Lundbom lake

July 2018
forrest rec site outside of meritt in the Grasslands Read more
  • 11footprints
  • 1countries
  • 3days
  • 44photos
  • 0videos
  • 261miles
  • Day 1

    coquihalla highway

    July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Left home around 1030....early for us. Stopped at Hope as usual for gas, before heading up the Coke.

    Nak peak, Zopkias ridge. That is the onion skin like shedding granite rock to the south of Highway 5 after the snowshed. always reminds me of Yosemite's 1/2 dome. Really tough grade going up we have to go into 3rd gear and usually only 50 km/hour when pulling the trailer....even a light 15 foot trailer it is still slow going. Going up or Coming down this same stretch in the winter is not a lot of fun either as it can be very slippery if snow or rain...and sooo many trucks. we have noticed a lot of road construction on the south side of the snow shed the last few years and it looks like they are putting in a large parking/rest area as this tends to be where the highway closes when those winter storms come through....and leads to traffic pile ups.

    Lundbom lake. Named for Augustus William Lundbom who settled in the Nicola valley in 1871. ranger, justice of the peace, judge and environmentalist. He established the Commonage due to concerns about overgrazing in the Nicola valley. Today the cattle only graze on one section for 1-3 weeks, allows recovery time for the natural bunchgrass to establish. no cattle were spotted on this trip, but september 2016 last time we were here the cattle came through the camp site getting to the lake for water.

    Laurie Guichon memorial grasslands interpretive site, this is on the way in. Laurie Guichon was another rancher (4th generation) died in 1999. He was instrumental in having the grassland interpretive site established. There is a kiosk on the way in modelled after a first nations Kekuli house with an open centre and open wall facing north for optimum natural light.

    Grassland habitat. rock outcrops and open slopes support bunchgrass sagebrush. sheltered gullies home to Aspen, Doug fir, Moisture collects in the hollow to create riparian areas. large stand of timber provide cover for deer and moose.

    Columbian sharp tailed grouse, recovery area. We may have disturbed a pair on one of our eve walks as 2 flew up. Luckily the dog ignored them and stuck to the 2 lane track we were on.
    Read more

  • Day 1

    lundbom lake east campsite

    July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    Nice little campsite on the east side of the lake. We went to see if there were any sites on the south east side where we had been in 2016, but the lake water was so much higher all the beach sites were flooded. Where I had hung the hammock between trees was now beach front. amazing how much water was in the lake and how much more of the shore areas were flooded. the camp host said that it was like this for the last 2 years..

    the site we had was right on the water, small path to leave the canoe and sit on the water. nice and breezy so that kept the bugs at bay during the day.....not so at night we had to put up the bug house as it was just too much.

    Yellow salsify -Yellow Salisify -Trapopogon dubious
    - Salsify from french Salsifis and latin Solsqeuium - Sol -sun, Sequium -follower a plant that follows the sun

    Verbascum -thapsus - great mullein -
    -Eurasian origin. common low to mid elevations disturbed, gravely sites, fields and pastures. biennial. Greek legend has it that ulysses, hermes and circe used this plant in their incantations and witchcraft. hedge taper and torch are derived from the practice of dipping the plant in suet and burning it as a candle or torch. Interior native poples used to smoke the dried leaves.
    Read more

  • Day 1

    eve walk

    July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Eve walk in behind. more lakes beyond the campsite down the forrest rec road. lots of paths to wander on. 2 track are for the ATV's and the horses. once on single track no ATV's,mountain bikes yes. we saw only one other person. We went later in the day as it was quite hot mid day. left around 600 and got back around 800pm. lots of wild flowers in the grasslands, birds and mosquitos in the shade. best to avoid the shade as we did get eaten alive at one point when we ventured into a marshy area in the shade.

    dog found a small watering hole and he actually went in.

    daisy is Showy daisy? Erigeron speciosus var speciousus
    -scattered and locally common low to mid elation in open forests, opening and clearings. this one roadside next to the confreres (doug fir, spruce, pine)
    -several horticultural forms have been derived from this plant. self seeds once established

    old ponderosa pine, one dead the other quite alive, but old and gnarled
    Read more

  • Day 1

    eve walk behind lundbom lake

    July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    still eve walk. shadows are getting longer. There was a path we went on last time that I was trying to find. we went about 10minutes down the path, but it came to a junction and Colin didn't want to head further away from where we had come from and the opposite side went down a steepish gravelly slope. I didn't have my knee brace or poles so we decided it might be best to head back since we had already been out for around an hour.

    gnarled ponderosa again, but close up. Lighting was nice.

    neat fungus on the trembling aspen

    parsnip flowered buckwheat? eriogonum heracleodies
    -basal leaves in whorls like lupins
    Heracleoides because the flowers are similar in appearance to those of cow parsnip (Heracleum lanatum).
    -flowers excellent nectar for honey bees. the Okanagon made a tea from the roots to cure diarrhoea.
    -scattered and locally common at low to high elevations in sagebrush, grasslands, dry open forests, grassy openings and open steep warm slopes in mountains.
    Read more

  • Day 1

    eve walk and back to campsite

    July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    more aspen in the setting sun.
    wild rose, maybe rosa nutkana? these were also at our campsite
    view from the campsite looking to the west side of the lake where the horse camp is located.

    The little water birch shrub? (at least that is what i think it is) , rose, saskatoon berry shrubs had lots and lots of bird activity. Cedar wax wings and house finches were feeding on the berries of the saskatoons. The finches were so ravenous they had berry juice all over their beaks. the waxwings were much more delicate. they just swallowed the berry whole. Lots of yellow birds, finches, warblers, Siskins? kinglets, I didn't figure out who was who. and humming birds I think they were rufous, but immatures so hard to id. I did catch a glimse of a burnt orangish bib.t There was a small woodpecker (maybe a hairy or a three toed) that had drilled some holes into the birch shrub. the sap was running so insects were congregating there. consequently the hummers, and yellow birds were all going in to eat the insects. quite the commotion. the hummers were flying so close we could hear the buzzing of their wings. They kept buzzing our heads. at first I thought there was a nest, but I couldn't really identify any mature ones, although there was one time a courting display was done; that huge arc where they fly down and peep at the bottom of the arc. The birds just kept flittering from shrub group to shrub group. it was great. The waxwings were also eating the insects on the fly and they would buzz up and around in a small flock (5 birds maybe) as they did that. all over the lake.Read more

  • Day 2

    canoe ride

    July 13, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Canoe trip out around the lake margins.

    The fishermen were already out by the time we ate breaky, but we still had a nice quite, calm lake. It had been windy the day before in the afternoon.

    Lots of birds at the lake edge.
    -3 ducks, I think female or immature golden eyes. brown heads, greyish sides of body, golden eye. they didn't like us getting too close so flew off.
    -great blue herons, maybe 2 which we kept disturbing and they flew off further down the lake then to the other side...by the time we reached the other side,they flew back to the other side again.
    -loons, I love to hear the calls of the loons. There were probably 5 on our lake with 1 or 2 young and at least another pair on the lake behind us with a youngster
    -osprey. they may have been nesting in the large ponderosa pine at the lakes edge. the adult who was out hunting got quite antsy as we approached the pine tree and was whistling to the one in the tree. the one in the tree called back.
    -spotted sandpipers. quite a few, mostly solitary. all along the rocky north shore in the sun. they have spots on their breast, orange beak and that constant bobbing tail. we saw some fluffy ones too so I assume immatures maybe, no orange beak?
    -greater or lesser yellow legs. we really saw his yellow legs, taller than the sandpipers, longer beak too a bit, and bigger. only saw one.
    -red winged blackbirds, in the reeds
    -brewers blackbird at the waters edge, white around eye
    =eagles, one had caught a fish and the osprey was chasing him. saw this later in the afternoon. it may have been the osprey who actually caught the fish and the eagle stole it as eagles are known to do that.....
    -hawks but i don't know which ones. they like to hover, as do the osprey.

    we saw a beaver on both mornings that we were out. there was lots of evidence of chewing of the reeds. the reeds themselves were down in the water all over the place. the first morning we saw him we saw him floating chewing on one of the reeds. you could see his tail and it looked much broader than a muskrat. on day 2 we saw the fat head as well. saw him close to the same location both mornings on the north side of the lake.

    -the reeds themselves were covered in exoskeletons of some of the insect larvae that had climbed to the top we assume before they emerged. I think mostly damsel fly, -bluet- as there were many of these beautiful small damsel flys about. they lined up with the winds when the wind was high, and when i was swimming when it was calm they were all resting on the twigs of the submerged shrubs. like little blue baubles for christmas decorations.
    -boreal bluet, phosphorescent tough picks hovering in the reeds.

    -other exoskeletons may have been the water tiger beetle. apparently quite ferocious in the larvae stage, they bite their prey and once impaled they inject digestive juices which dissolves the prey in its own body which the water tiger beetle then digests. starfish have the same method for eating.

    - the damsel fly larvae have 3 gills at the bottom of their body when in the larval stage. one of the larvae landed on my arm and you could see those 3 little gills.

    -lots of Blue eyed Darners too. a type of dragon fly- much larger than the damsel fly. The darners are important food source for kestrels and merlin. the young birds hone their hunting skills by capturing the darners.

    damsal flys and dragon flys apparently will lay their eggs either in the soft water plants or on top of the water so as they fly they dip their abdomen into the water.
    Read more

  • Day 2

    eve walk going in circles

    July 13, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Went on the road behind the lake again leaving around 630 as it was cooler. this time took what I thought was going to be the trail that looped back to the road where we had been the day before....
    nice 2 track road in. then we got to a small lake that was higher than the path. it had leaked into the path previously as one of the 'tracks' was much deeper with dried mud at the bottom. at the end of this little lake we should have found a path to go east, but it wasn't really evident so instead we took the 2 lane track west, then when it came to fork we went north thinking it may lead to another path heading east......after a nice long climb up the hill, dry gravel (at least today I had my soft knee brace and hiking sticks) we get to the top only to find the path ends. there is a gate leading up to another hill, single track and much steeper. the gate isn't officially a gate, but a fence so i don't know if you were really suppose to go through or not. we opted to turn around and head back to the ponderosa pine and turn west.
    at this point I was thinking this path would lead back to the path we had taken to sugar loaf mountain last year.....it was not to be. the path we were on actually looped back around and connected to the first path we had gone on heading to the small lake. next time we will head east at the end of this path through the vague single track. i suspect the water level height may have obliterated part of the path, but i was also looking for a 2 track path, not a single track so next time.......we did do this path in september 2016. might need to invest in that GPS.....but as colin said it probably wouldn't be on there anyways as my backroad maps don't seem to have it listed and google maps certainly didn't. the one in the local guide book did show the trail, but it was rather small.

    on the path that looped on itself we startled a pair of grouse that flew off. luckily wesley kept on the path and didn't try to run off after them. he was on the long lead and was pretty good not going to far ahead of us....good for a beagle.

    It was quite windy over some of the ridges as we were walking, and then others were nice and sheltered. we passed by a lovely riparian? area. nice lush green grasses with aspen, we didn't go off the path to investigate as i thought it was in the shadows, cool and so probably mosquito heaven.
    Read more

  • Day 2

    eve walk cirlces

    July 13, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    the small lake is off in the distance that was walked up from then turned north. It isn't so much a lake but a collection of reeds in this shot. you can't see the small bit of open water that was blue. the ponderosa pine off in the distance is where we turned north.

    you can just make out another single track that came down from where we had walked up to the end of the path at the fence. the north path.

    nice wildflowers as we wandered back down the road we had come in on. yarrow, lupins,
    Read more

  • Day 3

    last day lundbom lake

    July 14, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    another early? this time 1000 am canoe ride, lots of birds again. nice and calm.

    Yellow salsify - trapopogon dubious
    -low to mid elevations throughout dry plateus, grasslands, roadside fields and disturbed sites.
    -Salsify from french Salsifis and latin Solsqeuium - Sol -sun, Sequium -follower a plant that follows the sun

    short beaked agoseris?? -agoseris glauca var dasycephala
    -orange arnica should have mainly stalked basal leaves., opposite, and more sunflower like flowers. rays and disk. this one has mostly ray flowers....but not really basal leaves and not opposite.....
    -agoseris glauca var dasycephala- basal leaves, composite heads with yellow ray flowers and no disk flowers. widespread and common at low to high elevations in dry florists openings and mesic to dry meadows. this close to the outhouses very open south facing slope

    the bughouse -sure comes in handy, we haven't had to use it since we went to Prince Rupert with the kids in 2013

    colin and the dog resting before the canoe ride in the cool morning sunshine. mosquitos were so so in the earlier part of the day. worse at night.

    got another nice swim in later in the afternoon as it was very hot, no wind today so you needed to dunk to get refreshed. this time i didn't stand around and no leaches! had a quick outdoor shower to clean off any potential swimmers itch, and to get my hair clean.

    we left at 330, took till 430/500 to get to Hope. had some ice-cream which took a bit as DQ was quite slow. then continued on our way home and were home by 730 pm. it takes a good 3 1/2 to 4 hours when traffic is good. But a nice quick escape into a completely different plant zone so very exciting!
    Read more