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canada general hiking

Lady Mac solo hike (senses theme developing)

The Lady MacDonald trail had been re-opened, so I decided to head up there on Sunday. No-one to hike with, but it’s usually a pretty busy trail… then for the first hour of hiking I didn’t meet a single person. It was beginning to get a little spooky, and I was singing the Shoo Bears song (surprisingly similar to the Shoo Fly song… which apparently has a chorus, and completely different lines to those I know of, but anyway), and wielding my cougar-hitting stick, just in case.

People started appearing as I got higher though, and just as I was about to hit the final ridge to the summit, a group warned about a bear that was ‘just on the other side’. It must have wandered off, for I didn’t catch even a glimpse of it.

Towards Banff from the teahouse (other people were heading on to the summit proper today, but being alone and with a slightly dodgier centre of gravity than usual, I didn’t bother)

 

Lovely warm day for hiking – singlets and shorts and a dusty trail in the sun.

 

Back down along the ridge from the teahouse – this section was the only part of the trail that wasn’t dry. It was also the only part where I was promised a bear, but there was no sight of it.

 

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canada general hiking

Ha Ling solo hike (yes, again)

 

Summit views: Looking north along the Bow Valley from Canmore

 

 

Summit views: Looking south along the Bow Valley from Canmore

 

 

Summit views along the back of Ha Ling – towards the Goat Creek trail and Banff… Goat Range and Sulphur Mountain.

 

 

At the summit, with an in utero evilmoosling

 

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canada general hiking snow

Easter hike

Another hike up Ha Ling Peak – the trail had a lot more bare and icy patches, but then there was a lot more snow at the summit, thanks to the fact we actually had some snowfall recently. Super slippery!

Looking out to Canmore from the saddle between Ha Ling and Miners Peak

 

The wind above the treeline was icy, and we didn’t hang around for long.

Hiking off the back of Ha Ling

 

And Easter hike was followed by Easter dinner (with ham!). However, the Easter bunny did not visit, and I was tormented by the lack of chocolate.

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canada general hiking trip reports

Heart Mountain by semaphore

On a day so windy that we thought we’d be blown off the mountain (and I was wondering about the boots from The Blood-and-Thunder Adventure on Hurricane Peak), we decided to hike up Heart Mountain. The trees were whipping around like mad, and as a strong gust of wind came along we had to crouch to avoid being blown over (or off the mountain, you can never be too careful). It was delightfully sunny though, and the track was mostly bare – although some snow patches remained. Lots of trail braiding too, so it was easy enough to choose a trail that didn’t go through the snow in most cases.

 

Walking back down from the summit – lovely and sunny, but too windy to hang out (or to want to keep doing the full loop hike around the rest of the ridge-line)

 

 

Summit views along the Bow Valley towards Canmore (Grotto Mountain on the right, Mt Lawrence Grassi and Mt Rundle off in the distance on the left)

 

 

Out towards the plains of Calgary and the scenic lime factory

 

 

Scree, scree, and more scree. And a cement factory. And Exshaw.

 

 

Heart Mountain – if you use your imagination you can see how it got its name – the limestone does form a sort of heart shape. I’ve heard of a few misguided guys trying to drag their partners up here as a romantic spot for a proposal, only to have their partners kick up a stink at the scrambling sections. Sure, the name has potential, but you could pick a better hike for a proposal.

 

For reference, this is the one tricky part at about half-way that is mentioned in write-ups of the hike. It’s just a couple of scrambley moves to gain a higher bench – not exposed, and not really too bad going either down or up (be careful to look out for the orange diamond marking the spot though, otherwise it’s easy to keep walking straight).

And some people might not like this either (although you can go around to the right instead of going up this cleft, it’s more exposed, but less steep I think).

Overall the trail is easy to find and follow, just make sure you don’t end up following one of the weaker trails that disappear off from it.

Categories
canada general hiking trip reports

Mt Lady Mac – the Equinox hike edition

The trail was really dry and dusty (although with occasional mud) except for the final section up to the teahouse, where there was a little snow. A surprise after how snowy the Ha Ling Peak trail has been, I guess that side of the valley really gets a lot more sun.

 

Looking out south from the Teahouse across Canmore to Mt Lawrence Grassi and the Three Sisters

 

 

The view from the teahouse up to the summit proper – we didn’t go all the way, it was windy and we were lazy

 

 

Views towards Banff from Mt Lady Mac – Tunnel Mountain looks like a wee little hill

 

 

Heading down – we weren’t eaten by a cougar.

 

I did this hike the next Saturday (27th), and then on the Sunday and Monday there were cougar attacks on dogs with hikers. Since then the trail has been closed until further notice (according to the Rocky Mountain Outlook anyway).