Temperatures are set to soar in the lower mainland of BC, so I moved my Byrne Creek/South Slope walk up to just after breakfast instead of my usual mid-day break.
Even at 8:30 am the sun was sizzling over Taylor Park Elementary
The Skytrain tracks provide a bit of shade
It’s always a few degrees C cooler in the ravine by the creek
This is a super event with lots of other stewardship groups represented. Great fun to see kids so excited about releasing fish — and, um, getting a chance to try fishing, too .
Now that’s a huge Seymour watershed 3D map!
Seymour Salmonid Society hatchery tour
The Seymour watershed provides a good chunk of Metro Vancouver’s drinking water, and is a pristine, protected area.
Heading down to the lake for the trout release
Fishing gear to borrow for free to try your hand. It’s great to see urban kids so excited to release fish, and yes, try to catch one, too!
Yumi waiting for a trout to release. She got one the last ones.
What a beauty!
Interesting hitchhiker as we walked the lake loop trail.
Listening to an overview of what we’re going to see
Board members and local volunteers
It takes a lot of partners to make projects like this happen.
That’s a huge culvert blocking fish passage
Ian of the Penninsula Streams Society and also a SEHAB board member, explains the challenges of the project to install a stepped fish ladder. Planning, engineering, and fundraising are well underway.
I did an overnighter at Nairn Falls Provincial Park. Glad I got the tent up and a fire started before the rain began to fall.
Darn if I didn’t get my first camping injury in decades. I was sharpening the axe, and it was slick in the rain, and . . . nicked my thumb. Not a large cut, but deep.
We had a great time last week exploring the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village in Alberta. Wonderful collection of original buildings brought together on this site, and lots of period-authentic interpreters.
One of the themes at the recent Editors Canada 2018 Conference in Saskatoon, SK, was indigenous issues, and several indigenous writers and editors spoke about the importance of “remember where you come from.”
This is where I come from.
An aunt found this embroidery, obviously meant for a Ukrainian men’s shirt, and she thought Baba must have embroidered it for me. So my aunt insisted that I take it, and when Yumi and I later drove up to the family farm, we visited Baba’s grave and I thanked her.
She lived a tough pioneer life for many of her years, and yet she had love and comfort for all.
And in the packet. . . It’s like she just walked away from it minutes ago . . .
I was happy to see these reminders for boaters to clean their watercraft to help contain the spread of invasive species. These were on the Saskatchewan River in Saskatoon, just steps from the hotel where I attended the Editors Canada national conference.