There are often a couple different kinds of rock overlaying each other on these cliffs. |
There were lots of gray whales close to the beach along the trail. |
The hole in the wall is drawing closer. |
The Hole in the Wall is much larger in person. |
The sandstone shelves can be slick (sense the foreshadowing?). |
This is a surge channel. Wouldn't want to fall in there (Sense more foreshadowing?). |
Seals have a good life. They just eat and relax and eat and relax and eat and relax and get eaten by a killer whale. Simple life. |
Good by to the Hole in the Wall. |
Sometimes the trail runs unnervingly close to the cliff ledge. |
"Enough with the photos already!" |
This, our third day, is when the boardwalk started looking even more rough. |
This is the beautiful Rana aurora. My favorite ranid. |
This looks like a really evil roller coaster ride more than a hiking trail. |
Hmn. That looks like good hiking. Why are we up here on this nasty boardwalk? |
An old cabin by the seaside in gif form. |
These pretty little white bells belong to Moneses uniflora, a single-flowered evergreen perennial. |
I always get that gloating grin whenever I catch a snake. This one puffed up a little bit like he might think of biting me but, as usual, it was just a bluff. I released him unharmed. |
Some of the coastal Thamnophis sirtalis have those blushing red cheeks. |
There were several juvenile garter snakes on the trailside and I managed to capture a few of them. |
He's soooo cute! |
Lots of bridges. |
Carmanah Creek. |
Walking the sandstone shelf is fairly enjoyable, but those patches of green algae are slick as "bug snot," as my dad likes to say. |
These slanted shelves of limestone must tell an epic geological story of shifting plates and tectonic catastrophe! |
Cormorants are built for this kind of weather. |
Whale bones! There must be a carcass around. |
I confess! I fooled around with this one in photo shop to give the illusion it is in the evening. Looks nice, eh? |
These immense bones probably belong to a young grey whale. There were pools of white blubber underneath the carcass and ravens waited near by for another feed. |
The sunset at Cribs Creek was beautiful, but it was surprisingly difficult to get a good picture. There were a lot of people who took this opportunity to walk into the sunset. |
Ya Caleb, let's do it again! Dad
ReplyDeleteWoo Hoo!!! And take me with you. I saw the foreboding, but I didn't get the story where any one fell in. :-) xo mom
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