Wednesday, July 28, 2021

First Sailing Adventure of the Summer

We headed out from De Courcy for 10 days and enjoyed some lovely sailing and a few good walks. We met up with friends from Gold River in Howe Sound and enjoyed spending a couple of days with them including a great hike up to some lakes in the hills.

A brisk beat to windward

Motoring up an inlet in calm conditions


Rani checks out a waterfall

Lovely morning in a tranquil anchorage

What do you see? Cliff dwellings, pancake rocks?





We did several hikes including a coastal walk looking for pictographs

We did not find the rock art, but did find some naturally interesting rocks

Swamp Angel at anchor near the head of an inlet

These thistle loving bees ignored a camera plonked in their faces


We followed a decommissioned logging road that had grown over a great deal in less than 10 years

There's a road under here somewhere!

Panorama looking back down the inlet

Rock hopping

More rock hopping

Evening view from the anchorage


 The next morning view with an 'oil painting' filter applied


Friends on a hike to the lakes - Kath, Rani, Ned, and Mick


Tristan getting some air jumping a log on an old skid road


Mick, Kath, Tristan, and Ned

Rani at the lake where we saw Rough Skinned Newts




Rough skinned newts in their mating phase 

Check out these articles for more info on rough skinned newts: Salamander identification guide and Seattle Times article (great reading)



We saw this snake at another lake. It is apparently the only animal that is immune to the poison of a rough skinned newt, which contains enough neurotoxin in its body to kill 25,000 mice.



Waiting for dinner to appear?



We passed one of the few staffed light stations left on our coast on our way home

Thursday, June 10, 2021

A Late Spring Hike

We had a lovely hike today near Lake Cowichan. Following are a few pictures. Thanks to Maret for leading the hike.


Broom flowers


The hiking group - Rani, Ronna, Marat, and Jacqueline - at a look off over Lake Cowichan


Lupine with rain drops


Rani charging through the broom, which grows in profusion on this hike


'Self-Heal' or 'All-Heal' purportedly can be used to treat inflammation and infections


Heart


Foxglove


The broom was everywhere - lovely but very invasive stuff



More lupines


On the trail



Daisies and broom



Sunday, May 16, 2021

Spring flowers in our garden


Rani and I both love beautiful gardens but we are far too lazy to achieve our ambitions. The gardens along the walkway leading to our house and in a few other places are quite pretty just now, so I thought I would capture a few shots before the weeds take over. Please note I have attempted to identify these flowers but may have got a few wrong - corrections are welcome!


The yellow irises were already growing here when we moved in. They are lovely but bloom only for a very short time

 

These phlox were also here when we arrived and surprise us every spring. I think the white flowers are a rock cress (see better picture below)


These cress are very hardy and tolerate dryer areas of our garden. They also spread very quickly


The lupines were lovely when we left for a walk this morning but a deer must have come through and cropped the blossoms today! Looks like it was done with bypass clippers... The lupines were planted from Nova Scotia seeds from my parents' garden and come back every year.

We have three peonies that are all descended from one plant that was here when we moved in. This little one only has one flower and bloomed for the first time last year.

These came from a hanging planter we bought the first year we were here. We were surprised but happy when, after planting them in the late summer, they came back the next year


We planted this rock cress in year one and they survive in our dry sandy soil with infrequent watering

These blue bells are all over the garden and come up under plants we have added, dying away in the late spring

This azalea bush has lovely blooms but has not grown substantially in the 5 years since we planted it - a testament to our gardening abilities

This columbine has pink flowers. The rest of our columbines are purple as opposed to our native ones, which I believe are orange.

Vinca grows well here. A variety of these periwinkles survived 10 years of benign neglect at the cottage.

This sedum has pretty yellow flowers and survives neglect and dry soil. We brought some to the cottage garden, too.

Rani has always wanted her own banana tree. Her mother and sister both have banana trees in their UK houses. This one survived the winter under a bucket with a pile of sawdust around its base. It is just getting started for the year.


This lilac bush dominates the garden outside our back entrance and blocks a good chunk of our washing line. We really need to cut it back this year. We have some blossoms in a vase now and they fill the living room with their lovely thick scent