3.3M x 2M (10’10” x 6’5”) THE LANE AT

Painted in 2004 by Paul Ygartua,
The Artist
Paul Ygartua is the same artist who painted Mural #12, Native Heritage, one of the most recognized
of all Chemainus murals. Once again he brings the subject alive with the magic of his brush!
The Art
Charlie Abbott arrived in Chemainus sometime in the 70's (nobody knows exactly when or why), and wandered into the deep, green, forest surrounding this small town where he spent the rest of his life.
Old and bent with age, Charlie lived alone in the woods. He came to appreciate and love the forest, its wild inhabitants, and the changing seasons. For the few people that knew of his existence, he was simply called “The Hermit”.
Through acres of forest wilderness, he created “The Hermit Trails”. They are a marvel of enterprise, endurance and unique splendor. Slowly, and painfully, he created a garden beneath the canopy of giant maples and firs, carving paths through the woodland floor. Slabs of rock, large and small, were hauled and placed to form intricate walkways and steps. Every day, Charlie Abbott swept the paths and cleared the fallen debris from both winter snowfalls and autumn windstorms.
This place of Charlie Abbott's rebirth, what he called “the last stop on my pilgrimage”, became a place of solace and peace for others as well. He shunned human contact and had no sense of ownership over his domain. “I can’t take it with me when I go”, he would say.
He saw himself as a simple caretaker, nourishing the ground from which he drew his strength. It was a task more suited to a younger man, but for the last decade of his life, Charlie Abbott buried his gnarled hands in the rich earth and released its beauty. He chose to dwell in the silence of the forest.
He no longer wanders the magnificent cathedral that is part nature part his own creation. Charlie Abbott's pilgrimage ended on