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Thursday 31 October 2013

October Blooms

November's knocking on the door and the weather's changing. We've had a couple of frosts now and our blue skies have given way to grey.  

The gardens in our neighbourhood are still quite colourful but I know that the blooms will soon fade.  Would you care to take a walk with me and enjoy them while they're still here?

Click on any image to be taken to a slide show of larger views. 



 




 





  












Thursday 24 October 2013

Genoa Bay

I'm big on enjoying the natural beauty around me and I write a lot about it, but I'm big on enjoying beauty made by people too. The magnitude of human creativity astounds me.  I love that there exists in the heart of every person the need for beauty and for creative expression.  

Most of the works of art I love best are collaborative, either made by humans from objects found in nature,or made by humans and then altered by the action of wind and water and weather and time. 

One of my favourite places to observe this artistic collaboration between humans and nature is Genoa Bay.  The people who live in the tiny community there and those who frequent the small marina on a regular basis have created something very special.  

The marina is a collection of wharves, boathouses, and float homes - some spic and span, some old and worn - a gallery, and an excellent restaurant.   


There's a perennial garden adorned with sculptures made from found objects.  


The restaurant has a small herb and vegetable garden too, from which they harvest ingredients for their dishes year-round 


and everywhere you look, the inhabitants of the bay have embellished what they have with originality and creativity.

I live in the city of Duncan and, as the crow flies, Genoa Bay is quite nearby...but the crow flies over Mount Tzouhaem nature reserve and I must drive around it. It takes about half an hour to drive the winding country roads that take me over the two sides of the triangle that make the road route to the bay.



It's a beautiful drive, passing by Quamichan Lake, and winding through gently rolling farmland, with the brow of the mountain rising steeply from the inland side of the road.  

The marina and its wharves are set within the embrace of the mountain, looking inland down a narrow inlet toward Bird's Eye Cove.  


Genoa Bay is a jewel-like setting - a treasure for the eye - but, even so, it's always the small details there that captivate me.  I could tell you about them, 
but it seems better just to show you what caught my eye on my last visit.  

Here are some photos for you.  If you click on any photo it'll take you to a slide show of the photos here, shown in a larger view.

Enjoy, and thanks for stopping by.  :)
















Friday 11 October 2013

A Visit to Marie Canyon


Our valley is a gift to hikers.  There's a well established network of trails throughout, with many beautiful parks to enjoy along the way.  Cowichan River Provincial Park is one of these:  More than 1400 hectares of forested land along the banks of the Cowichan River, with the 20-kilometer-long Cowichan River Footpath running through it.

The park lies mid-way between Duncan and Lake Cowichan and may be
accessed by road, with various parking lots and campgrounds along its length. 

Cowichan River park is less than a half hour's drive from my home, so I visit it often.  If I have an entire day at my disposal, I'll sometimes walk the length of the footpath, taking photos along the way, or taking along my sketch pad and some watercolours.  More often though, I'll go for a shorter visit, to a single destination within the park.

Yesterday, my husband and I went to Marie Canyon.  My guy has some mobility challenges so there was no hiking on the agenda.  Instead, we parked in the small lot at the top of the canyon, enjoyed the scenery from above and then made our way down towards the bottom.  Even with his challenges, my guy can manage all but the last set of stairs down to the riverbank.
Marie canyon is striking at any time of year.  From the lot at the top, a person can walk to the lip of the canyon and look down at the water from above.  Tall evergreens grow right to the edge, some leaning over at an angle, their roots exposed to the air on the water side. Maples, oaks, and other deciduous trees cling to the steep slope down to the river, some reaching with outstretched boughs to sweep the rushing waters below.  In fall, their changing foliage adds to the beauty of the view.

The river narrows to pass through the canyon, making a stretch of white water that is enjoyed by intrepid tubers during the summer months and kayakers and canoeists year 'round.  The sound of the rushing water echoes up the canyon walls and actually seems louder at the lip of the canyon than it does nearer the waters below.

The banks of the river at the canyon are shale, with bare black walls, and long
ribs of stone exposed at low water.  In the winter months, this bare stone is covered by the rushing river, which
every season breaks away a little more stone, exposing new textures and shapes, and even a
few fossils to curious visitors. 

It is a
place of contrast:  dark stone and bright foliage, hard edges and fluid river, soft moss edging every unyielding surface.


There are fish in the river and the forest is teeming with life.  There are berries in the summertime and mushrooms nearly all year 'round.  They burst from the soil with such sudden force that you can see the
hollows from which they've sprung still empty beneath them and the broken crusts of soil they've pushed aside. 

At the sun dappled edges between forest and stream, oak trees share their bounty.  Thousands of acorns nestle among the fallen leaves.

It's a banquet.


Bears dine here.  (We saw lots of bear sign on our visit but, thankfully, encountered no actual bears.) 

Eagles follow the river's course, often flying level with the canyon's lip,
surprising hikers as they soar by at eye level. 

A visit to the canyon is a step outside of time, away from all the human noise and bustle and day-to-day-ness that so absorbs us most of the time. I feel blessed to have it so nearby.