Archive for BC

Pacific [far]Northwest

Posted in Mountains, pictures, Travel with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 16, 2023 by xi'an

The last week of our BCations was spent in Prince Rupert, 54⁰18’W, on Kaien Island, almost the northernest coastal spot before Alaska. (Although Stewart, 55⁰56’W, may qualify.) With a much more oceanic [and cooler] weather than in farther south, still warm enough to swim in the ocean. And an interesting airport since it sits on another island, with an airport bus taking all passengers from the airport to town via a 15mn ferry, and luggages being delivered only at the end. (Which led to some confusion on our side!)

This place was once called “the halibut capital of the World”, with numerous canneries of halibut and salmon along the coastline. We visited one such (p)reserved cannery, the North Pacific Cannery, which operated till the 1980’s with appalling working and living conditions (and racial discriminations against First Nation, Chinese and Japanese workers). Which made me realise that Canada had also turned to the internment of Japanese descendants during WW II. While there is some degree of recognition of the First Nation rights to land, since 95% of BC territory is unceded, with acknowledgments of which First Nation one uses the land, the persistence of the colonial era struck me in the numerous topographical names with British connections, from the name of the province, to the name of the city, the first Governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company. (The fish we ate while in Prince Rupert was fabulous!)

Prince Rupert is a passenger ferries and cruise stop, even though most unfortunately the ferry to Alaska was not running this year, supposedly due to staff shortage, although this could be yet another round of the US-Canada dispute of the area. (Cruise days are to be avoided at all costs, as cruisers invade the waterfront and even the closest hiking trails!) This is also the northwesternmost container port in North America connected by rail (hence, an unceasing parade of  endless CPR trains).

a journal of the year of fires

Posted in Books, Kids, Mountains, pictures, Statistics, Travel, University life with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 1, 2023 by xi'an

Indeed, the year of the mega-fires in West and East Canada, with Kelowna (and UBC Okanagan where BIRS 23w5106 took place) severely hit. Travelling through BC by car and plane, we saw several wildfire fume clouds, incl. a massive one from the Yellowknife region…

Read a few dozen pages of Gene Wolfe’s The Knight, in the fabulous Bacchus Books and Café of Golden, BC. Despite the positive vibes of the place, I could not engage with the story or the style, which I found quite disappointing given the earlier achievements of the author. There is of course the attempt at recreating an Arthurian tale, with its lack of temporal and logical coherence, but this fails short, in part because the narrator keeps jumping from a pre-teen to a much wiser adult and back. I thus replaced it within the shelf where I had found it, hopefully with no stain from the scone I enjoyed in the same place. A clear advantage of cafés within bookstores (the replacement, not the scone stains!) Also read Angel Six Echo by Robert Appleton, a short sci’fi’ story of the (very) military type, a mix of Warhammer 40k, Scalzi’s Old Man’s War series, Ender’s Game, and a few other space trooper novels. Pleasantly light as I was trying to read a few pages before fazing out after a day of intense activity! Realised as well that Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory was a very very short [almost as short as its long title!] story within the Murderbot Diaries, and not particularly interesting. Still waiting eagerly for the incoming (#8) System Collapse, a genuine novel.

Hiked inside and outside Yoho National Park (Emerald Lake, Mt. Hunter, Mt. Field), with varying success at avoiding the maddening crowd. And the drone of the highway below. Even 900m below. No wildlife encounter apart from the frequent mule deer, the few bighorns lost on Trans Canadian #1,  and the lightning fast chipmunks (except when they come begging for food). Despite bear warnings all around. Most days were above the healthy air quality limits, due to the numerous wildfires in the North-East BC, even though I did not feel any change when running or hiking. Made a night stop in Canmore to catch an early flight in Calgary, the place has gone surprisingly upscale from my earlier visits there!

 

smoky sunset [jatp]

Posted in Statistics with tags , , , , , , , , , , on August 24, 2023 by xi'an

Kelowna two weeks later

Posted in Mountains, pictures, Running, Travel with tags , , , , , , , , , on August 19, 2023 by xi'an