Trip Report – Morte Lake Loop – 11 Oct 2023

The rain quit in the morning and three hikers enjoyed a beautiful sunny autumn day. We started up the mountain bike trail known as Dead Fish. There has been considerable work done on this trail. Mountain bikers have made new jumps and numerous banked corners. They have moved large amounts of rocks and dirt to do this. The small creek is now running again after the few rainfalls we have had. There were numerous multicoloured mushrooms that have just come up because of the rain as well. We crossed back over to the old Morte Lake Trail where Dead Fish turns and goes up the hill. We proceeded on past the two small lakes that are very low and to the east end beach of Morte Lake. It is very low as well, and a lot of new sand showing on the beach. Instead of taking the new mountain bike route that makes huge switch backs up the side of the hill ,we kept to the old trail, which is much shorter. It is in poor condition now, though, as it has quit being maintained.
We stopped at the north west beach to have lunch. Someone has cleared many of the rocks into piles so it is a very sandy beach with the water so low. We enjoyed the sun here and the lake before going on around the lake. We kept to the old route all the way back to the cars. (11 km; 3½ hours moving time)

Les
 
Thanks to Les, Valerie and Carrie for the photos.
 
(click on photos to enlarge)

Hiking – Morte Lake Loop – 11 Oct 2023

Hiking – Morte Lake Loop – 11 Oct 2023

Activity Hiking
Destination Morte Lake Loop
Date 11 Oct 2023, Wednesday
Trip Coordinator Les Hand
Contact Info lhquadra@gmail.com  or 285-2029
Description We will do the classic around the lake hike. May do some small adjustments depending on the group.
Meeting Place Heriot Bay store parking lot
Departure Time 10:00
Difficulty
Easy
Costs none
Trip limits 10
Dogs? OK, but must be under control and not run back-and-forth through group
Notes Sorry for the short notice for this hike. I thought maybe some of us would like to work off some of the turkey, LOL.
Please contact one or two days early to sign up as only those who have signed up will be contacted in case of postponement or cancellation due to weather.

Work Party – Chinese Mtn – 25 Oct 2023

Activity Work party
Destination Chinese Mountain
Date 25 Oct, Wednesday
Trip Coordinator Norris Weimer
Contact Info norris.weimer@ualberta.ca or 3710; please contact the coordinator in advance of the outing.
Description The Chinese Mountain system is not in bad condition, but there is some deadfall that needs to be chainsawed and the annual brush cut is due.  If there is time and energy, we may work on the trail to Beech’s Overlook.  The Trail Committee provides tools.  Bring your own gloves, and your own tools if you prefer them.  We will have lunch at a scenic location.
Meeting Place Heriot Bay store parking lot to organize tools and carpool to the trailhead
Departure Time 10:00
Difficulty
Moderate work
Costs None
Trip limits 10
Dogs? No
Notes: Bring lunch.

Tour and Hike – Haig-Brown House and Baikie Estuary – 16 Oct 2023

Activity Tour and Hike
Destination Haig-Brown House and Baikie Estuary
Date 16 Oct. 2023, Monday
Trip Coordinator Debbie Quigg
Contact Info dmquigg@gmail.com or 3710.  We need to RSVP for the tour, so please contact the coordinator by Friday, Oct. 13th.
Description We will have a tour of the Haig-Brown house at 10:30, lasting about half an hour.  Roderick Haig-Brown was a fly-fisher, a conservationist and an author.  https://www.haig-brown.bc.ca/haig-brown-family-history/
From there, we will walk the short trail through the Baikie Estuary.  This is a flat, out-and-back walk of about 6.2 km.  The following link will help you understand the extent of the restoration which has occurred in the estuary:  https://www.natureconservancy.ca/en/where-we-work/british-columbia/featured-projects/salish-sea/campbell-river-estuary.html
Major work on the estuary has continued up to and through the summer of 2023.
https://www.greenwaystrust.ca/projects/baikie-island-and-campbell-river-estuary/
We will check out the River Nook, with its Alex Witcombe mural and sculptures (https://driftedcreationsart.ca/public-art/) before heading to More Eatery for lunch.
Meeting Place QCove ferry terminal or by arrangement
Departure Time 10:00 ferry to Campbell River, by car or bicycle
Difficulty
Easy
Costs We will give a donation to the Haig-Brown House for the tour.  Other costs are ferry and lunch.
Trip limits 10
Dogs? No
Notes: This outing is a window on conservation in Campbell River.  There are three separate parts: the tour, the walk and the lunch.  The lunch is entirely optional.

Trip Report – Amor and Nearby Lakes – 29-30 Sept 2023

This trip used the road-accessible Rec Site on Amor Lake for greatest flexibility.  Of the six people who participated, some stayed three nights, two nights, one night or just one day.  It certainly isn’t the best campsite on Amor Lake, but it has some conveniences. We were incredibly lucky with the beautiful autumn weather, since the trip was planned long in advance.

Friday:  Two came out on Thursday and set up camp.  Three others arrived on Friday morning and all launched as soon as possible.  We headed out to the south end of Amor and hauled out at the Mr. Canoehead campsite.  We navigated the short portage to Surprise Lake with the assistance of borrowed wheels for the kayaks and paddled across Surprise Lake as if we were doing the canoe circuit.  We left the boats at the south end of Surprise Lake and walked the 2.2 km portage to Brewster Lake through a lovely forest.  We had lunch at the launch site into Brewster Lake before retracing our steps and paddled back to the campsite by mid-afternoon.  We walked down the Blackwater Main logging road to visit the Rec Site on Blackwater Lake, which was sunny and scenic.  After relaxing on the shore, we headed back for dinner and enjoyed a great campfire, as the ban had just been lifted during the week and the evenings were cool.  The full moon was a bonus. (paddling 5.2 km, 1¼ hr; walking 8.3 km, 2½ hr)

(click to enlarge photos)

Saturday: We were joined by one more person on Saturday morning and were quickly away, heading north and across Amor Lake to the portage to Twin Lakes.  The launch site was quite muddy, but we managed awkwardly to get to the trail and walk up the undulating path to Twin Lake.  The campsite there, which is accessible by road, was very busy on this long weekend with great weather.  We briefly followed a trail up the north side of Twin Lake to a swim rock before heading back.  After returning to Amor Lake, we stopped for lunch at the first campsite we passed, which was on the north shore and had a beautiful sandy beach and lots of sunshine.  Continuing on, we came out of the east arm of the Lake and headed to the campsite at the north end, which has significant infrastructure.  We admired the dock with the picnic table as well as the covered shelter, but especially the sandy beach, sun-facing direction and great view.  We headed south along the western shore exploring the many campsites and sandy beaches along the way.  On our return to the campsite, two of the group packed up and left, leaving four others to enjoy another relaxed evening around the campfire.  (paddling 13.1 km, 3¼ hr; walking 2.5 km, ¾ hr)

We saw four of the Sayward canoe circuit lakes on this brief two-day paddle.  It was an easy and relaxed exploration.  We only encountered four other boats on Amor.  This was a fitting end to the season, having begun in May with an outing to Morton Lake Provincial Park and paddling on two other Sayward canoe circuit lakes – Mohun and Goose.  We had beautiful weather for both trips and enjoyed the relative quiet of the shoulder season.

Debbie

Multi-day kayaking and camping – Amor Lake – 29-30 Sept. 2023

Trip Report – Mine Lake Bluff – 20 Sept 2023

Six of us were fortunate to have a truly beautiful autumn day for this highly varied hike.  The group decided to do the hike as a loop, which is more challenging than out-and-back. We walked along the Mine Lake shore to Homewood’s Woodsman Camp and then steeply up the trail to the foot of the bluff.  The exposed section of the route was fairly dry in spite of the previous day’s rain.  Views of Mine Lake, the Quadra high plateau, and the Vancouver Island skyline made it all worthwhile.  We explored much of the bluff perimeter, with impressive cliffs on the east and west sides, before settling down for lunch at a sunny viewpoint.  We picked up the trail down the north side and under the impressive cliffs we had just been standing on.  After visiting some of the periphery of the camp we followed the path out to the first campsite, at the corner of Mine Lake and the narrows. One person swam before we headed back along the lake to the vehicles.  We enjoyed this leisurely hike to so many beautiful spots on a wonderful fall day. (6.6 km; 4 hours)

Debbie
 
Thanks to Carrie and Norris for the photos.
 
(click on photos to enlarge)

Hiking – Mine Lake Bluff – 20 Sept 2023

Trip Report – Rousseau Ridge Loop – 13 Sept 2023

Six of us hiked this loop starting from North Gowlland Road.  The recent welcome rain made the bushes wet and the day humid.  We hiked North Gowlland Trail up to Rousseau Ridge with a short break for elevenses and to enjoy the view..  From there we descended the mossy bluffs toward Gowlland Harbour Rd, with a few short steep sections into the forest and back up on the ridge.  Each ridge has great views of Discovery Passage and the Vancouver Island mountains, which were in cloud for us.  We stopped for a leisurely lunch on the third and lowest bluff.  We continued our descent to a logging road heading east and then picked up a route over lower, but still open bluffs taking us back to North Gowlland Trail.  We enjoyed the three very old Douglas firs, the Three Sisters, on the way back to make our loop.  Since we did this loop about 15 months ago, the flags have been removed, making the route finding trickier.   6.8 km; 3¼ hours.

Debbie
 

(click on photos to enlarge)

Hiking – Rousseau Ridge Loop – 13 Sept 2023

Day or Multi-day Paddling – Amor Lake – 29-30 Sept 2023

Activity Day or Multi-day Paddling
Destination Amor Lake
Date 29-30 Sept 2023, Friday – Saturday
Trip Coordinator Debbie Quigg
Contact Info dmquigg@gmail.com or 3710; please contact the coordinator well in advance of the trip
Description We will try to make this a very flexible outing.  Kayaks or canoes are welcome with good gear and experience.  Participants may come for one day or for both.  The base for our activities will be the small Rec Site on the west side of the lake with five campsites.  This is a free Rec Site accessible by logging road.  The boat launch is modest.  Amor Lake has lovely beaches and islets with much to explore.  It is on the Sayward Canoe Circuit and we can walk the portages.
Meeting Place QCove ferry terminal or Amor Lake
Departure Time 9:00 ferry to Campbell River or by individual arrangement
Difficulty Easy to moderate.
Cost Ferry
Trip limits 10
Dogs? No
Notes: Here is information about the Rec Site and Amor Lake:  http://www.sitesandtrailsbc.ca/search/search-result.aspx?type=Site&site=REC0174
There is currently an advisory for an aggressive cougar, but I believe that is quite old.

Hiking – Mine Lake Bluff – 20 Sept 2023

Activity Hiking
Destination Mine Lake Bluff
Date 20 Sept 2023, Wednesday
Trip Coordinator Debbie Quigg
Contact Info dmquigg@gmail.com or 3710; please contact the coordinator by Monday night.
Description We will hike through the Camp Homewood site on Mine Lake and then through the forest to the scenic bluff. We can decide as a group whether we want to do this as a loop or out-and-back.
Meeting Place Heriot Bay store parking lot
Departure Time 9:30
Difficulty
Moderate if we do out-and-back.   Some challenging spots with exposure if we do the loop.
Costs none
Trip limits 10
Dogs? no
Notes We will not do this trip in wet weather and maybe not even in poor visibility.

Trip Report – Paddle around Cape Mudge – 6 Sept 2023

Almost exactly one year to the day since our first Round the Cape paddle trip, four club members set out from Q-Cove to repeat the adventure. This report will therefore sound a lot like the one written last year (cut and paste…) The necessary shuttle was pretty simple with just four participants, one volunteer spouse and a two-car paddling couple! Two paddlers got to the put-in without motorized transport!

By 10:10 we were on the water just as the ferry was loading – two ferries to watch out for this time. Weather, (overcast and threatening drizzle, but no wind) tides and currents were all in our favour as we rounded Whiskey Point and headed south to Cape Mudge. We passed closely by the Village (accompanied briefly by a pair of harbour porpoises on our starboard), and then the lighthouse, working against the counter currents while the main tide continued to flood, and then rounded the Cape. One petroglyph barely revealed itself here, but one sharp-eyed paddler spotted it. These often treacherous waters were very calm, due to our timing, and we headed into the boulder strewn shallows of the south shoreline. It was interesting to be at the base of the sandy cliffs that we had hiked to the edge of last week for a view of the shoal at very low tide.

As we glided along a flock of a dozen or so Common Loons struck up a conversation about kayaking intruders, Harlequins scurried along the water’s edge to put distance between us, and the migrating coho were leaping about. Large schools of herring or sardines were seen in the shallow waters of Wilby Shoals.

By this time we were looking for a reasonable place to pull out for a “rest” and stretch, but, once again a cobbly beach was the best we could do. As it was time for lunch, our rest stop lasted nearly an hour. Back on the water and heading for our final “turn around the corner”, a nice beach was spotted and perhaps will be remembered for next year’s lunch stop! We rounded Francisco Point and headed north on a somewhat brighter and milder afternoon without notable resistance from the ebbing tide. With our destination in sight for most of the 5 km, it did feel like a long stretch as we avoided rocks and watched for whales.  (15.0 km; 4¼ hours.)

List of bird sightings – at least a dozen Common Loons (very vocal), many Harlequin ducks, a Common Merganser, numerous Bonaparte’s, Glaucous-winged, and Mew Gulls, Cormorants, a Great Blue Heron, Bald Eagles

Vic 

Thanks to Vic and Norris for the photos

(click on photos to enlarge)

Kayaking -Paddle around Cape  Mudge – 6 Sept 2023