Friday, July 31, 2009

Following our noses. Northward, mostly.

We're home, we've unpacked, we've even cooled down after the hot drive. And we're already talking about going back. Soon.

Now where was I? Here: Day One, Leg Two: the Sunshine Coast.

The Sechelt Peninsula is known locally as the Sunshine Coast for a reason; it has the mildest climate to be found in BC., with 14 more days of sunshine than flowery Victoria, the merest sprinkling of snow in the winter (if that), and Vancouver Island on the west serving as a windbreak. At the Langdale ferry terminal, a palm tree grows unprotected, facing the sea.

The peninsula stretches from Gibson's Landing at the southern tip, through a narrow neck at Sechelt townsite, to Earl's Cove in the north, where another ferry (free, outbound) takes us to the Powell River area. Local industry majors in tourism, fishing, and logging. The Sechelt native band quarries gravel. And all along the road we see little signs, with arrows and the legend(s), "Artist - artisan -potter - carver ---"

We followed some of these arrows, with varying results.



Just south of Sechelt, we turned at the sign of the "Art Barn". At the end of a long drive down a winding gravel road, we found the driveway. And this closed door, leaning against a tree.

Behind the tree, in an open field, a battered table and two red chairs invited us to stop.



Imagine tea and scones, with plenty of fresh raspberries, served "al fresco".



Frayed silver fabric, flaking paint.



The Art Barn.



Invitation to rest.

The artist was obviously planning to return; the closure was temporary. We checked out the work displayed in the field and around the walls.



Detail of structure in yard: "Mardi", upside-down.

Two motifs predominated: rusty metal, cut and shaped into panels, possibly to be used as doors or gates. (One is attached to the wall at the top of the stairs.) And natural objects, painted silver. Even the bare tree in the yard was half silvered.



Silvered antlers, with cryptic markings on the skull.

Back on the road, some little ways on, we passed this mysterious carving.



Like a totem pole on acid.



Detail.

There was no sign identifying the work or the artist. It is what it is.

The town of Sechelt; it was too hot already, and we took ourselves to the beach.



Another mysterious construction, this one not intended as art.



Sechelt rockweed. Smaller than ours, at home.



Steep, pebbly beach. The bottom cuts off sharply; no wading here.

Onward, and upward! Or, at least, Northward.

The highway skirts a small, green and blue lake, possibly known as Trout Lake. We stopped to look.



Trout Lake, with dry tree.



Water lilies stand on tall stems.



Assorted water plants.



Alien wildlife.



And native wildlife.

The obelisk posture is a handstand-like position that some dragonflies and damselflies assume to prevent overheating on sunny days. The abdomen is raised until its tip points at the sun, minimizing the surface area exposed to solar radiation. When the sun is close to directly overhead, the vertical alignment of the insect's body suggests an obelisk.
...
When the sun is low but the air is still hot, dragonflies may adopt a modified obelisk position with the abdomen only partially raised (From Wikipedia.)

These blue dragonflies were hunting along the shoreline. Out over the water lilies, large black and white dragonflies darted back and forth, too quickly to photograph, too quickly even to see properly.



The lake looked cool, but the sun was still hot. We couldn't stand on our heads like dragonflies, so on we went.

Next: Stonewater at Garden Bay.

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Goodbye to Campbell River

We're packed and ready for the trip home. We've gone down the stairs to "our" beach for the last time, and watched our last sunset.


Sunset over Willow Point

And it's been the best vacation ever. We'll be back.

I doubt that I'll have access to the web for a couple of days. Blogging will resume, with a vengeance, (or at least, with bazillions of bugs, birds, beasties and beautiful views) as soon as I've unpacked at home.

Cya!

.

Sorry!

I just found out that Gmail has been sending my blog comments to spam. I don't know how long this has been going on, or how many have been irrevocably deleted. I'm sorry if I missed any of your comments because of this.

:(

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Big name for a small snake

At Oyster Bay, just south of Campbell River, we found a small rest area/nature park, with a variety of habitats to explore. Once a log booming area, it is now protected habitat for birds and rare native dune and marsh plants. A couple of locals we met on a trail told us that the small bay is crowded with thousands of shore birds in winter; now, on a hot summer's evening, we saw only the purple martins nesting on poles, an eagle, a flock of lbbs, and a lone Least sandpiper (photos later).

On the shore, we met this tiny snake:



I had never seen one of these before, only the larger Common garter snake. This one was barely a foot long, and very slender. We saw it first, weaving its way along the old seaweeds at the high tide line; when it noticed us, it headed up the beach, going fast. We followed, and after a bit, it stopped running, coiled up, and threatened us. Not much of a threat, considering that it would fit in one of my hands.

However, these garter snakes do strike and have been known to bite. I'm glad I didn't try to pick it up.


Look at that red tongue!

The snake is named "terrestial", but is mainly aquatic, rarely found far from water, salt or fresh. And "Wandering" refers to its wide range; most of the western North American continent, sea level to high in the mountains.

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Sunday, July 26, 2009

Everyone's quiet except the gulls.

I give up. At least, I hereby abandon all attempts at system and order in my vacation blogging.

We are settled down in a motel near Campbell River; nothing fancy, but it suits us. It's shady and quiet, the view is astounding, the neighbours friendly. There's a miniature dog and big spiders and moths (outside). There's plenty to see and do in easy driving range.

We've decided to stay put until Wednesday, then (probably) head home the long way 'round. Every day, we've been going someplace, taking oodles of photos, coming back to the motel, recharging batteries and downloading photos. Then back out again, to take more gazillions of photos. "Home" for supper, and out to see the sunset. Another eleventy-umpteen photos.

I'm barely finding time to discard the fuzzies.

So, until we're back in Delta, I'll post highlights according to my whim of the moment.

The motel is on a cliff looking over Georgia Strait. A staircase (104 steps) leads down to the beach below. These are some of the birds from that beach.



Bonaparte's gull, Larus philadelphia. Black head, black bill is the adult breeding plumage.



"Boney's," again. It rides high in the water, with the wingtips crossed over the tail.



Great blue heron. Two stand on rocks just offshore all day long.



Eagle pretending he's a cormorant.



Gulls feeding in shallow water.



Check out the catch!

The gull in the water came up with a mouthful of starfish. Seconds later, the gull on the rock broke out in loud and bitter recriminations: "That starfish came off my rock! It's mine! You dirty thief!"*

And the "dirty thief" flew happily away. With his stolen lunch.

*(Free translation from the gullish.)

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Saturday, July 25, 2009

Free-style vacation; Leg One

This is the first vacation we've taken where we're playing it entirely by ear. No pre-booked rentals, no-one waiting for us at the end, no real end point, beyond "When we feel like going home." We've been taking side roads, following local artist signs, stopping where the view was good, or we saw lichens on the rocks or an intriguing place name. We've searched the outside walls of motels for bugs, and wandered in the bush. I'm still hoping for a bear; we found their droppings, twice.

And we've got hundreds and hundreds of photos. I've decided to blog them in chronological order, so as to keep my sanity.

So here's Leg #1, the ferry from Horseshoe Bay to Langdale (Gibson's Landing). Rather tame, so far ...



Horseshoe Bay - Langdale crossing



Harbour entrance, with marker

The weather has been uniformly beautiful; blue skies, calm waters, just a touch of a breeze.


Queen of the somewhere or other. The ferry to Nanaimo, I think.



Hard-working tugs. The nearer one is hauling a big log boom.



On the vehicle deck: he's got a license, but not to drive.



Coil of ropes and cable



We make our own path.



Water patterns



The shore, sliding by, with coast mountains behind.

Next: the Sunshine Coast.

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Friday, July 24, 2009

Postcard from Vancouver Island

Just checking in. We're on the edge of Campbell River, on Vancouver Island. I've got an internet connection, finally and probably, for the next three days. Full reports, coming up.

For now, an anemone garden under the floats of the Powell River wharf.


I'll be back anon.

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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Colours at the Quay

Wednesday Wordless (almost)

Palest pink:


Mallow

Purple:


Drooping Butterfly bush

Pink and cream:


Pink yarrow, with fly

Green, very green:


White waterlily

Yellow:


Water flowers on stalks.

Black and red:


Unidentified tree berries

White (ish):


Neptune watching ...

Orange, yellow, green and blue:


Carp pond, with reflections

And just plain brown:


Singing his heart out

And we're packed and ready to go, heading North, following our noses. I'll post whenever I find a network.


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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Huntress

Looking for slugs in my garden, I found this big spider, instead:




She's probably a Philodromus, a running crab spider of some sort. It's hard to be sure, because a defining characteristic is that the second pair of legs is longer than the first. And all she's got in second place is a broken stub.

One advantage of having eight, I guess; she's doing fine with two gone.

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Monday, July 20, 2009

Everything's Skookum

Just another perfect summer afternoon on Boundary Bay ...



Imagine



Honeysuckle



It's cool in the shade.



Lonely waterski



Lonely boat. Or at least, alone for the moment.



Hammerhead shark. Good with children.



Incoming tide.



Afloat



Skookum



Chase. The rubber dinghy's catching up.



Captain Intrepid in a kid's plastic kayak.



Back to shore: super-orange nasturtiums.



Lily says hello.



Glowing lily.

A Skywatch post
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