Showing posts with label hiking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hiking. Show all posts

Friday, 27 October 2017

I'm anticipating this as much as I anticipate a Star Wars sequel: 105 Hikes

I cannot sit on this any longer: spoilers ahead.

Anyone who knows me or that can read the title of this blog knows that for a time I was a fanatic about peak bagging hiking guide books, most notably "103 Hikes in SouthWestern BC".  I own copies of all 6 editions, and have hikes most of the trails within all of them.

Recently, a string of sequential discoveries blew my mind. I'm glad they didn't come all at once because the shock might have killed me.

*FIRST: Rumours started circulating that a new edition of "103 Hikes" might be getting written.  But who would write it? The original writers have unfortunately moved on and the last collaborator expressed little interest.

*NEXT: Wanderung board member (and established writer) Stephen Hui was toying with compiling a book of his own. His secret "Death Star" project was shrouded in mystery (at least for me), but between his callouts to such a variety of places, and his prolific photography,.. it seemed like maybe it was hiking related.

*NEXT: Spoiler alert: Stephen Hui is writing what will be called 105 Hikes In and Around Southwestern British ColumbiaNot since Darth Vader was revealed to be Luke's father did I feel such simultaneous confusion and "wow it all makes sense now".  But wait, is there really going to be another edition with those cartoon maps that I love, but others criticize so much?

*NEXT: Hold on to your asteroids, this ain't like dusting crops folks! Founder of Canadian Map Makers, and Coquitlam SAR volunteer Steve Chapman was assigned by Greystone books to collaborate with Stephen on the maps. BOOM!  Steve has a long history in this arena and even pitched an early product idea on Dragon's Den.  He also was a Wanderung subscriber and participated in many an adventure with yours truly.

Now I don't want to say that Wanderung made this all happen but... (well it didn't,.. but I love the connection!).  I've hiked with both of these guys on many a "103" hike through Wanderung (Alouette, Mt McGuire, Widgeon Lake, Williamson Lake) and could not be more excited to see the final product coming from the minds of 2 guys I've shared these kinds of adventures with.

So let's recap:  Stephen Hui is writing 105 Hikes.  Steve Chapman is doing the maps. I cannot wait.  I will be there lined up like the next Harry Potter is coming out.  

May, 2018?!!?  Oh well, at least I've got Episode VIII in December... (my birthday is in May, hint, hint).

Move along, move along.

Thursday, 31 August 2017

109th Walk of the book BAGGED!

In addition to completing "Dawn Hanna's Best Hikes in SW BC" in 2007 and "103 Hikes (5th edition)" in 2015, I now have completed the 5th Edition of "105 Walks in British Columbia's Lower Mainland"!

Ok, maybe somewhat less of an accomplishment, sure, but for 10+ years on rainy days and through injury recovery I've been chewing at the edges of this one and and happy report I've now seen them all.

This book, like when I finished 103 hikes, was quite outdated, and there are newer editions but the reason I like to "bag" books cover to cover is to introduce the "random factor".  Especially with this book, what it did was allow me to explore parts of Surrey or the Sunshine Coast, for example, I might never have been inclined to check out. I now feel more in touch with my home (the Lower Mainland) as a result.

Many of these walks could not be more flat,.. hardly worthy of walking your dog.  Others,.. full on hikes with elevation gain.  They were nothing if not inconsistent.

My final walk was South Elphinstone Heritage Trails which turned out to be logistically painful unless I wanted to pay for my car on the ferry to Langdale, both ways, only for a 3 hour hike.  In this case I rode over solo, climbed the hill from the ferry by bike, locked up and switched to my hiking boots. FINITO (actually it was a pretty tough trail for an out of shape guy recovering from an injury).

Looking back, I think of all the trips and people I did them with (many of these I did solo) and sure they were not all super exciting adventures,.. but the whole experience was what mattered.  Owls, history, and just something to do after work instead of TV. It was good enough for me to seriously consider walking the gaps between the 5th edition, and the lists in editions 6 and 7.

I'll release a list of "worth doing" sometime soon (and the "these were crap" list also).

The hikes:

UBC Gardens
Pacific Spirit Park
Chancellor Woods
Point Grey
Jericho Park/ Spanish Banks
English Bay
False Creek
Stanley Park
Renfrew Triangle
Champlain Heights
Burnaby Heights/ Trans Trail
Capitol Hill
Burnaby Mountain
Burnaby Mountainside Trails
SFU/Stoney Creek
Burnaby Lake
Brunette River
Deer Lake
Molson Way (Central)
Molson Way (South)
Burnaby Fraser Foreshore Park
Mundy park
Shoreline Trail
Sasamat Lake/ Woodhaven Swamp
Belcarra Regional Park
Buntzen Lake
Colony Farm Regional Park
Ridge Park Loop
POCO Trail
Woodland Walks (Lower Burke Ridge)
Minnekhada Regional Park
Whytecliff
Seaview/Baden Powell
TransCanda Trail/ Nelson Creek
Point Atkinson
Cypress Falls Park
Black Mountain Loop
Cypress Bowl
Baden-Powell Trail (Hollybrun Ridge)
Lower Hollyburn
Brothers Creek Trails
Hollyburn Heritage Trails
Ballantree
Capilano Canyon
Bowser Trail
Baden Powell Trail Grouse Mountain
Mosquito Creek
Upper Lonsdale Trails
Lynn Headwaters Loop
Rice Lake
Two-canyon Loop
Hastings/Lynn Loop
Historic Mushroom Loop I
Historic Mushroom Loop II
Goldie Lake
Dog Mountain
Mytery Lake and Peak
Baden Powell Trail
Indian Arm Park
Lulu Island Dyke
Richmond South Dyke Trail
Richmond Nature Trail
Deas Island
Brunswick Point
Boundary Bay Regional Park
Crescent Beach
South Surrey Urban Forests
Tynehead Regional Park
Derby Reach Regional Park
Campbell Valley
Aldergrove Lake Regional Park
Matsqui Trail
Seven Sisters Trail
Teapot Hill
Coquihalla Historic Trails
Chatham Reach
Alouette River Dykes
Pitt Wildlife Management Areas
UBC Malcolm Knapp Research Forest
Mike Lake
Alouette Nature loop
Gold Creek Trails
Kanaka Creek
Rolley Lake and Falls
Hayward Lake
Hoover Lake Forest Trail
Mission Trail
Weaver Lake
Campbell Lake Trail
Sasquatch Provincial Park
Killarney Lake
Porteau Bluffs
Shannon Falls
Squamish Estuary
Four Lakes Trail
DeBeck Hill
Evans Lake Forest
Brohm Lake Interp Forest
Brohm Lake
Brandywine/Calcheak
Crater Rim Loop
Cheakamus Lake
Shadow Lake Interpretive Forest
Soames Hill Regional Park
K2
South Elphinstone Heritage Trails
Triangle Lake
Mount Daniel
Skookumchuck Narrows

On to complete DWYT, and Car-free BC...

Sunday, 1 May 2016

109 Walks 5th Edition bagging

So what does a 103 Hikes trail bagger do in the off-season? 109 Walks 5th edition of course!

I've been picking away at this book for decades, and I'm betting so have most Vancouverites (just without knowing it).  If you have walked in Stanley Park, Pacific Spirit or Lighthouse Park then yup,.. you're a 109 bagger.

Compiled by the same authors as 103Hikes, this publication focuses on trips generally less than 4 hours, with at worst moderate elevation gain (but don't be fooled you can hit "real hikes" in this book but most are urban parks).  Snow is rarely an issue for these, nor is doing them on a rainy day.  The "zone" covers Hope to Pemberton, and includes the Sunshine Coast.  There are new editions out, this version was written 16 years ago but as far as I know almost all trails are still usable.

At the time of writing this I'm 3.5 walks from completing the book. I've done most after work, and many are doable by anything but a road bike too. It is my intention to share the best finds from this book and post them here.


Left to go:
Goldie Lake109 Walks 5 ed.
Weaver Lake109 Walks 5 ed.
Saquatch Park109 Walks 5 ed.
South Elphinstone109 Walks 5 ed.


Sunday, 30 August 2015

Best of 103 Hikes (5th Edition)

Earlier, I published a hit list of my top 10 "recommended ensemble" hikes.  In other words, a 10 pack of accessible great payoff hikes to give someone the greatest variety if they were going to do 10 and only 10 hikes near Vancouver (from 103 Hikes).

This list is probably is more what people who already hike here want to know: what were the 10 best hikes, full stop.  Ie. which were the best experiences and most worthwhile, painful logistics aside, as stand-alone hikes.

A theme for BC hikes I've found is that the best ones require getting further from the city and suffering a 4x4 road, some bushwacking, killer elevation or distance, or at least backpacking to stay overnight.  If the payoff can offset that,.. then it makes my top 10 list.

Here goes, in no particular order, these hikes stick out as the most satisfying for some reason:

1 - MAMQUAM
This one is a bit of a cheater.  Technically, Elfin Lake's trail (also a 103  hike book destination) is the first, and last, quarter of this trip and many people think that is a good enough destination.  Because of the cabin, that can make this multi-day more enjoyable,.. or even doable as you could probably get up here after work,
Mamquam is 44km round trip but has an easy access road in the months you would do this but what makes it great is that it is just non-stop scenery (and the gradient is never high). It starts with the red heather meadows on the way to Elfin,.. then Elfin itself (scenic lakes, good camping or the cabin),.. then you hike to Opal Cone,.. glaciers and walking around an old caldera! THEN you keep going through a number of science fiction fantasy landscapes that remind me of Hawaii... then there is the lake for camping. It is just packed, and why I rank it up there.  PHOTOS

2 - ATHELNEY PASS (SALAL CREEK)
Access to this place sucks.  The road is sandy and needs a 4x4 and a good driver,. it is also very far from Vancouver,  Navigation for the first 10-15km is hard and the terrain challenging including a few stream crossings that you need to plan for. However, that is all erased as soon as you see where you arrive.. huge skies, massive glaciers and the feeling that all hiking youv'e done before was viewed through a port hole.  My eyes felt as if someone switched them from cropped frame camera to full frame (it almost blew my brain).  The scenery is awesome but you have to work to get to it. PHOTOS

3 - RUSSET LAKE
This one actually is very convenient to access, a ready made trip that is a nice loop but does require camping.  PHOTOS
See my post HERE.

4 - WEDGEMOUNT LAKE
This one can be done in a day there and back (but why?). The trail isn't that exciting and is in fact grueling at times but the visual payoff,.. wow.  PHOTOS

5 - MOUNT MACFARLANE
This one is a long haul but there are choices regarding how to tackle it.  We camped at lower Pearce Lake and only took day packs to the top and back in the morning.  It is quite high and gives you a great 360 view of the Chilliwack area.  It is just something about the asthetic that makes this one worth checking out. PHOTOS



6 - LEADING PEAK
Most people call this hike "Anvil Island".  Is the trail great? No. Is the view amazing? Not bad (but it is unique). Is it worth all the begging for permission and extortion of the bible camp, plus the cost of the water taxi? Not really.
What sticks out for me is that every time I drive the Sea to Sky highways, I don't have to look at it anymore and wonder what it would be like to get tot he top.  Like the Lions, Anvil Island is such an icon of this area, it can drive someone like me insane not to hike it.  I enjoyed this adventure just due to the boat ride and the peak was satisfying, as was the approaching ridge.  The logistics? Not so much,  PHOTOS 

7 - MT. RODERICK
This one was an adventure and I doubt people would be able to repeat.  In fact, you aren't supposed to go through the pulp mill anymore or you'd be trespassing.
Knowing I had to bag the book we decided to deal with the lack of free ferry (that existed when the book was written) by kayaking in the calm evening. We were met with a security team telling us to turn back but it was too dangerous and we cut a deal.  That night we hiked, in the dark, to the cabin.
In the morning we woke to a scenic place we'd spend at least 1 more night.  We hiked toward Sedgewick in the alpine and returned in time to sit under cover on the porch and watch the reddest apocalyptic sky peppered with a lightning storm to end all storms, The next day, hiked out and paddled back to Squamish. It sticks out to me as an adventure to remember.  PHOTOS

8 - TRICOUNI MEADOWS
Not unlike Mamquam,.. this one is a 3 stage rocket,.. what might be the ONLY payoff on other hikes is just one of many phases that aim to satisfy here.  We did it as a day hike, but camping at the meadows looks very appealing.  The problem with this one is the need for a 4x4, and a reputation for being muddy year round (for the first hour or so,.. not in the middle).  Great views, great alpine terrain. Do it.  PHOTOS

9 - HAYLMORE-MELVIN DIVIDE
This was in my recommended ensemble list  HERE
Easy to get to by 2WD, all around satisfying overnighter.  No particular adventure story for me on this one, just a good solid destination,

10 - MOUNT OUTRAM
I wrote about this one too HERE
This one is all about the view, it is just that much higher up that the ranges in the area. Being the highest in the book made it particularly satisfying to discover it was wasn't as much a killer chore as it was an amazing destination.  I had dreaded it, conquered it, and even enjoyed it.  PHOTOS




Also of note:
Mt. Steele - (a series of cabins on Sunshine Coast)
Helm Lake - (the only way to do Garibaldi)
Pinecone Lake - (a sleeper with amazing views)
Mt. Harvey - (the best of the HSCT)
Needle Peak - (get your Coquihalla fix)







Wednesday, 19 August 2015

Worst Hikes in 103 Hikes 5th Edition

Far be it from me to be pushy about where someone else wants to go,.. but if you read this and choose to still go on one of these 10 hikes,.. all I can say is "you've been warned".

Because I hiked the 5th edition many years after it was published, I probably deserved a few crap hikes,.. trails don't last forever, especially in Southwestern BC where the access is often provisioned by some resource industry like logging or mining.

Logistics for sure influenced my experiences on these hikes, as did trail condition,.. but some,.. just suck without those considerations.  Thankfully almost all of these were removed for the next editions!

Do not do these hikes:

1 - ELAHO CANYON

The West Coast Wilderness Committee does great work.  They bring attention to areas at risk, and save pristine stands of forest.  Sometimes they do this by building a trail for access.  The problem is after an area is saved, their job is done and the trail is never maintained again.  The Elaho Canyon is one such trial and the bridge is out so you cannot complete it end to end.  Even if you could, there are no views and the access road is very, very, long.  In early Wanderung, this trail was the destination for the callout that won the first "Worst Callout" award.  The organizer knew the road started in Squamish so labelled it a "Squamish hike" the fact is it starts North of Pemberton!

2 - BUG LAKE

The name probably gives you a hint. It took me 2 attempts to bag this piece of crap.  Both soaking rain and bugs.  The road is washed out so I did some damage to my car and the 2nd time we
smartened up and brought mountain bikes to cover some of the distance.   Imagine the Grind with instead of stairs,.. a mud slope straight up.  At the top, granted, it started showing promise,.. at the turn around point!  Very overgrown, very hard to find the trail.  Oh ya, and we helped a crashed driver get back on the road only afterwards realizing he was probably drunk and we probably endangered Brackendale citizens for miles around.

3 - BOISE TRAIL

Another WCWC fiasco. So overgrown I got stuck unable to move forward or back at one point and it took us an hour to move 200m.  Slide alder requires an extra several km of hiking, and only a sweet little truck got us there and had to shuttle people.   I see nothing redeeming about this trail, consider it decommissioned.  My shins are still scarred months later!


4 - HECTOR FERGUSON

I don't know who this Hector Ferguson guy is, but I bet he is an asshole. His trail sucks and serves no purpose, and oddly, still in the 6th edition!  We biked part of it to save time but this one asks you to do a dangerous river crossing and the camp spot at the top,.. a mud pool. No views, long trail, why go?  I was crossing a log bridge that snapped and I was fully submerged for several seconds in 3 foot water with my pack pulling me under,.. fun times!

5 - HOPE PASS AND NICOMEN LAKE

Sure, if Nicomen lake back to the highway are the tail end of your trip through the Heather Trail,.. I can see doing it.  The lake is nice, but my god this trial is endless,.. sheer monotony for 50km.

6 - SUNSET TRAIL

This is all forest, not real payoff except that I suppose you could spare yourself the hike down by just hiking to Cypress Bowl and hitching a ride.  In fact,.. do that.


7 - MT. AMADIS

Very long, very lame. 2 attempt to finish this and nothing redeeming about it, yet somehow still in the 6th edition. Oh wait,.. 1 good thing: views of the places you should have spent your 11 hours hiking in the Baker or Chillwack areas.

8 - DENNETT LAKE

For me, this was the worst bugs I'd ever seen to this day... we ran eating lunch so they could't eat it first.  Mud, mud, and more mud - horrible drainage.  Just not sure why this remains in the 6th edition except maybe convenience being so close to Coquitlam?

9 - SKAGIT RIVER TRAIL

History has never been so boring.  Yes, Hudson's Bay company stories permeate the very trees of this trail, but you can read about that at home.  Flat and all the highlights can be reached within a few km of HWY #3,.. so just do that end and check of the Rhodos and big trees,.. the hours to the other end you will never get back!

10 - GATE MOUNTAIN

This one and the others near it on the Fraser Canyon are unique,.. uniquely pointless!  Its a long way
to drive for a bit of exercise.  One kicker experience is one of my hiking partners (my ex) found a tick burrowing into her flesh near her waistband!  We had to go to Chilliwack hospital :(

Saturday, 15 August 2015

10 Must-Do trails from 103 Hikes (5th Ed.)

Let's be clear, this list is not a list of the 10 best stand-alone hikes from the book,.. this is an ENSEMBLE of the 10 I believe everyone should do.  The audience I have in mind while writing this is one that I encounter often in Wanderung: someone new to the city or visiting that may not ever do hundreds of trails, but should at least not be subjected to doing 10 very similar ones due to lack of information.

In my last blog post I touched on the story of a guy that came to Vancouver and hiked 3 great trails,.. but they just happened to be right next to eachother with very similar views: boring.  Granted, this list will partially be excluding trails with horrid logistics, I think that this is the list that all local hikers should review and ensure they have at least knocked off these rites of passage, and visitors would get the most bang for their buck without too much repetition. I also wanted to create an array that will take people to several different areas.  In no particular order:

1 - MOUNT SEYMOUR

Locals will probably close their browser window right now but that is because we all take it for granted.  Lets recap what a great Vancouver treasure this place is. PHOTOS
  • 30 min from Vancouver and you've already gained a ton of elevation
  • Views of Vancouver itself
  • double header: hiking destination by summer, great snowshoe destination in Winter
  • great connections to other hikes and hot weather swimming holes

2 - MOUNT HARVEY
I have to include one from the Howe Sound Crest Trail set (Lions, Unnecessary, Brunswick), and Harvey is the best IMO due to more interesting stuff in behind, a view OF the Lions, and the ridge that extends out into the water view,.. it is the reason you see more photos from Harvey than the Lions (I'll touch on this in my "Hike this not that" blog entry). This trail can also be done on snow under the right conditions but I highly recommend fall, as the red foliage really adds to it. PHOTOS










3 - WEDGEMOUNT LAKE
Yes it is steep and not for everyone but the trail is actually not all that long. Trail access is basically pulling off the highway, and the payoff, wow.  The colour of that lake will be etched in your mind forever once you see it. If you are new to hiking and hit this place on the right day,.. you will be hooked so long as you are fit enough not to feel as if the trail was torture.  You can camp up there on tent pads (or in the cabin) also which I highly recommend. PHOTOS






4 - NEEDLE PEAK
The Coquihalla area deserves some attention.  This trail does have one challenging part that could deter some people but I'm not much of a scrambler and I got there. I suspect anyone getting to the top of Needle Peak will get the bug for the area.  People with the skills and know-how can also do this area in snow season.  PHOTOS













5 - HAYLMORE-MELVIN DIVIDE
Using only a normal 2WD car you can gain admission to a highly under-rated area.  This one is up near Pemberton, moderately challenging, but has great lake and mountain views plus you can hop off to do some other interesting diversions.  I suggest doing this one at least as an overnight trip. PHOTOS







6 - MT. CHEAM
You have to do a Chillwack hike! You need a good 4WD and someone that knows how to drive it to navigate some hair raising obstacles and slope side roads,.. but once at the trailhead,.. this one is all payoff.  Catch it at the right time of the year and the wildflowers are insane.  The summit offers a unique view of the valley and mountains to the south. There is even this funky swimming hole that is perfectly round, PHOTOS

7 - MT. OUTRAM
This one is technically not in Manning Park, but close.  No hike in the book has more elevation gain (1800m)and I actually felt the elevation slowing me down here, but it wasn't nearly as bad as I had expected. When I went we stayed overnight at a super scenic camp spot near a tarn, and did the summit the next morning. Very few people seem to go here but I have no idea why. It allows you to look down on all the ones in Manning. PHOTOS


8 - 3 BROTHERS
I did this the first time when I was in scouts as a detour from the Heather trail. This one gets high marks because of the scenic, but dry, ridge walk to the peak and getting there puts you in the heart of wildflower country.  I feel this is best done as part of some sort of multi-day trip to Manning. PHOTOS







9 - MT. GARDNER
One of the few island peak hikes in the book and this one comes with the added "adventure points" of a nice ferry ride and a few decent pubs to hit for a full day excursion.  Gardner's trail is nice, and typical "coastal", but it is not alpine so it has quite a nice long season due to the low elevation (bonus!).  What you will remember most is the view of Vancouver from the helicopter/lunch pad.  No other hike will get you this unique angle and is the main reason why I have added it to my top 10 to recommend as part of the ensemble. PHOTOS


10 - RUSSET LAKE
This Whistler based one has to be done over 2 days.  What I like about this one it that it is the perfect loop if done the right way: hike up singing pass, camp at scenic Russet Lake, hike the musical bumps, and then take the gondola down. Mind blowing views the entire way and never retracing your steps.  This loop might be one of my faves of the entire book (not just as part of the ensemble).  PHOTOS



Thursday, 13 August 2015

Lists of lists,...

When you are obsessed with something like peak bagging a book it is hard not to volunteer it. Afterall,.. what explains what you do with your free time all summer?  What are you going to talk about? Work?

Most people I know hike in some form or another so are generally curious even if they aren't part of my existing hiking community.  The question I often get is "I know that book, what is the best hike?". When you have 103+ adventures to draw from,. spanning 10 years, different groups of people and weather conditions,.. it is a bit of a tough question and highly subjective.

Some hikes from the 103 series I've done over a dozen times,.. but at least 50% only once. That is more a reflection of convenience than anything.  The "best" hike when you have only done 25% of the book changes frequently,.. and when talking to a novice hiker do you want to plant a seed that will send them on a 3 day trek where it might put them at risk?

That is why I want to compile a series of top 10 lists.  103 Hikes spans the most common trails of
the area so it is a good base to use for recommendations. However, for me, my top 10 experiences do not completely overlap with the top 10 destinations I'd suggest someone visiting from another place make their hitlist.  I recall a Wanderung subscriber from Isreal for 3 months doing the Lions, Mt. Harvey and Brunswick,.. those are basically the same hike, with very similar views (in fact you can walk from 1 to the next). This pained me. I can just see how that happened,.. he was at the summit and someone pointed to the next bump over and said "that is a great hike".  That person should have told him about Wedgemount lake, or Mt. Cheam. Hell, they could have given him a different view from Mt. Gardner.

I've decided to compile the following lists over the next few weeks:
  • Top 10 "ensemble" of hikes to do if new to hiking and want a good variety
  • My top 10 experiences (best hikes for me)
  • 10 hikes to never, ever, ever do.
  • "Hike this not that" - substitutions better tha the their more popular options
  • Backpacking best picks






Sunday, 9 August 2015

103rd Hike of the book: BAGGED!

As of the August long weekend 2015,.. I can now say that I've hiked all of the hikes in 103 Hikes 5th Edition!  The last one was the Lizzie Stein Divide, and as with many of hikes I went further than the defined turn-around point (in this case, all the way to the amazing cobalt waters of Tundra Lake).

A celebratory beer after bagging #103
This trip was not easy.  When the book was written, the logging road took you within a single round trip day hiking distance of the destination! We had to add a full day of extra hiking to each end of the trip and the terrain was horrible,.. it took us 5 days total to do what was defined as a 7 hour hike back in 2001!

Thankfully, my friend John hauled 6 tall cans up to celebrate unbeknownst to any of us (for the record, that is insane on a multi-day backpacking trip).
The long view of Caltha Lake



More photos can be found HERE.




Our campsite at Caltha Lake


John at Tundra Lake
I should qualify my earlier statement about bagging the book, there are exceptions.  The "rules" I had set out for myself were that I needed to complete each trail in entirety unless access was now forbidden, or unsafe.  The second part is a bit of a grey area since some did require scrambling and may not have been safe by any stretch.

In many cases I had to take multiple attempts to bag a trail. They were always the horrible ones: Mt. Amadis, Bug lake, Boise.  Going back a 2nd time was more than a chore.

In the cases where I couldn't bag it, I went as far as possible AND then hiked a substitution in the same area of equal or harder stats.  Those exceptions:

  • Elaho Canyon - the bridge is permanently out, but I went as far as possible and then did Locomotive in the Semaphore area of Pemberton.
  • Tricouni Meadows - I chickened out on the scramble at the top. I missed maybe the last 50 metres and in this case expect to go back.
  • Mt. Liddell - The Gambier Island Conservancy de-commissioned this trail and I want to honour that. Instead I did Mt. Killam which is the same stats and literally attached to Liddell.
When I think back to the over 150 adventures this journey took me on, I met so many great people (including some of my closest fiends and my wife!) and saw so much beauty that I cannot imagine time better spent. In 2013 when I hit some new and significant medical challenges, I wondered if I'd have to call it off,... I'm happy to say that it just didn't turn out to be the case. Thank you everyone that came with me for helping me tackle this extremely fun and rewarding goal!

What next? I'm not sure yet but first my body needs to recover from this one!


Thursday, 30 July 2015

Why "bag" a hike guidebook cover to cover?

Back in 2002 I re-aquainted myself with hiking and in fact started Wanderung.ca with my friend Judd.  Wanderung has grown to be one of the more active "clubs" in the lower mainland of BC.

That season I was looking for a change (in my life), and got hooked.  Hiking became my source of exercise, escape from work,... and a major boost to my social network.  At that time I only owned 1 guide book: Dawn Hanna's "Best Hikes in Southwestern BC" and it not only became my bible,.. it pretty much became the backbone of Wanderung (most callout destinations could be found within these pages 2002-2005).

As I cherry-picked my way through the book to find new scenic vistas I really started gaining a passion for exploring and seeing areas of my "home" that I had never known existed.  It dawned on me at some point that "I really want to check out ALL of these destinations",.. so that is what I did.  77 in all, I systematically hiked the trails outlined within and discovered that when you "pick" your destinations, your biases may prevent you from a great discovery.  At least 3 times, ones I "dreaded" from reading a description,.. turned out to be mind blowing.  From that point forward I knew that the framework of thoroughly cutting through a book cover to cover adds another layer of hiking satisfaction for me and that repeating destinations leads to less - "I want to go somewhere NEW",

For those familiar with 103 Hikes, you will know that it has a considerably more challenging roster of hikes than the Dawn Hanna books. I knew the series from having seen earlier editions on my parent's book shelf since the 1970s (never used).

I had no intention of hiking the ones in "103", because I had deemed some of them as too difficult. Some were 1800m of gain, or 12 hour hikes if done in 1 day,. or 30km. At some point I cannot remember I must have cracked the 5th edition looking for somewhere to go and thought,.. "I've done over 50% of these,.. why not the rest?".  My obsession never turned back.

103 Hikes 5th edition
I then collected up the versions I had. 1st and 2nd were at my parent's house.  5th I owned, so I went on a chase for 3rd and 4th and had a chance encounter with a local hiking celebrity of sorts that worked in a 2nd hand bookstore and he fished them out.  I now had a set (6th Ed. was not out), and entered them all into a spreadsheet to compare how the rosters had changed over the years..  It was clear,.. I was going to peak bag the 5th edition.

Though some hikes I had done in scouts at 10 years of age, and dozens overlapped with Dawn Hanna, I started to systematically cut through the book, abandoned/overgrown trails and all. Probably spanning a decade due to snow levels and short seasons (plus I probably hiked an additional 100 trails not in the book) I'm now about to tackle the 103rd hike and complete the book.

This blog is where I want to share my thoughts and organize recommendations. Though I know others are out there that have done all of these and more, as far as I know, I'm one of the few that can probably comment on such a wide range of the "top" lower mainland selections (at least from this book, the most common guidebook out there for this region).