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canada general moosling snow

Frozen Thunder is here! The first ski of the season.

The first ski of the season, and the Moosling’s first ski as a two year old, with considerably better control of his legs than before.

We took it in turn to do a couple of laps each, while the other held Moosling hands, and helped him skitter up and down hills. He was very keen to run down the hills, as he hasn’t yet got the hang of the fact that all he has to do is balance, and the skis will whoosh him down the hill of their own accord.

At any rate, he seems to like this “keeing” thing.

(Oh, and Frozen Thunder is the little loop of trail that the Nordic Centre puts down in October, using some snow they saved up from the year before – no, really, they just make a big pile of snow and cover it in sawdust and things, and then dig it out to use 7 months or so later)

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bikes canada general moosling trip reports

Out along the Cascade Fire Trail

An overnight bike trip out along the Cascade Fire Trail

Past the Cascade River, and out towards the Warden’s Cabin

Dropping down the side trail to the Stoney Creek Warden’s Cabin – Laura towing her Bob trailer

Suddenly we’re back in the 1940s… or perhaps a post-apocalyptic world

Studying the map.

Warden’s Cabin at night

Playing hide-and-seek in the cupboard (notice the feet peeping out)

The biking crew

Our loon – he was by the side of the trail, injured, and making loon noises. We called Parks, but they were saying there’s probably not much hope for him, as if they take him and look after him, he’ll probably die, and if he’s put into a lake that belongs to another loon, he’ll be killed. Poor loon.

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canada general trail running

The Grizzly50: Where I inexplicably manage to run 50 kilometres

Although I couldn’t really claim to have run all fifty of the kilometres – like most people, I walked a lot of the steep uphills. On a course with 1700 metres of climbing, there were definitely some steep little climbs in there. And I did stop for a bathroom break, and to stock up on food. And to take a photo. But mostly I ran. And ran. And ran. For over five hours. But it was strangely easier than I was expecting. I was assuming there would be soul-crushing agony, teeth-gnashing, and stomach-gurgling, dead legs and embittered spirit. But instead there was just tree roots to jump over, people to high five, and say hello to, signs to look for, and more people to chase.

The course was at the Nordic Centre, so all the trails were familiar, mainly because I’d mountain-biked a lot of the single trail many times before. The sections of double-track were familiar from winter skiing adventures, and less fun to run on, but not as bad as I was expecting either. Although single track is much more fun, it also takes a lot more concentration to run on.

A team of friends were doing the whole thing as a relay, so I spent each leg wondering if I could catch up to them, or maybe catch a glimpse of them on the few sections of overlapping track. Instead I just found them all every time I ran through transition, with the next person already sent out on the leg I was about to embark on – although I did catch the first and last person for high-five action on the track as we passed.

All in all, it was an awesome event. Well organised, fairly well signed (Leg 3 and 4 could have both done with a few more signs to clarify things a little better at a few points), and a lot of fun. The variety of the five different legs made the 50 kilometres travel by a lot quicker than it might have done otherwise too.

A couple of years ago I assumed that people who ran 20 kilometres were a little crazy – forgetting that I’d kind of done that sort of thing when we were rogaining a lot about ten years ago – but then the running was more of a by-product rather than the main goal, so it never seemed to count. You never really know what crazy things you’ll end up enjoying.

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canada general hiking moosling

A lakey sort of jaunt

Another exercise in toddler coaxing, this time up to Lillian and Galatea Lakes in K-Country, with a grandmother in tow (although she didn’t require any towing at all).

The best of the fall colours …. weren’t really visible from this hike. There were certainly a few yellow leaves here and there, but on the whole it was green, and just stuck to the standard level of spectacular, rather than the techni-colour version you can get in the mountains in autumn.

Lillian Lake lurks in the trees with some campsites nearby. We had lunch there, because otherwise we may have started gnawing on our hands for sustenance. Afterwards we carried on to the higher Galatea Lake, which is certainly worth the extra kilometre or so of wandering uphill, as it’s a genuinely lovely alpine lake, whereas Lillian Lake is more of a tree-bound puddle affair.

There were nice views, but the trail seemed quite long for how long it was. A side-effect of toddler herding combined with being accustomed to covering trails at running speed more often this year.

Distance: 14km
Elevation gain: 685m

(Sorry for the phone photos, I completely forgot to bring my camera *gasp*)

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canada general

Aurora Borealis

After lots of false alerts, and space weather warnings that led to little more than fuzzy green glows on the horizon, barely visible to the naked eye and certainly not worth staying up late for… finally, aurora!

Not just a little, but crazy bright, visible-from-downtown-despite-the-full-moon sort of aurora. After seeing how bright it was, we headed up out of town to watch the show for a little longer.

It was barely any time before the dancing lights dimmed down to a vague glow on the horizon, but we sat and waiting and try to lure them back.

Alas, they would not return.

We’re heading into a peak in solar activity over the next few years (it’s an 11 year cycle), so there might be more like this on the way.