| Activity | Hiking |
| Destination | Haskin’s Farm Loop |
| Date | 20 Nov 2019, Wednesday |
| Trip Coordinator | Vic Gladish |
| Contact Info | vicgladish@gmail.com; 250-285-2111; (cell 250-287-0459) Please contact the coordinator in advance of the trip. |
| Description | We will follow the Haskin’s Farm trail to the beach and pass by some great old growth trees before walking through the gently rolling paths on the golf course. |
| Meeting Place | Haskin’s Farm trailhead at Smith and Heriot Bay Roads |
| Departure Time | 10:00 |
| Difficulty |
Easy |
| Costs | none |
| Trip limits | none |
| Dogs? | Yes, but must not run through the group. |
| Notes: | Dress for the weather and bring a snack/lunch. |
Category Archives: day-trip
Hiking – Shellaligan Loop – 13 Nov 2019
| Activity | Hiking |
| Destination | Shellaligan Loop |
| Date | 13 Nov 2019, Wednesday |
| Trip Coordinator | Julie Mellanby |
| Contact Info | 285-3978. Please contact the coordinator in advance of the trip. |
| Description | We will park on Valdez Rd and hike the logging road to the trailheads. The loop we choose will depend on the weather. |
| Meeting Place | Heriot Bay store parking lot for car pooling. |
| Departure Time | 10:00 |
| Difficulty |
Easy to moderate. There are a few rocky bluffs to scramble up and some undulating sections. |
| Costs | none |
| Trip limits | none |
| Dogs? | Dogs must not run through the group. |
| Notes: | Bring lunch and gear for weather. |
Hiking – Eagle Ridge Loop – 27 Nov 2019
This trip is FULL
| Activity | Hiking |
| Destination | Eagle Ridge Loop |
| Date | 27 Nov 2019, Wednesday |
| Trip Coordinator | Janis McLean |
| Contact Info | 285-3614. Please contact the coordinator in advance of the trip. |
| Description | This hike will include the official trail to Eagle Ridge and an unmarked route descending the ridge and continuing on to the higher ridge to the north. From there we will descend to the logging road and return to the vehicles. The descent from Eagle Ridge is very steep on mossy rocks. There is no trail. Three to four hours hiking. |
| Meeting Place | Heriot Bay store parking lot for car pooling. |
| Departure Time | 10:00 |
| Difficulty |
The section up to Eagle Ridge is a maintained trail of moderate difficulty. The descent from Eagle Ridge is briefly tricky. The segment to the next ridge and down to the logging road is on an unmarked route through mostly open forest. |
| Costs | none |
| Trip limits | Maximum of 10 |
| Dogs? | Depends on the dog. Would need to be completely controlled during the descent from Eagle Ridge. |
| Notes: | Bring lunch, poles if you use them, and gear for weather. |
Trip Report – North Gowlland Loop – 30 Oct 2019
Our group of nine hikers and two dogs had a beautiful fall day for this varied loop. We started at the bridge across the creek and climbed up Marlow’s logging road. We followed a flagged route over to the North Gowlland trail and made a side trip to Rousseau Ridge. We enjoyed great views of Discovery Passage, Vancouver Island and parts of Quadra. We carried on northwest along North Gowlland trail, crossing the foot bridge back over the creek and continuing up the Copperhead logging road to the mountain bike trail, Little Black Dress. We passed by the shallow trenches that were an open-pit copper mine and a small woodland lake before we climbed up a rise and had lunch in the sun on a mossy bluff. After lunch we meandered along the Little Black Dress trail, undulating through open forest. Four of our group had early deadlines, so they parted from us just before the Cash Only trail and headed down a logging road to return to their vehicle.
The rest of us followed the Cash Only trail down to the North Gowlland Road and crossed to the mountain bike trail behind the wetland, Lady Lumps. There were a few trees down on the trail, but it was a lovely walk back to the bridge. This mix of trails makes a great loop with lovely forest and lots of variety. 9.3 km; 3¾ hours.
Debbie
(click on photos to enlarge)
- Along Marlow’s Road
- Discovery Passage and Vancouver Island
- Moss
- Leaving Rousseau Ridge
- Big-Leaf Maple leaves
- The creek
- Copperhead Road
- Reindeer Lichen (?)
- Cauliflower mushroom
- Old Oyster mushroom
Trip Report – Horne Lake Caves – 23 Oct 2019
Eleven adventurous souls made the 1¼ hour drive down island to Horne Lake Provincial Park. We went on a variation of their guided multi-cave tour. After the suspension bridge over the Qualicum River and the 1 km walk up the hill, we started on the upper end of Riverbend Cave where we visited the Soda Straw and Bacon Galleries with beautiful caves features (speleothems) and continued as far as the Buddha Room to see the “Buddha” in the reflecting pool. Main Cave was the second cave where we climbed up a waterfall and slid down a metal slide. We all managed to avoid “face-plant rock” at the bottom of the slide. The final cave was Lower Cave with beautiful features and tight passageways. We crouched low as we walked up the stream in the “Birth Canal”, but the “Cheese Grater” was the tightest squeeze. We emerged dirty, somewhat wet and tired, but everyone had a good time.
Matt was our guide and an experienced caver as well as fun and knowledgeable. He explained how the caves were formed by slightly acidic water running through limestone. He also showed us ancient fossils and how calcite crystals are formed. As we made our way through the caves he talked about how stalagmites (from the ground) and stalactites (from the ceiling) are formed over thousands of years. 4 hours on the tour.
I would highly recommend this Park to anyone. There are a wide variety of things to do for all levels of comfort.
Les
Thanks to Norris and Vic for the photos
(click on photos to enlarge)
- Meeting Matt
- The Qualicum River
- Suspension bridge
- Bacon formations
- Drapery formations
- Reflective water droplets
- Ice Cream Falls
- Drapery formation
- Buddha pool
- Entering Main Cave
- Terrace formations
- Reflective water droplets
- Climbing the falls
- The metal slide
- Outside Lower Cave
- Fourescent Christmas tree
- Emerging from the Cheese Grater
Trip Report – Mt. Seymour – 14 Oct 2019
The Mt. Seymour hike was moved forward to Thanksgiving Monday to avoid the deluge forecast for Wednesday, and Monday turned out to be a great hiking day. Eight of us made a quick trip to the summit, stopping at the three viewpoints for a nearly 360° view. The summit was clear with a good view of the clouds approaching the other mountains all around. The southeast breeze was cool, so we headed back down after a quick lunch. Les provided tailgate apple crisp when we got back to the vehicles. 8.0km; 470m elevation gain; 3¾ hours.
Norris
(click on photos to enlarge)
- mushroom
- the Nugedzi Lakes
- lichen
- looking southwest
- looking southeast
- Orange jelly fungus
Natural History – Horne Lake Caves – 23 Oct 2019
| Activity | Caving |
| Destination | Horne Lake Caves |
| Date | 23 Oct 2019, Wednesday |
| Trip Coordinator | Les Hand |
| Contact Info | 285-2029 or leshand@gicable.com. Please let the coordinator know as soon as possible if you are interested. |
| Description | This is a multi-cave experience that will be slightly modified for us and will take about 3 hours. Please use link https://hornelake.com/cave-tours/ to check it out. Scroll down to “Multi-Cave Experience”, click on “More Info” to see what to bring and wear. The helmet and headlight are provided. You can rent rubber boots for $6 if needed. |
| Meeting Place | Q Cove ferry terminal – be early |
| Departure Time | 10:00 ferry |
| Difficulty | Moderate |
| Costs | $26.25 including taxes for the tour. Must be prepaid to Julie hold your spot. Please make arrangements to pay Julie by contacting her at 3978. Also the ferry and shared gas costs. |
| Trip limits | 12 |
| Dogs? | No |
| Notes: | We will arrange carpools once we know who is coming. You will need to sign a liability waiver for Horne Lake Caves. Bring a lunch that you can eat before tour. |
Trip Report – Kay Dubois Loop – 9 Oct 2019
We had a beautiful fall day for eight of us and four dogs to hike along the eastern Quadra shoreline and through woodlot trails. We sat on the beach for a snack and were lucky to see two humpback whales passing by. 2 hours.
Trip Report – Hope Spring-Thompson Trail Loop – 2 Oct 2019
We had six people and two dogs for this hike, as well as a WWOOFer from Belgium. The walk was lovely and dry through forest to see stands of first growth Douglas fir. We passed by wetlands, along a creek following the undulating trail. We had lunch on the northern bluff, with a good view for a cloudy October day. There were lots of colourful mushroom along the way and some were collected for dinner.
Trip Report – Beech’s Mountain Loop – 18 Sept 2019
Seven hikers enjoyed what turned out to be a splendid day, after heavy rain the day and night before. The hike began via the South Chinese trailhead in the fog, following the low cloud almost to the top. Here the skies broke into sunshine at the large open east-facing bluff where the group had peekaboo views of the Coast Mountains. From there the weather continued to improve to full sunshine. After turning off the South Chinese Mountain trail, Beech’s trail follows a series of rock bluffs between fir and hemlock forested sections, with arguably the best views of any trail on the Island.
After lunch at the east viewpoint and a brief stop at the top, the group continued on a route only, descending the north side and dropping down to an old logging road. After about fifteen minutes on the road, we followed a convoluted route over another series of bluffs which brought us to the North Chinese Mountain trail. From here, it was a straightforward walk down the steep trail to the parking lot. Even though the sun was shining in the afternoon, extra care was taken on the steep bluff sections since the rock was very wet and slippery. The second half of this loop is not recommended unless hiking with someone who knows the route down the far side of Beech’s Mountain. 6.2 km; 340 elevation gain; total time four hours.
Janis
(click on photos to enlarge)
- Under the cloud toward Georgia Strait
- Lots of water in the streams
- Large bracket fungus
- Moss
- British soldier lichen
- At the Beech’s Mtn overlook
- Open Bay & Breton Islands
- Moth
- Discovery Passage
- Mainland mountains
- Looking back at the Beech’s Mtn overlook




































































