Tuesday, May 26, 2020

"Start where you are..."


"Start where you are, use what you have, do what you can"
Arthur Ashe.


I came across this quote last night, and it struck a chord with me.  My blog has been neglected, despite promises to a couple of friends who don't get to see my stuff on facebook.  I write blog posts in my head, or even on the computer, and don't get the photos done.  I prep some photos but move on to something else before I take the time to load them onto Blogger with some words to link them together. I just deleted three posts because they were started, never finished, and now past the time where they made sense to post (my New Years post, for example!).

So.....forget those past ideas.  I shall start where I am.  I shall use what I have.  I shall do what I can. If you are a facebook friend, I posted these there this week.  If you are not, then enjoy!  (**Waves to Marie!**)


Yesterday was Maggie's third Gotcha Day - three years since I adopted her from Langley Animal Protection Society. And she has never looked back.  Her two favourite activities are going to the beach (an almost daily activity as we live just a couple of blocks away from one of the nicest ones on Vancouver Island), and jumping up on boulders, stumps or logs.  Her favourite toy is anything that contains treats - her snuffle mat is her current favourite.  Her favourite person is ME!  And I love this girl to bits. 

Happy Gotcha Day, Maggie!
(I know, you already saw this photo, but it is my favourite of her)

Last Friday, my friend Pat and I went to Morrell  Nature Sanctuary, one of our favourite places to hike.  It was our first hike there since February, and only our second hike since Covid began.  It did not disappoint. 


So many beautiful flowers

It was busier than we are used to, but then we don't usually hike here in May because that is when a lot of school programs traditionally make use of it (Mags is terrified of kids still), so we have nothing to compare it to. It was still pretty easy to keep physically distanced though, on most trails. And certainly not busy compared to many places. Love this sanctuary!


Pat and the poms, Cosmo and Parker

Honeysuckle


I was photographing flowers, birds and poms.  Maggie suddenly plonked her butt down
 and refused to move until I took a photo of her too!  Silly girl!

Pat and Parker

I still play around with photos sometimes.
I happen to like this photo in black and white best.

I think these are summer oyster mushrooms
but don't quote me on that!

Across Morrell Lake, along the hydro line, this appears to be yellow broom growing
profusely.  It is an invasive species which spreads rapidly and crowds out native flora. 
But it does make for beautiful reflections in the water! 

I was taking photos of some ducks and glanced up the slope to see
Parker and Cosmo watching attentively.

Lilypads on the lake

Reflections at the end of the lake

A female hooded merganser with some of her babies

Same female hooded merganser with the whole brood of nine!


"You can't see me!"



There he is! This is a Western Tanager
I've lived in BC most of my many years and
this is the first one I've seen.  They have a lovely clear song.
They are migrating through, but I hope to see them again.

I hope you enjoyed coming along on this hike with me.
I'll try not to take so long to post next time!

In the words of Dr Bonnie Henry (BC's top doctor):  "This is our time to be kind, to be calm, and to be safe."   Stay healthy, my friends. 💖

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Happy Easter!

Maggie the Easter Sheltie reminds you to Please Stay Home this year (except for a walk in your neighbourhood, where permitted, maintaining physical distancing).  We wish our friends and family, and especially our health care workers and other essential service providers, a Happy Easter and a safe weekend. Oh, and do keep that chocolate away from the dog!
(And, yes, Marie, there is a blog post coming soon!)



Friday, February 14, 2020

From Maggie, With Love

Happy Valentine's Day!

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Merry Christmas to All!



(My apologies for the blog silence the past few weeks - my back has been giving me grief, and working at the computer is particularly difficult.  Hopefully I'll be back to blogging, albeit somewhat sporadically, in the new year.  Meanwhile, Mags and I wish you a very happy holiday season!)

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Autumn Meanderings


There are those who dislike autumn because it signals that winter will soon be here.  And those who love it, for the very same reason.  But I love autumn for the sights and sounds and smells it brings.  Leaves crunch underfoot. Squirrels chatter in trees as they scramble to gather in the harvest that will sustain them through winter if only they remember where they have hidden the stash. The air is crisp, the sun is bright but low in the sky.  It has been a perfect autumn so far, and I hope we will have at least a couple more weeks of this glorious weather in which to enjoy the outdoors.

Top Bridge Park, Parksville BC

The fall colours provide the perfect backdrop for photos of Maggie, who anticipates my "sit, stay" command as soon as I pull the camera from my pocket.  She has become a ham, plonking herself down in appropriately sunlit-and-leaf-strewn places to wait for the click of the camera and a treat for her cooperation.

You can pay me my modelling fee in cookies, please!

I have done lots of hiking and walking lately - some with Maggie, some with friends, some with both. So come along with me, and see where we have been:

Are ya coming?

My Monday hiking friend and I returned to Strathcona Park to repeat the Paradise Meadows-Lake Helen McKenzie-Battleship Lake loop I'd done earlier with a group - I posted about that hike here.  This time we traveled it at a more comfortable pace, taking many more photos and many more breaks.

Strathcona Park

When we stopped for lunch at Battleship Lake, we were particularly entertained - and sometimes frustrated - by the cheeky whiskey jacks who not only landed on our laps, hands, and heads uninvited but also grabbed pieces of our sandwiches enroute to our mouths!  Eating lunch was an exercise in sneakiness, trying to keep our food covered and hidden at all times.


We also went to Christie Falls near Ladysmith this fall, for the first but not the last time,  as well as Spectacle Lake near the Malahat summit, and Morrell Sanctuary in Nanaimo.  Yesterday, we hiked Enos Lake in Nanoose Bay, but those photos are not yet edited.

Enroute to Christie Falls

Enroute  to Christie Falls

Lower part Christie Falls - first of three falls

Middle part Christie Falls
(We didn't reach the highest one due to some difficult terrain, and a fellow hiker told us 
the third one was pretty much dry. Two creek sources converge; the bottom two falls are fed by a different stream).

The picture at the top of this blog entry is the footbridge where the Christie Falls trail meets up with the Haslam Creek trail - which is part of the Trans Canada Trail system.

The hike at Spectacle lake, on the Malahat, was done on a rainy day, but that generally doesn't stop us. Mags came along, sporting her red raincoat:

Spectacle Lake in the rain


Morrell Sanctuary is beautiful any time of year, but particularly in fall.  I go there often, with both my hiking friends, doing various loop trails around this wonderful nature park. In October, my Monday hike explored the Alder trail, as well as the Beaver Pond trail, High Knoll, and a set of small trails designed for kids, seniors, and people with disabilities.


Morrell Lake

Morrell Lake from above


I love how the brilliant yellow of the leaves shine through the darker evergreens, making the forest appear backlit with sunlight.

My Friday hiking friend and I, who do shorter, even slower walks or 'saunters' as we call them, took the dogs to Bowen Park in the heart of Nanaimo the other week - a perfect urban park for a fall walk in leaves, a fall photoshoot of waterfalls as the Millstream River tumbles over river-smoothed rocks.

Maggie beside Millstream River

Ducks! Maggie's favourite park of any hike!

Heron in Millstream River


Millstream River, Bowen Park, Nanaimo

The falls on Millstream River

The falls on Millstream River, Bowen Park

Last week, we also went to Morrell Sanctuary, one of our very favorite places to saunter, and the thick covering of fallen maple leaves created a lovely camouflage for my friend's pom, Parker.

Trail in Morrell Sanctuary



Parker, in camouflage! 


I've done a few other hikes too.  Mags and I went to Top Bridge Park near our home, and discovered it to be an easy and beautiful hike through meadow, forest, and along riverside.  Part of the trail was closed when we had first checked it out this spring, and I am so glad we went back.  We will be frequent travelers on these trails.


The many colours of autumn
Top Bridge Park

Englishman River, Top Bridge Park


Trestle in Top Bridge Park

We also frequent Englishman River Estuary Park, a wildlife management area, at least a couple of times a week.  The ever-changing views of river and ocean, and a network of wide and narrow trails are always enjoyable.

Englishman River Estuary Park

Maggie on the leaf-strewn trail

On all our walks and hikes this fall, there has been an amazing show of wild mushrooms of all colours, shapes and sizes.  I photographed but a fraction of the hundreds of species we saw.



Last week I checked out the lower section of the Nile Creek trail, north of Qualicum Beach.  Though an easy trail (the upper section is more difficult though but beautiful with many waterfalls, apparently), it was not well signed, and I was not well matched with the fit and fast person I explored it with so I had little time for photos or observations of the beauty around us.  I'll do it again another time with one of my regular hiking companions. 

Log bridge with cable handrail over Nile Creek

My idea of an enjoyable hike is a leisurely wandering with frequent stops to admire the surroundings, take photos, check out a side trail, observe a bird, discover a mushroom or flower or little critter alongside the trail.  I find few people whose style and pace matches my own. I'm so thankful that my Monday and Friday hiking buddies from my former home down island have been willing to continue our hikes/walks even though it frequently means long drives for one or both of us.

And then, of course, there is the beach in fall.  Mags and I go there almost daily on at least one of our two or three daily walks.  The flocks of sandpipers and ducks have come back for the winter, as well as a smattering of eagles and a handful of herons.  The sunrise creates mirror images of far away trees and buildings in the pools between the sandbars, and of the waterfowl that search for snacks in the shallows.  And one morning an otter entertained us as he feasted on his morning catch.

Maggie watches a flock of geese flying noisily across the water

Heron on Parksville Beach, early morning

Reflections between the sandbars

River otter having breakfast on the beach

And everywhere we go, we see the beautiful fall colors - all shades of browns and yellows and orange and red.  How can one not love autumn?




The End