Custom Search
Showing posts with label Similkameen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Similkameen. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Daisies - Somewhere Saturday

Little more than a month ago I snapped these daisies growing in a friend's garden in the Similkameen Valley but except for the sagebrush mountains in the background they might equally well be growing around here . They seem to thrive as well on the roadsides as in carefully tended gardens. I've not attempted to identify these more specifically since there are several similar genera and many species. Whatever their name they are one of summer's pleasures.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Summer Dreams

I'm indulging myself this week with a lazy browse through the archives. Today's photo is not Victoria but is from a trip I took to the interior of the province a couple of years ago. I can almost feel summertime heat radiating from this photo.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Similkameen River

I am a bit engaged in another project today so I am sharing another photo from the holiday I took earlier in the year to the Similkameen River Valley. There's nothing dramatic about this photo but there is something about horses standing in a river that is very peaceful. Hope you enjoy this.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Richter Pass

Here's a view from my recent holiday that never fails to please my eyes, the Richter Pass. The Similkameen Valley runs mostly east and west, roughly parallel and not very distant from the international border with the USA. The nearby Okanagan Valley runs north and south. The Richter Pass connects the two valleys. It is not often this spectacular yellow shade nor are the hills usually so green, effects of an unusually wet spring. These pastures are part of a large cattle ranch, another important agricultural aspect of this area.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Bears (Ursus americanus)

Shortly after we began the descent to the valley floor along the switchback road pictured above, the bear and cub to the left were sighted. Mother bears with cubs are notoriously dangerous so while I was tempted to get closer I was also more than conscious of how fast bears can run. When we first saw them they were already on the move up the slope. Then the mother paused and looked back at us while waiting for the cub to catch up. When he had bounced up the hill past her she moved into cover off to the left. I didn't attempt to follow her. (Reader Carolyn from Haida Gwaii kindly posted a video link of a similar encounter with bears in British Columbia north of here, though the bears in the video are the rather more aggressive Grizzly Bears. Click HERE to see the video.) I suspect the bears I saw were American Black Bears (Ursus americanus), though the distinctions between Black and Brown Bears are quite subtle. The valley in the above photo is the Similkameen Valley near Hedley, British Columbia.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Yellow Bellied Marmot (Marmota flaviventris)

Here's a close relative of the ground squirrel featured in a recent post, the Yellow Bellied Marmot (Marmota flaviventris). This one was living on a rock slope with numerous family and friends and there were several Columbian Ground Squirrels living there too. This photograph was taken on a spectacular trip above the Similkameen Valley near the Apex Mountain Ski Resort. I have now returned to Victoria but will share a few more of my holiday pictures over the next few days.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Lazy Evening at the Red Bridge

This old red bridge that crosses the Similkameen River outside Keremeos, BC, was built in 1907 for a now defunct railway. The bridge is now used for cars as an access to the Ashnola River Valley. It's also a good spot to cool off on a summer's evening.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

St. Ann's Church, Hedley

Between Christmas shopping and rainy days I am forced to fall back on the archives from my summer holiday once again. Here's a photo of a little old church on Highway 3 between Hedley and Keremeos in the Similkameen Valley of southern British Columbia. It is St. Ann's Church, a Roman Catholic church about 100 years old. You can read a little more about it HERE.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Goats

According to the technician my place is not likely to be dry until Monday so we will continue with more photos from my spring and summer jaunts to the Similkameen Valley.

Though I don't pay much attention to astrology it always strikes me as more than coincidental how much of my life was spent in close contact with people born under the sign of Capricorn. That influence seems to be waning in my life but I still like to see goats such as these I met last spring in the Similkameen Valley.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Magnolias

I'm still under siege from the drying machines so I'll continue to mine the archives from earlier this year. Here's a bit of spring.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Crab Apples

I'm still drying out (see yesterday's post) so here's another from the summer archives.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Morning Glories

A couple of days ago I was leaving my apartment when I felt a drop of water hit me on the forehead. Looking up I discovered that the ceiling above my doorway was dripping. I re-entered my apartment to find other drips coming down from the ceiling. A broken water pipe continued to seep into my place for the next 24 hours. Now the drying-out process is underway but everything is all piled up in a few dry patches so...for the next few days we'll have photos from my summer holiday archives when I spent a week in the beautiful Similkameen Valley.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Hibernation

When it's cold and dark and wet outside it's time to get out all the summer photos and browse through them. Here's one from my trip to the southern interior of British Columbia in August of this year. This is the Similkameen River near Keremeos.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep

No, this is NOT Victoria. It's another image from my recent vacation. These Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep (Ovis canadensis canadensis) were part of a group of about a dozen that I saw on a back road leading up into the Ashnola River Valley. I've seen these wild sheep in this area before but never at such a low altitude. Nor were they disturbed by my presence, seeming to be very hungrily cropping the first green sprouts on this hillside.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Similkameen Valley

Those of you who visit this blog regularly will know that I've been on holiday recently, into the southern interior of our province, British Columbia. I visited an area generally known as the Okanagan. This is a semi-arid desert climatic zone where farming is dependent on irrigation. The land is very fertile and many of the farmers in the Similkameen Valley are organic.During the week I was there my friends (one of whom has just started a blog about this area, Cawston, Canada) drove me around so I could take lots of photos. Over the next few days I'll post more photos of the splendid sagebrush country and its sights.This old wagon is part of a display at a BC heritage site where there is an old grist mill. The horses below represent some of the animal life I saw.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

My Summer Vacation IV - The Okanagan

One of the reasons we wanted to visit the interior of the province was to get some real summer HEAT. Here Rosie found a neat device to cool off with while traveling. After an overnight stop in the Similkameen Valley in sagebrush country we drove through the Richter Pass (below).As we descended from the Richter pass the town of Osoyoos came into view. The Okanagan Valley is a long string of emerald lakes surrounded by lush orchards and vineyards on the valley floor and sagebrush and pine trees on the dry mountainsides.After a cooling swim in Lake Osoyoos......we traveled northward up the valley to the small city of Penticton, where this vacation report will close with a shot of the steamer Sicamous in the sunset on the shore of Lake Okanagan.Thanks for joining me on my vacation. Tomorrow I promise to return to Victoria!