Back Country

Breaking through the trees for the first sight of the lake.

It was good to leave the valley where everyone is trying to separate tourists from their money. It is a scourge, troubling watching the lake and town gasp at it descends into overconsumption.

We were off into the mountains to a place my father and I hiked until his legs ached. I didn’t then but I appreciate it now. He let me go following the dry creek runoff all leading up.

Dave and I hadn’t hiked together for awhile. My fault as work has consumed me the past two years. 

Once we turned towards the Palliser, the people were gone. The trail head was deserted. I slipped off a boulder at the creek crossing and had one wet foot that lasted the hike. Certainly not as sure footed as I once was.

The trail hasn’t seen much use.

The old skid trail was overgrown. We both carried bear spray. We remarked at the amount of bear sign. Dad used to attach bells to me a long time ago. I also carried granddads 30 30 rifle so often dad said I had one arm longer than the other.

The trail gained elevation through the alders and skunk cabbage. It has been wet and Dave stopped to take pictures of various plants and mushrooms. The spruce had new dark blue pitch covered cones at their tops. The nuthatches and grosbeaks will be plentiful come November. 

A Rocky Mountain peak rising above the trail.

Strata once layered horizontally, under a sea of prehistoric shell fish, is pushed vertical in the highest spots. Millions of years work which we can’t fathom, thinking a lifetime is a long time. That these mountains don’t consider us is peaceful. We are of little significance in the hands of time. Even our damage will one day be undone the same as the trail we followed was grown over and hard to follow. 

Mountain asters blooming and abundant along the trail and slides.

Once off the rise we stopped for a bite. I scoped the old trail across the slides north for grizzlies and moose. The trail we were on was much better than the one my father and I followed. 

The remaining trail was flat with only a few deadfalls across the trail. The lake was right where we left it. It still takes my breath away as we clamoured out of the spruce and soft footing onto its rocky shore.

Cow moose yields the trail for a swim.

The slides on all sides of the lake were overgrown. On rounding a corner a large brown hump appeared. I started reaching for the bear spray and realized it was a cow moose. A moose can be as dangerous if it decides to charge. Since we had no where to go we took a few pictures before it turned our way and trotted not fifteen feet from us into a small pond leading to the lake. A fine encounter.

Tadpoles swimming in the shallow pools.

We found a flat rock to have another bite and look around. I took some directions measuring where the stars would align during the night at this time of year. Dave pointed out thousands of tadpoles swimming the shallows. Fish jumped in the middle and around the shores. I had caught some big fish here long ago. I found the old camping spot completely grown over.

Dave picks his way over the trail roughed up with bear sign.

After lunch we picked up the trail and headed above the lake to get a good look at the emerald water. We stopped as long as we could before we turned to follow the trail back as we were due back at the bottom three valleys over.

When ever I leave this place, even when I was a boy, I always wondered when or if I would ever see it again. To be here on this tiny sliver of time sharing the earth with these large spruce, rocks, flowing water and animals is a gift.

Sometimes you get lucky. 

12 thoughts on “Back Country

    1. underswansea's avatar

      underswansea

      Thank you Carol! It was a wonderful day in a spot that means a lot to me. I am glad you liked the video. I hadn’t heard the word pollywogs before. They were everywhere. Hopefully they will transform into frogs as the shallows recede. Thanks for commenting. Always good to hear from you!

      Liked by 1 person

  1. mountaincoward's avatar

    mountaincoward

    What an amazing walk you had. I think the moose encounter would have scared me but isn’t she a beauty – great shot of her. And that first photo – our winds rarely drop here so lakes are very rarely calm like that – lovely to see them so mirror-like.

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    1. underswansea's avatar

      underswansea

      Hi Carol, it was a wonderful day for a hike and we were lucky there wasn’t wind when we first got to the lake. It was nice seeing the moose. I have a blurry picture of her trotting towards us as I was busy backing up and aside. Take care.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. underswansea's avatar

        underswansea

        With Moose females can be even more dangerous if they have calves. I am a believer in giving wild animals a wide berth whenever possible. Usually they go the other direction. But sometimes they do not.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Jim R's avatar

    Jim R

    Good photos. No sign of smoke or haze. I really liked the layers of rock on that mountain shot.

    I’m in Washington state near Tacoma this week visiting my son. Back to Iowa on Saturday.

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    1. underswansea's avatar

      underswansea

      Hi Jim, I hope you are having a wonderful trip to Tacoma. Here in BC we have so far been lucky that we haven’t had much smoke or fires. Regarding the layers of rock in the mountains, it is common to split shale and find fossils from millions of years ago when the area was covered in water. Take care.

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