Salmon Spawner Patrol Training on Byrne Creek, Burnaby

We had a good spawner-monitoring orientation tour this morning on Byrne Creek in SE Burnaby, BC. We didn’t see any fish aside from a few coho/cutthroat in the smolt-size range.

I hope that with the rains coming this week, the salmon will respond to rising water in the creek and start moving upstream to spawn. Fingers crossed for exciting days ahead.

It was great to get some new volunteers out!

byrne creek spawner patrol burnaby bc training
On the dyke south of Byrne Road/Southridge Dr.

Welcome Sound of Rain in Burnaby, BC

I hadn’t heard the sound of what woke me this morning in so long that for a moment I was confused.

Ahh.  .  . Rain!

What a sweet sound and smell.

And not too much rain that would have pounded off the baked ground and gushed into drains and into pipes to blast through the creek, but a nice, gentle, steady drizzle.

Exactly what we need to revive the forest, slowly swell the creeks, recharge groundwater, and welcome the salmon back to spawn in  Burnaby, BC, creeks.

It has been scary dry for so long all over BC.

Hope to see you soon, chum and coho!

More Sediment Dumped Into Byrne Creek in Burnaby

I saw another dump of sediment into Byrne Creek in SE Burnaby, BC, on a pre-dinner walk today. Reported it to the City of Burnaby and they asked for photos.

The creek was running clear around 3:30pm, but Griffiths Pond near Edmonds Skytrain Station was murky, there was fresh sediment visible all along the bottom of creek from the bottom of the ravine stairs to the footbridge near Southridge Dr., and both ponds in the artificial spawning habitat were cloudy.

Likely a construction site pumpout in the upper watershed somewhere.

Sigh. . . This was happening repeatedly earlier in the year and the City finally tracked it down and shut it down, and here we go again. . . .

Construction sites are not allowed to pump out into storm drains! All dirty water from construction sites is to be remediated on site.

sedimnet dumped byrne creek burnaby bc

Mug of Green Tea Saves Hundreds of Spiders

How a mug of green tea saved hundreds of baby spiders.

A true story. . . by me. . .

Late this afternoon I made myself a large mug of green tea and went out on the balcony to enjoy it.

The sun was sinking behind the tree line and it was pleasantly warm for mid-October.

As I took a steaming sip, a small cloud drifted down in front of my face. I glanced down to see dozens, if not hundreds, of baby spiders on my lap.

Now I like spiders for the most part, and appreciate the role they play in nature taking care of even less likable things like mosquitos, but as with many folks, I tend to react reflexively if a spider, or a mess of them, drops in unexpectedly.

I credit my Zen state of sipping green tea from a heavy stone mug for  not swatting, but simply sighing, and wondering how I was to remove the wriggling mass while causing the least amount of injury.

The babes were teeny tiny, each not much larger than a sesame seed.

I slowly got up, took a step to the table, and gently shook them off, one area of my clothing at a time.

Then I bent over and did a full body shake, and after nothing more dropped off, I ran my hands over myself from top to bottom.

I was free, and so were the babes.

Humber River Birds, Salmon in Toronto

We went to a wedding in Toronto, ON, recently, and had several lovely walks in the autumn colours.

humber river salmon watching torontoOne walk was along the Humber River where there were lots of people watching salmon returning to spawn, cheering when the fish got over a weir, and groaning when they slid back down, to try again. . .

turkey vulture humber river toronto
Turkey Vulture

cormorant humber river toronto
Cormorant

cormorant humber river toronto
Cormorant on a weir

egret catching fish humber river toronto
Egret catching a small fish

great blue heron mallards humber river toronto
Great Blue Heron and Mallards

cormorant salmon humber river toronto
Cormorant with salmon passing by

samon jumping weir humber river toronto
Salmon attempting a jump

first nations history sign humber river toronto

Streamkeeping, sustainability, community, business, photography, books, and animals, with occasional forays into social commentary. Text and Photos © Paul Cipywnyk