle%3AMonuments+and+Memories&as_publication=Canadian+Geographic&as_ylo=&as_yhi=&btnG=Search Scholar search]</sup>}}</ref> The windstorm of 2006 revealed traces of a long-forgotten rock garden in the area of the Tea House and railway, which had once been one of the park's star attractions and also one of its largest man-made objects by area.<ref>{{cite news | last =Hasiuk| first =Mark| title =Wind exposed more of historic rockery| publisher =Vancouver Courier| date =2007-02-06| url =http://www.vancourier.com/issues07/021107/news/021107nn5.html | accessdate = 2007-03-10}}
{{cite news| last =O'Connor| first =Naoibh| title =Lost garden of Stanley Park| publisher =Vancouver Courier| date =2006-08-18| url =http://www.vancourier.com/issues06/083206/news/083206nn1.html| accessdate = 2007-03-10}}
</ref> A monument to the [[Nisei]] of [[British Columbia]] <!--not about the internments, I don't think; I'm not sure-Skookum1 Is this the war memorial? -Bobanny --> immediately west of the Aquarium is accompanied by a planting of [[Japanese maple]] and flowering cherry and other plants from [[Japan]].
 
Reflecting the view that the park should be kept in a more natural state and is already saturated, the park board has banned the erection of any further memorials. In what some have considered an exception to the ban, the park board agreed in 2006 to build a new playground at Ceperley Meadows near Second Beach honouring the victims of the [[Air India Flight 182]] bombing. The federal government has earmarked $800,000 to build the playground, which was completed in the summer of 2007.<ref>{{cite web| last =Kittleberg| first= Lori| title =Air India tribute proposed for Ceperley Park| publisher =Xtra West!| date = 2006-07-06|url = http://www.xtra.ca/public/viewstory.aspx?AFF_TYPE=4&STORY_ID=1859&PUB_TEMPLATE_ID=2| accessdate = 2006-12-10}}</ref> A local historian has also suggested the appropriateness of memorials marking the sites of communities that were displaced in the making of the park at Lumbermen’s Arch (Whoi Whoi, or Xwayxway), Prospect Point (Chaythoos), Brockton Point, and Kanaka Rancherie (at the foot of Denman Street), although a formal proposal has not been put forth.<ref>{{cite book| last =Barman| first =Jean| title =Stanley Park’s Secret| publisher =Harbour Publishing| year =2005| location =Vancouver| pages =18| isbn = 1-55017-346-4 }}</ref>
 
== Galeri ==
<gallery>
Image:Vancouver-stanley-park.jpg|<center>Lost Lagoon with Downtown Vancouver in Background.
Image:Stanley Park Vancouver.jpg|<center>Sunset from Stanley Park.
Image:Girl in a Wetsuit.jpg|<center>''Girl in a Wetsuit'' statue
Image:Burns and Bird.jpg|<center>Statue of Scottish poet, Robert Burns
Image:HarryJerome.jpg|<center>Statue of Olympic runner, Harry Jerome
Image:A01923 CVA 677 136 Deadman's Island 191 .jpg|<center>Deadman's Island, showing squatters' homes in the early twentieth century.
Image:Brockton Point Lighthouse.jpg|<center>Brockton Point lighthouse
Image:LionsGate.jpg|<center>Lions Gate Bridge connecting Vancouver to West Vancouver.
Image:Notched tree stump.jpg|<center>Evidence of 1860s logging is visible on notched tree stumps in the park.
Image:Stanley Park Lagoon.jpg|Lost Lagoon
Image:Second Beach Pool.jpg|Second Beach Pool
</gallery>
 
==Rujukan==
{{reflist|2}}
 
== Pautan luar ==
{{commons cat|Stanley Park, Vancouver|Stanley Park}}
*[http://www.vancouver.ca/parks/parks/stanley/index.htm Stanley Park] – Vancouver Park Board website
*[http://www.vancouver.ca/parks/parks/stanley/pdf/stanleypark_printable.pdf Map of Stanley Park] - PDF Map of Stanley Park
*[http://www.stanleyparkecology.ca/ Stanley Park Ecology Society]
*[http://www.vancouver.ca/parks/news/2006/061229_closedareas.htm Park Board Map] showing areas damaged by December 2006 storm and related closures.
*[http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20061219/stanley_park_061219/20061219?hub=TopStories CTV news story] and video footage of aerial survey showing storm damage.
* [http://www.forestry.ubc.ca/StanleyPark/tabid/1447/Default.aspx UBC Faculty of Forestry] articles and photos on the windstorm damage and restoration
*[http://www.nosracines.ca/e/toc.aspx?id=1025 ''Correspondence and papers in reference to Stanley Park and Deadman's Island, British Columbia'', Ottawa, Ontario, s.n.1899], Sessional Papers No. 68A, Parliament of Canada, S.E. Dawson, Queen's Printer, by Order of Parliament.
*[http://vancouver.ca/ctyclerk/archives/webpubhtml/qbes/MovingImages/MI-113.htm ''On the Spot Zoo Story'', short 1953 film about the Stanley Park Zoo, City of Vancouver Archives]
 
Ada juga '''[[Stanley Park, Liverpool|Stanley Park]]''' di [[Liverpool]], [[Britain]].
 
'''''Stanley Park''''' juga merupakan sebuah judul novel pertama penulis Kanda [[Timothy Taylor (penulis)|Timothy Taylor]].
{{Vancouver landmarks}}
{{VancouverNeighbourhoods}}
 
[[Kategori:Vancouver]]
[[Category:Tapak warisan di British Columbia]]
[[Kategori:Tempat bersejarah Kebangsaan Kanada]]
[[Category:Taman Stanley]]
[[CategoryKategori:PelanconganTaman di VancouverKanada]]
[[Category:Tarikan pelancong di British Columbia]]
[[Category:Tapak Bersejarah Negara di British Columbia]]
 
[[cs:Stanley Park]]