Category Archives: Summer

The Chain


© Jens Preshaw

Last weekend I climbed to the top of a granite monolith in the Coast Mountains. It was a beautiful sunny day and there were lots of people hiking with their dogs in the provincial park. After a few hours I reached the summit and there was a chain to help people up a relatively steep section of granite. I was intrigued by the chain and how the rain had rusted it and stained the granite rock. I tried to create a composition that just showed the chain and granite, without any distracting background clutter. Sometimes simple is hard.

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Elfin Lakes

© Jens Preshaw

In the Autumn I always find time to hike up to Elfin Lakes in Garabaldi Provincial Park. During the summer and on weekends this trail is very busy with dayhikers, mountain bikers and those people who are overnighting in the Elfin Lakes shelter which has bunks for 34 people. I usually hike the 22 km’s and 600 m of vertical in a single day with time for a leisurely lunch.

The trail is actually an old access road to the Diamond Head Lodge which was built in the 1940’s. Joan Matthews and two Norwegian brothers, Emil and Ottar Brandvold, from West Vancouver, built the lodge for backcountry hiking and skiing. The lodge was closed in 1972 and recently disassembled by BC Parks.

The first part of the hike winds it’s way up through tall Hemlock trees. At about the halfway point you reach the subalpine and Red Heather Meadows which are a beautiful colour in the Fall. This area is also popular with black bears who like to feed on the berries. The second part of the hike is my favourite as it runs along the Paul Ridge and you get spectacular views of Atwell Peak, Mount Garabaldi, Opal Cone, Diamond Head and Mamquam Mountain. It was a great day although the bugs were a bit of a nuisance.

© Jens Preshaw

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Living Room of the Gods

My legs are a little sore this morning after hiking up to Garibaldi Lake yesterday. This is a 19 kilometre hike with an elevation gain of 810 meters. If solitude is what you’re craving then this is not the hike for you. There were hundreds of dayhikers and overnight backpackers. Many of them find it necessary to scream and shout when they are hiking on the trail. I even saw one young man heading up the trail in flip flops.

When you arrive at the lake you are greeted by the beautiful blue-green colour of the water and a spectacular view of the glacier, crevasses and snow on Tantalus Mountain. The lake is 5 kilometres long, 4 kilometres wide and 300 metres deep. The water level of the lake was higher than previous years. I think this is because of the cloudy and cool weather we experienced in July and much of the snow didn’t start to melt until August when we received sunnier weather and hotter temperatures. As I sat along the shore of the lake, near the Battleship Islands, a few Whiskey Jacks and chipmunks joined me for lunch, while I soaked my feet in the icy cold water. At Garibaldi Lake you can also see the Black Tusk, but this side of the mountain is less spectacular then what you see from the top of Whistler Peak or Blackcomb.

My original plan was to spend a few hours sitting in the sun and enjoying the view, but there was just too many people. As I hiked backed down I stopped to look at The Barrier which is a geological formation that formed about 12,000 years ago and creates a natural dam. In 1855 an estimated 45 million tonnes of rock broke off of The Barrier. This slab of rock would have been about 500 metres long, 300 metres high and 500 metres deep. It buried a section of Rubble Creek and as I sat there it was interesting to see the creek reemerge from the rockfall further down the slope. The rock looks very unstable and small boulders are constantly tumbling off of The Barrier face. I’m sure, at some point in time, maybe thousands of years from now, there will be another huge rockslide. I wouldn’t want to be around when that happens because it’s holding back all of the water in Garibaldi Lake.

The Earth is about 4.5 billion years old and when you think about the passage of time in terms of geological events, you realize that the 100 years or so that a person will live is equivalent to the blink of an eye when compared to larger stretches of time, like the evolution of our planet.

© Jens Preshaw

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Hishuk-ish ts’awalk

The weather has been cool and cloudy in British Columbia. We have yet to experience the hot temperatures and sunshine we usually receive in July and August. I just returned from spending a week on the west coast of Vancouver Island. One evening I watched a whale for about thirty minutes very close to shore feeding near the rocks and amongst the kelp forests. The whale had two distinct blowholes, no dorsal fin and I could clearly hear it exhaling. If you have never been close enough to a huge whale when it’s exhaling, let me tell you,  it’s an amazing sound. As I walked back to my vehicle I watched an Osprey hovering and then plunging feet-first into the water. When it flew overhead I could see the fish that it had caught and was holding in it’s talons. The west coast of Vancouver Island is a magical place. The Nuu-chah-nuulth First Nations people have lived in this area for thousands of years. When describing this place they use the word, “Hishuk-ish ts’awalk”, which means “everything is one”. In the winter it’s battered by Pacific storms, but in the summer you can walk on the beaches, beneath towering Sitka spruce trees and listen to the rhythmic sounds of the surf.

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