Saturday, September 26, 2009

Pogo Mountain

I've been wanting to get up Pogo Mountain for a while now. Pogo is pretty visible on the Highway out to Tofino. I organized a trip with the Alpine Club there earlier this year. On that trip it rained the whole time, and we got stuck trying to get around a bluffy section part of the way up which we couldn't make it around

Pogo from a trip I did to 50-40 Peak a couple of years ago

From the previous trip I had the access sussed out pretty well. With no snow this time, the part we got stuck on last time wasn't too bad.

Steamboat. I am heading up here next week


Upper section on Pogo. It was actually pretty fun scrambling. I stuck to the rock to avoid the bush.



On the way down, I tried to follow the actual "route" down. At one point I veered a little too far off to the side of the ride and ended up in some horrendous bushy cliffs. I was able to escape with only a minor flesh wound. The trip down took nearly 2 hours longer than going up!

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Elkhorn Attempt


With a stellar forecast, and the family out of town, I decided that taking a day off for a ramble was in order. I have been keen on Elkhorn for awhile, and had an abortive attempt on it last year (though didn't make it too far).

Rumor is that Elkhorn is day-trippable. Given the shorter days at this time of year, I figured I would need an early start. Unfortunately I am not very good at getting up early in the morning. After a few hours of sleep, my alarm started crowing at 3:30 in the morning. I played the snooze game for 15 minutes, and after a bowl of granloa and yogurt, was off at 4:15. I pulled into Campbell River, zonked, at 6:00 and had to have a short nap before grabbing a coffee and taking off at 6:30.

I hit the trail at 7:45 (so much for an "early" start). I had the approach mostly sorted from my first trip into the area. Highlights included an au cheval log crossing over the Elk River, and a tarzan up a dodgy fixed rope up a wet, slimey cliff.

From the alpine, the mountain surroundings open up. You get some pretty good views around.

King's Peak

Looking along the ridge to Elkhorn. The route I tried heads up the big cleft to a notch on the right side of the mountain.

Rambler Peak

I followed the ridge up to the base of the mountain proper, where you have to swing around and try to get into a gully system on the west side of the mountain. Once in the gully, things got a little more challenging. The rock was a little wet, and the climbing a little funky. Being by myself I wasn't able to work up the courage to get past the first main obstacle in the gully, so turned around about 5 1/2 hourse into the trip. Still had a good hour or so to get to the top.

Base of routes on Elkhorn

Colonel Foster

Back down the ridge, down the slimy cliff, and over the river found me back at the car a little shy of 10 hours after starting. I was almost home before it got dark. Next time a rope and a partner are probably in order.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Bella Coola

Bella Coola has always held a bit of mystique for me. It is an area of rainforest and grizzly bears which seems to exemplify the mid-coast of BC. I was up to Bella Coola about 10 years ago for an outstanding ski trip to the Monarch Icefield, and have been itching to get back there for a while, so I was pretty excited when the valley became our next destination for work.

Getting up to Bella Coola can be an adventure in itself. The ferry from Port Hardy is certainly an aesthetic way to approach. The one road into town is another, somewhat infamous route in. From the Chilcotin Plateau the road drops off pretty steeply in what is known as "the hill". Originally the province didn't want to build the road into town because it was too sketchy, so the locals decided to build it themselves. It is certainly a road that you want to make sure your brakes work on before going down it.

I ended up taking the easy way into town. The journey started with a walk from my house to Nanaimo's waterfront.


Fishing boats in Nanaimo Harbour

It was the first time I have taken a floatplane to Vancouver


Leaving Vancouver Island

When we arrived in Bella Coola, we started with the mandatory flight around the major fires in the area. The one of most concern was one in the Bella Coola valley off Noohalk Mountain near Hagensborg.


We then toured around South Bentinck Channel, the Monarch Icefield and south Tweedsmuir Park



Fires burning through Junker and Turner Lakes. This is a pretty popular canoe trip, though it has been closed most of the summer

Hunlen Falls. Third highest in Canada

Despite the work agenda, we were still able to sneak in some tourist time

Nuxalk Totem

Downtown Bella Coola


Derelict in Bella Coola Estuary


Plaque commemorating Sir Alexander Mackenzie's journey to the Pacific. "Mackenzie's Rock" where he finished his journey is another 50km beyond out in Dean Channel

Old cannery at the Government docks

Purgatory Mountain. Apparently the glacier reached all the way to the valley bottom 10 or 15 years ago

Upper Nusatsum Valley




Odegaard Falls



Spawning salmon (sockeye?) on the Saloomt River


There are some great trails through old-growth on the Saloomt floodplain

Cedar grove

Douglas fir