Photo Credit: Anita Johnson
Front: Ceilidh Johnson
Back: Emily Yun and Meighan Johnson
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Photo Credit: Anita Johnson
LtoR: Ceilidh, Arta, Emily, Dalton, Meighan
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Photo Credit: Anita Johnson
LtoR: Arta, Emily, Dalton, Ceilidh, Meighan
.... the trail goes from Sicamous to TRAIL END
which is where we being the walk toward Sicamous ...
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I have been longing to repeat that adventure. So on a day when the air was smoke filled and there was a question about “what to do” some of us started out on a five part adventure:
1) Greg’s Path,
2) an Uphill walk,
3) Trail End to Trail Beginning, and
4) Old Sicamous Road.
Photo Credit: Anita Johnson
LtoR: Dalton, Emily
... admiring the height of the ferns along the path ... |
Greg’s and Glen’s Path (soon to be renamed The Grandfather’s Path)– Dalton, Emily and I tried this stretch a few days ago.
The path goes parallel to the railroad tracks, but since it is forested on both sides, there is a feeling of being among the trees more than being on the track.
Photo Credit: Anita Johnson
LtoR: Ceilidh, Meighan, Arta, Emily, Dalton
... we pause for a photo on the trail ...
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And even the feel of being more in the forest than being near the water.
I noticed that the people with me were beginning to give names to the spaces that have been created: the tree that is shaped like a ‘U’, the bowed tree that looks like a hotwheels track, X marks the spot (where two trees criss-cross in a perfect X), the Little Canadian Stream, the Meadow Stream, and “the place where a Douglas Fir upended and ruined the path (except for the saving grace of a chain saw later on)”.
The path is covered from the sun, branches stretching out to shade us.
The boles of the trees are so high that I have to touch someone for stability as I throw my head back to see the tops of them. There are places where Greg has filled in gravel to make the walk easier.
I see rocks that have been moved by him along the way.
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Each time I travel the path I see more work that has been done, so sleuthing and trying to figure out what has been done next becomes an adventure.
There is only one point where I think I am seeing something that is not of Greg’s hand. There were three big indents in the blackberry patch.
My guess is that bears were in there, since I can’t imagine any human pushing the vines back in such a spectacular manner.
I took a nice fall forward before I had gone 10 yards.
I tripped over a big rock.
Photo Credit: Anita Johnson
LtoR: Dalton, Meighan, Emily, Ceilidh
... walking down the road just under the Pilling house ... |
I wasn’t paying attention to the ground.
I was gazing around in wonder at the beauty.
I took this as a lesson to take off the sunglasses when I am in the forest.
As well, I watched the ground for the rest of the hike and I couldn’t have taken a better lesson.
The roots of the Douglas fir criss-cross the trail with such beauty, sometimes even acting as the step up to another level of the forest.
Arta
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