Thursday, September 21 to Wednesday, September 27, 2023 (Puntledge RV Park, Courtenay, BC)

Steve decided to get out fishing early on Thursday (Sept. 21) morning, wanting to be down at the river by daybreak. I wished him luck and finished my coffee as I relaxed in my recliner.

Steve here: I arrived at my spot next to the bridge shortly after daybreak. There were three other anglers further down in the early morning mist...
My spot on a little sand bar...
On my first cast I snagged the first of 4 snagged fish, caught only one by the mouth, and lost 3 within 40 minutes! They sure fight when snagged! Snagged fish cannot be kept...not that I was going to keep any anyway. A 4:15 minute video...
View from the bridge as I head home...
With so many fish holding in a school it's no wonder I snagged so many...a 32 second video...
By around 9 a.m. Steve was back and we were soon ready for our morning walk, at the Airpark and Riverwalk. As we walked along the pathway, there is a culvert that goes under the path from a saltwater lagoon over to the river. We noticed some salmon struggling to make their way through the culvert...Steve took a short :32 second video...
Friday (Sept. 22) is the last of our nice, sunny days...the first fall storm is heading in tomorrow and expected to last most of next week. So, with that forecast, we decided to get out hiking and geocaching. 

A portion of the 'One Spot' trail has access from the spot we parked in when we went geocaching last Monday in the Wildwood Forest. So that is where we are headed...but first, a little info on the trail. "One Spot" is a unique name so I thought I'd to do a little research, and this is what I found...
The One Spot Trail is located primarily along the former railway grade of the Comox Logging & Railway Company. The trail is named after the first locomotive to work on the grade, the “One Spot”. It was a wood burning Baldwin engine, built in 1909. The One Spot engine operated in this area for 34 years before it was scrapped in 1943.

Apparently the goal of the Comox Valley Regional District is to have the trail run from Courtenay to the Oyster River. So far there are 3 separate sections...one section is 8.5 kms; one is 8 kms; and one is 4 kms. The first section actually starts fairly close to where we are...just down the road...but we are driving to the other end and will hike a short section of it, gathering geocaches along the way. The complete trail has a string of geocaches all of the way along...we will eventually gather them all.

A very cool 'blue bird hide' placed on top of a stump, covered with moss...
This one was particularly hard to find.  When in the forest our GPS's have difficulty and continually send us in different directions! We had basically given up after running around in circles on both sides of the trail for 30 minutes or so when I happened to see a stick sticking out of some ferns. I picked it up and the cache was attached to it...
Gold bird find...
Black bird...
I really had to crawl through the branches to get this one after spotting it from the trail...
Some funny signs posted on trees alongside the trail...
This one's for you Dino!
A blue and red bird...
We hiked as far as the paved road, finding 6 geocaches before turning around and walking back up the trail. We hadn't realized that it had been a steady decline as we walked...but sure noticed it on our way back. We had walked 5 kms/3 miles by the time we got back to the car. The One Spot Trail goes off in another direction from here and we started to walk towards another cache but decided to drive the car to it. This was a fairly easy find along the trail...
So with 7 geocaches under our belt, we headed home for lunch.

Steve decided he should run the truck, etc...so he started it, along with my quad and the generator and let them run for a bit. He then went up onto the roof to check it out before the rains start..finding a crack in the bedroom vent cover. He managed to fix it with JB Weld.

Saturday (Sept. 23), as predicted, we woke to clouds...the rain started a little later. Since we had a few errands to run, we thought we'd go out anyway. With the errands taken care of, it was just sprinkling out a bit, so we decided to go for a walk. It was pretty blustery out, so we made it a short one on the treed section of the trail that's protected from the wind. Yup Fall has arrived...
Afterwards, we took a drive through Comox and out to Goose Spit Park...the kite boarders and wind surfers were sure taking advantage of the blustery weather. The water on this side of the spit stays calm but still has sufficient wind.

Getting some airtime!
Not so calm on this side of the spit for this wind surfer. This is the beach we had been at last July when Chris, Angela and Isaac were visiting...looks a tad different today!
A 2:15 minute video...getting some air!

That night we decided to try a new (to us) place for dinner...The Flying Canoe West Coast Pub. I checked their menu on-line and found that they have a special on Saturday nights starting at 5pm...a special $6.95 menu, as long as you also purchased a beverage. Well, okay...that sounds good. We were surprised at how extensive the menu options were...Steve had "The Works Burger" (substituting onion rings for the fries for an extra $1.95) and I had a Chicken Quesadilla. Both were delicious and our plates were cleaned up since it was a smaller portion...more than adequate though.
We arrived just at 5:00 which was good timing judging by the line up at the door shortly afterwards!

Sunday (Sept. 24) and Monday (Sept. 25) were rather non-descript days...basically raining, making us hunker down inside. 

Tuesday (Sept. 26) was more rain and wind but after basically being inside the last couple of days, we decided to at least get out for a drive. We went back to Goose Spit but the tide was way out so the bay where the wind surfers were last Saturday was high and dry. We also went to Kye Bay...it was a little more sheltered from the wind. Yup, the tide is way out!
We noticed some people were gathering seaweed for their gardens that had washed ashore after the windstorms...
By this time, it had stopped raining, so we decided to go for a walk. We went back to the sheltered trail in Courtenay and walked the whole way this time, even the unsheltered part...yes it was pretty blustery!

Something that we have been wanting to do is check out the museum that we pass by regularly...and today seemed like a good day since it was so yucky outside. So on the way home we stopped at the Courtenay and District Museum and Palaeontology Centre...
The Courtenay and District Museum was established in 1961 as a non-profit organization with the mandate to collect, preserve and interpret natural and cultural heritage of the Comox Valley region.
Throughout the year, the museum offers on-site and outdoor programming suitable for all age groups. Program subjects include fossils, geology, First Nations history, pioneer settlement history, social history of the Comox Valley, logging and lumber history, river way study, as well as, a series of changing exhibitions.e
The museum operates by donation.They have weekly guided tours to local areas where fossils have been found. They will supply tools so you can dig for your own to keep unless you discover something of significance.

Views as you enter the museum...
A water feature on the left...
Featuring a gator and eggs...
The fossils in the next 3 photos were found locally in the Puntledge and Trent Rivers, Parksville, Hornby and Denman Islands and Campbell River...




The long fossil in front is Dinosaur poop!

This is a replica of a partial skeleton found when the new inland Island highway was being built...
How do they come up with these names? 😂


This is the partial skull found....


Description of the one featured on the wood panel...

There were areas on both floors with info and displays on the First Nations people of the area...


Wow, this tree was a seedling in 822 CE! Looks like one was missing...

This area describes the history of the area when settlers first arrived, farming, logging and coal mining...


Displaying provisions of a bygone era...
Next was a section on mushrooms and fungi. Apparently there are around 3000 varieties in BC...who knew!


We were really impressed with the displays...very well done!

Wednesday (Sept. 27) we woke, again, to the pitter-patter of rain on the roof. The forecast is for brighter sky and no rain this afternoon, so we spent the morning inside...I worked on this blog and Steve read.

As promised, the rain had stopped and the sun was out so after lunch, we headed out for our daily walk around the Courtenay Air Park and Riverwalk, the great 3.5 km that we walk most days. Once back, it was Steve's turn to edit this blog.

And that pretty well sums up our week!

Tuesday, September 12 to Wednesday, September 20, 2023 (Puntledge RV Park, Courtenay, BC)

It was a rather drizzly, gloomy day Tuesday (Sept. 12) when we picked up Don and Rhonda (my brother and sister-in-law) at Kal Tire. They are getting new tires and asked if we were available to go out for a hike and lunch while the work was being done. We picked them up at 10:30 and headed to Nypmph Falls for a hike. 

As you know, we have been to this park many times...it's one of our favourites! Don and Rhonda had never been, so it was nice to show them this park and take them on the hike we really enjoy. 

We hiked the Long Loop Trail that we often do (rather than just to the falls), a beautiful hike that is just shy of 5 kms...and the rain held off for us!

After lunch at the Whistle Stop Pub, we dropped them off back at Kal Tire. A wonderful way to spend the day!

Wednesday (Sept. 13) we were back to our normal routine. I had just gotten home from shopping when friends from Peace Arch RV Park in Surrey stopped by. Don and Judith are visiting the island and stopped to see the park we had  "settled" in.

Great seeing them and getting caught up with what's going on at Peace Arch...a park we have spent so much time at!
We decided on Thursday (Sept. 14) morning to change up our walk...it was a beautiful sunny day, so lets check out a new hiking trail! We had passed an area on our way to Nymph Falls where there was always a lot of cars parked along the side of the road, so we thought we'd see what the attraction was. It was the trailhead to K'omoks Treaty Lands and Tribal Park and Wildwood Interpretive Forest...actually, there are five access points to the Wildwood Forest and it has multi-use trails.

Although a sunny day, unfortunately some smoke from the wildfires nearby had drifted in again, so we kept our hike to a relatively short one. We noticed that there are a number of geocaches located in the park...we managed to find 2 but we will definitely be back to hike the rest of the trails and hunt for more! 

Definitely smokey...very noticeable if you look back down the trail...
Beautiful trails...
Our first geocache...

Venturing off the main trail in search of another geocache. We later discovered that this one no longer existed after checking log attempts...
Our last find of the day was very unique...
A tiny micro cache hidden in the bottom...

That afternoon, Steve walked down to the bridge to see the salmon...
Then he returned to the campground and walked the road that leads to where the Tsolum and Puntledge Rivers meet... 
Friday (Sept. 15) was another beautiful day, so we went back to the Wildwood Forest to do more geocaching. We went to a different trailhead this time.

My first find...
A fern forest...
Steve got to this one first as we ventured off the main trail...
The trail we took today ends at a road...another park trail continues on the other side so we will check it out another time. We made a left and walked along the roadside to reach the gas/hydro trail that loops back into the trees and eventually meets up with the trail we started on.

This old barn was on a property along the road...very cool...
Another cache found!
It was a long hike...our GPS says 7.6 miles (12.25 km)...so we were glad when we finally got back to the car! We had found 5 caches but got skunked on 2.

That evening, we joined Earl and Allison at Kin Beach Provincial Park for a picnic dinner. It was our first time being there. Such a beautiful evening!
Earl and Allison picked up a pizza...thanks guys! We supplied desert...cookies and fruit.
Still a little smokey but such a gorgeous evening...
BC Ferry from Powell River to Comox arriving...
BC Mainland in the distance...
A Kingfisher...
A great end to a beautiful day!

Saturday (Sept. 16) morning we did a walk that we have done many times...this time though, I checked the geocaching app on my phone and we went in search of one along the way.

Found it! It was hidden in a block of wood in the storyboard along the trail near the creek...
As we were walking along the trail, we saw a black bear cross the trail ahead of us...probably the same one we saw the other day.

On our way home, we  stopped at the bridge to check out the salmon...lots of fishers out there! Love seeing the kids out too...
There is apparently another geocache hidden along our walk around the Airpark, so Sunday (Sept. 17) morning we decided to try and find it. It was a very clever hide on the bottom of a light standard, held in place by magnets. We did get a little help from a fellow geocacher that happened to be walking by!
Steve had looked at this but figured it looked like a normal part of the post...very clever!
Our morning walks have been very educational for me...Steve has taught me the phonetic alphabet. I have the registration down pat on each plane we pass...."Charlie, Golf, Foxtrot, X-ray, Hotel"...
The visitors centre is next to the path we walk and apparently there is another geocache hidden somewhere near the train but we couldn't find it!
Tonight was date night! We started off with drinks and dinner at Gladstone Brewery...
And then walked across the street to the Sid Williams Theatre to see the Canadian rock band from BC, Chilliwack, in concert! Check out this link for some of their top hits that you may recognise...
Not the greatest audio on this 1:40 minute video...we were in the second to last row in the nose bleed section! 😂
With the weekend over, Monday (Sept. 18) morning we headed back to the Wildwood Forest to hike the rest of the trails. We've been on a geocache hunt craze lately!
There it is!
Now this one is unique...the hint was "look for something out of place". A cow-patty on the side of a log? Hmmm...I prodded it with my hiking pole and broke a small piece off...oops! 😕
And look what I found...
Another one...

We found a 'Path Tag' in one of the caches...Pathtags are personal trading items. Used most often in Geocaching, they are also very handy for Scouting, Military and Promotional use.
Unfortunately, I didn't make note of which geocache we found it in...and I'm not sure whether I feel like signing up with PathTags to log it. But here it is!
This was the end of the line...the last cache tied to a fox. There were a couple more but looking on the logs for them indicated that they hadn't been found for quite a long time. Unfortunately some people don't maintain the geocaches they have placed.
Another great hike in a lovely park! Have we mentioned that we are very pleased with our decision to make Courtenay our "home base"? So much to see and do in this area!

Tuesday (Sept. 19) morning we saw this new family behind the trailer for the first time...a doe and her 3 fawns...
As we were about to leave for our morning walk, my brother, Doug, from Chilliwack called. We are buying his small travel trailer and he wanted to know if we could take it now, since he needed the room back in his driveway. Our cell service here at the RV Park is spotty...which really ticks me off since we are on the edge of a city. So we had to call Doug back once we got to the parking lot at the Courtenay Airpark. No problem, Doug, we will work on the logistics...storage and transport and get back to you.

After our walk, we stopped by a couple of storage places...of course, the one we wanted was full but they put us on a wait list. Long story short, we ended up with a spot at a commercial business off Royston Road that has a big storage area that is fenced and gated. It's a side-line business for them...with a very reasonable rate, so decided our new trailer will go there until we can get a spot at the place in town.

Our long-time friends, Rob and Nancy, have a pickup truck that they tow their trailer with. They have agreed to take us over to pick up the trailer the week after next. Thanks guys! It's going to kill us having the trailer now, but nothing to tow it with...sorry Buster, but you have to go soon!

Wednesday (Sept. 20) morning we had our usual 3.5 km power-walk along the Riverway and  Courtenay Airpark. We have been having some fabulous weather...but that is supposed to end by the weekend with major rain forecast for the next couple of weeks. This is actually good because we really, really need the rain. Apparently we've been in a drought since last fall!

Some pictures from our walk...Lots of geese resting in the Lagoon Salt Marsh before they continue their trek south...
Lots of seals hanging out on a tiny island at the entrance to the Puntledge River...
Great Blue Heron...
The salmon are finally coming up the channel under the foot-bridge we cross that enters the Lagoon Salt Marsh...
After lunch Steve "made" his heated hose for the trailer. He had purchased a Camco heated hose but after giving it a good try for over a week, we just couldn't get rid of the awful plastic taste, so we returned it and Steve decided he would build his own. 

Steve here: We had to buy a 25' water hose as our existing one was 50' and not required. I ordered a Heatit Self Regulating Water Pipe Heating Cable that adjusts its power output based on ambient temperature so it doesn't overheat or burn. After taping it to the bottom of the hose, I covered it with pipe insulation. 
Yup...time to get ready for winter!