Camping Experience

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
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Vancouver Island
Plutocrat. :lol:



Years ago when we had a tent trailer (would never have one of the bloody things again) we spent a lot of time camping at Tribune Bay on Hornby Island (an hour or so from Courtenay B.C.) Lots to do there, you could sit outside the Co op store all day and just enjoy watching the hippies, but mainly there is a beautiful sandy beach and the water is very warm for the ocean. There's trails to hike and if you are an artsy type there are lots of those around. There is a nice pub right at the ferry terminal. I'm sure it's all changed now so I would be afraid to go back.

Tribune bay is one of the most beautiful places in my opinion, we were just there two weeks ago, went by
boat from deep bay, but we have driven there a few times, but mostly go by boat. My daughter has a house
in deep bay now, so she moors her boat there at the marina, and it is only about 20 minutes to tribune
bay from there. It's still a great place to go, nothing to fear. lol
 

Johnnny

Frontiersman
Jun 8, 2007
9,388
124
63
Third rock from the Sun
A REALLY GOOD Tarp, sleeping Bag and fishing gear is all i need :)

Ive actually built a shelter with spruce branhes before and used my tarp to cover the inside and slept in that before. And for a fire i use a magnesium flint
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
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Vancouver Island
most of our camping trips over the years have included fishing, have been to many lakes throughout
b.c., lots of ocean fishing, and some river camping too.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
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Vernon, B.C.
most of our camping trips over the years have included fishing, have been to many lakes throughout
b.c., lots of ocean fishing, and some river camping too.

Likewise- many enjoyable days spent camping in the Chilcotin and Northern B.C. when our kids were small. Babine Lake and Old Hazelton are a couple that stand out. We used to go up to Quadra Island once in awhile too- camp right on Rebecca Spit and there was an old pub nearby there. :smile::smile:
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
212
63
In the bush near Sudbury
Once upon a time I'd pack a pup tent, some fishing gear, a knife and some matches into the canoe and just go upstream. Then I got married. Her idea of roughing it was a Winnebego and black-and-white TV. Now I'm a few years older ... and I understand her point.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
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Vancouver Island
Likewise- many enjoyable days spent camping in the Chilcotin and Northern B.C. when our kids were small. Babine Lake and Old Hazelton are a couple that stand out. We used to go up to Quadra Island once in awhile too- camp right on Rebecca Spit and there was an old pub nearby there. :smile::smile:

yup, we've been to babine lake, and also to old hazelton, and also to rebecca spit many times, taught
joe to swim there when he was a little pup, 'well' not much teaching for a lab puppy to learn, but he was
very small, so didn't want to scare him at first, so I hung onto him a bit till he got the hang of it.

we went to deka lake many many times, sheridan lake, (had to hike from deka to sheridan at that time,
not sure how it is now.
puncie lake sp?, and a lake way up the mountain from summerland I think, mosquitoes so big they almost
carried our dog away. lol. mammot lake, and that other lake north of mammot, forget the name.

campbell lake, upper campbell lake, campbell river (actually the river), Buttle lake, and my husband
has fished more than I can remember, he's gone on many many fishing trips over the years.

he and my daughter and grandaughter came home from ucluelet with 9 beautiful salmon, then they caught
more near hornby, not far from entrance to tribune bay. I'm not much of a fisherwoman, I have fished
quite a bit over the years, but it's not my passion that's for sure.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
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Vernon, B.C.
yup, we've been to babine lake, and also to old hazelton, and also to rebecca spit many times, taught
joe to swim there when he was a little pup, 'well' not much teaching for a lab puppy to learn, but he was
very small, so didn't want to scare him at first, so I hung onto him a bit till he got the hang of it.

we went to deka lake many many times, sheridan lake, (had to hike from deka to sheridan at that time,
not sure how it is now.
puncie lake sp?, and a lake way up the mountain from summerland I think, mosquitoes so big they almost
carried our dog away. lol. mammot lake, and that other lake north of mammot, forget the name.

campbell lake, upper campbell lake, campbell river (actually the river), Buttle lake, and my husband
has fished more than I can remember, he's gone on many many fishing trips over the years.

he and my daughter and grandaughter came home from ucluelet with 9 beautiful salmon, then they caught
more near hornby, not far from entrance to tribune bay. I'm not much of a fisherwoman, I have fished
quite a bit over the years, but it's not my passion that's for sure.

Yep, we put in a few days at Puncie (yer talking near Chilanko Forks?) what I remember about Puncie, fishing was poor. Also that South east Cariboo, Bridge Lake, Hammer Lake, there's a million of them out there. In laws lived in Lone Butte at one time.

Once upon a time I'd pack a pup tent, some fishing gear, a knife and some matches into the canoe and just go upstream. Then I got married. Her idea of roughing it was a Winnebego and black-and-white TV. Now I'm a few years older ... and I understand her point.

Just have one question- when you were roughing it what were you doing packing matches? :lol::lol::lol:
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,340
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Vancouver Island
When I was young a sleeping bag was all that was requires. Now a tin tent of any model so ling as it has a ****ter and shower will do. Must come with cook as well. We use campers/trailers as camps quite often so camping has lost its appeal. I bet I could count the times I went to a camp ground could be counted on one hand. We just find a good spot along a logging road.(free)
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
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Vancouver Island
Yep, we put in a few days at Puncie (yer talking near Chilanko Forks?) what I remember about Puncie, fishing was poor. Also that South east Cariboo, Bridge Lake, Hammer Lake, there's a million of them out there. In laws lived in Lone Butte at one time.

The first time I saw Lone Butte was early spring l960, we drove into deka lake, spring thaw, we got stuck
somewhere between lone butte and deka lake.

I'd been to ashcroft many times, my sister lived there for years, but lone butte was even more historic,
couldn't believe there could be a little 'stop over' like that, we also knew someone who worked in
lone butte, (can't be many business there),forget their name, but my husband will remember, (he's golfing right now).

I'd rather sleep in the back seet of the car than tent anymore. don't like being visited by big furry
bears in the middle of the night. Two men were very close to death a short while ago, tenting not far
from port alberni, lucky they fought their way through it, but not without many wounds. Thee is always
the chance of some 'grouchy' bear, who hasn't read the memo, wandering around looking for things he's
not suppose to have, well, it won't be me.
 

Bcool

Dilettante
Aug 5, 2010
383
2
18
Vancouver Island B.C.
Always loved tenting best: back when our National & Provincial park campgrounds were free and most used tents; before the advent of large, overly bright propane lamps, "boom boxes" and while campgrounds were still patrolled & all-night partygoers were chucked out. Also camped in spots we just felt like camping in. I camped and canoed a lot in the Lakehead/Thunderbay area while living there on and off. Moved to Edmonton (hippy party time :lol:), then we lived in Jasper National Park for a couple of years and spent many wonderful times camping there; tented/camped from Edmonton to BC when we moved here - lovely, memorable trip. Lots of camping around BC of course.

One of the many outstanding memories: driving the then six hour drive from Port Alberni to Tofino/Ucluelet on the only road, a potholed, washboarded gravel forestry road that went over the very top of hair-raising "Switchback Mountain": rusting car parts & wrecked cars & even travel trailers strewn down the stomach churningly steep mountainside, single lane only so backing up to permit someone to get by was frequent. The logging trucks travelled at full speed & didn't slow down or back up for anything, you just drove for the side of the road in that instance & hoped your car didn't slide off the road and keep on sliding. Mile upon mile as far as the eye could see of clear-cutting, which was dismal. But also some beautiful spots to stop for a breather beside the emerald green, crystal clear Kennedy River and listen to the water and the wind. And such a reward when arriving! The stunning beauty of that west coast of the sixties is a very precious memory. We had Long Beach totally to ourselves, as well as the only provincial campground - all nine spaces!

Our car was an open/rag top four seater '62 Datsun "Fairlady" sportscar - the perfect camping car :smile:, especially when a bunch of inquisitive bears decided to get in it! Which happened often in Jasper, elk & moose seemed to find our car overly interesting also. However our Samoyed usually kept them at bay, bears seem to get spooked by white, sort of 'wolfish' appearing dogs. Our tent was a Swiss 'two man' - one of the early outside frame type (no poles inside the tent), tricky on rainy days for my over 6' tall husband as it was only 4' high at the peak and 7' long (I've lost my metric converter again...), the dog used 50% of the sleeping space by morning.

Shower & toilet facilites were rare, you bathed in lakes, rivers, the ocean. Outhouse type toilets, BYO TP or Eaton's catalogue. No inside cooking or cookhouses, the cast-iron skillet or cast-iron stew pot on the open fire was it and, oh my!, did that taste good! Lighting was a flashlight, candle in a jam-jar and campfire light, all of which would inevitably quit on leaving the toilet for your trek back in the dark. :albino: :sad6:

First night on arrival from our very first wowser ferry crossing at Port Alberni camp-ground was interesting. We arrived after dark in the rain (Port Alberni rain, whew!), having been entranced for too long by Cathdral Grove & marvelling at the rain forest "Leopard" or giant green slugs we kept tripping over. So we pitched as fast as we could in the first site we could find in the light of our headlights (constantly whispering apologies to the other campers for disturbing them). Had the best, longest and softest sleep ever although we had to keep mumbling at our dog for unusual whinging. Finally awoke to people hollering, "Are you alright in there?" and mutters of, "They're dead, gotta be.". On reluctantly forcing eyes open and attempting to sit up, we realized we were floating in a lake filled tent! Our air mattress was floating on top of a foot or more of water, we had camped in a large hollow in the campsite. Our emergence was greeted with applause and much friendly ribbing. :smile:

We graduated to a VW minimally camperised van when the sprogs came along and to a permanently parked full facilities holiday trailer at a gated & patrolled (two young daughters who needed to be free to roam around and explore on their own), riding, swimming, sports, hiking, etc., recreational resort in the mountains when they got to the "None of my friends are going with their parents!" age of disdain, a stage which we enjoyed too actually. Ah! The peace! :lol: But tenting is, IMO, the only way to really get as close as we humans can to the wonders out there - being a Brit/Welsh, mosquitoes, deer flies, black flies find my blodd irresistable & I, of course, lack the anti-bodies to their bite so am very allergic. Sleeping out in the open is not an option sadly.

Too many camping stories to tell really. BTW, I don't think this is off-topic, at least I hope not. IMO relevant and an interesting read:
Outdoors and Out of Reach, Studying the Brain

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/16/technology/16brain.html?src=busln

" . . It was a primitive trip with a sophisticated goal: to understand how heavy use of digital devices and other technology changes how we think and behave, and how a retreat into nature might reverse those effects.
Cellphones do not work here, e-mail is inaccessible and laptops have been left behind. It is a trip into the heart of silence — increasingly rare now that people can get online even in far-flung vacation spots. . . ."
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
BCool- Know what you mean about the old road to Tofino. DRove over it and back once in 1969, the new highway to Taylor River was opened in the early 70s.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
63
Vancouver Island
QUOTE]


One of the many outstanding memories: driving the then six hour drive from Port Alberni to Tofino/Ucluelet on the only road, a potholed, washboarded gravel forestry road that went over the very top of hair-raising "Switchback Mountain": rusting car parts & wrecked cars & even travel trailers strewn down the stomach churningly steep mountainside, single lane only so backing up to permit someone to get by was frequent. The logging trucks travelled at full speed & didn't slow down or back up for anything, you just drove for the side of the road in that instance & hoped your car didn't slide off the road and keep on sliding. Mile upon mile as far as the eye could see of clear-cutting, which was dismal. But also some beautiful spots to stop for a breather beside the emerald green, crystal clear Kennedy River and listen to the water and the wind. And such a reward when arriving! The stunning beauty of that west coast of the sixties is a very precious memory. We had Long Beach totally to ourselves, as well as the only provincial campground - all nine spaces!

the road from alberni to ucluelet/tofino is very much improved, but they still haven't actually blasted
that switch back area yet, but guess that is coming. I don't mind the drive any more, I use to hate it.
Our daughter has rental cottages near ucluelet, so we drive back and forth quite a bit.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
QUOTE]


One of the many outstanding memories: driving the then six hour drive from Port Alberni to Tofino/Ucluelet on the only road, a potholed, washboarded gravel forestry road that went over the very top of hair-raising "Switchback Mountain": rusting car parts & wrecked cars & even travel trailers strewn down the stomach churningly steep mountainside, single lane only so backing up to permit someone to get by was frequent. The logging trucks travelled at full speed & didn't slow down or back up for anything, you just drove for the side of the road in that instance & hoped your car didn't slide off the road and keep on sliding. Mile upon mile as far as the eye could see of clear-cutting, which was dismal. But also some beautiful spots to stop for a breather beside the emerald green, crystal clear Kennedy River and listen to the water and the wind. And such a reward when arriving! The stunning beauty of that west coast of the sixties is a very precious memory. We had Long Beach totally to ourselves, as well as the only provincial campground - all nine spaces!

the road from alberni to ucluelet/tofino is very much improved, but they still haven't actually blasted
that switch back area yet, but guess that is coming. I don't mind the drive any more, I use to hate it.
Our daughter has rental cottages near ucluelet, so we drive back and forth quite a bit.

I think she was referring to the old switchback above Sproat Lake that the new road bypassed.
 

Bcool

Dilettante
Aug 5, 2010
383
2
18
Vancouver Island B.C.
I think she was referring to the old switchback above Sproat Lake that the new road bypassed.

Yes, that's the one. Whoa!

So you drove it too, quite the experience, huh? Teeth chattering experience driving over the washboard at each end of all those Bailey Bridges too. :bounce:

You know I wonder sometimes if anyone ever collected all those fifties and sixties Cadillacs, Lincolns & other huge gas guzzlers that were left on that mountainside after the bypass was built. All those bits put back together and restored would have been worth a mint!
 

VanIsle

Always thinking
Nov 12, 2008
7,046
43
48
I think she was referring to the old switchback above Sproat Lake that the new road bypassed.
I didn't get that JLM. The road to the area still has some tight spots. The road to Ucluelet and Tofino is just a logging road that they paved. It was never properly built. It's not a bad drive. I know the first time I went there I thought the road was awful but by the time we lived in Ukee for a few months, we were so used to the road we never gave it another thought. We could always tell a tourist by the slow driving and the frantic grip on the steering wheel and the road hasn't changed since we lived there. It's probably still one of the most beautiful places on this planet. (the entire west coast of Vancouver Island). There is one area of the road between Ucluelet and Tofino where you come over a little hill and round the corner and the scene is absolutely breath taking. I never once failed to have those feelings everytime we drove out there. Anyone who hasn't been there doesn't know what they are missing. It's Canada's little gem in the rough.
Sorry JLM - I was wrong.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
I didn't get that JLM. The road to the area still has some tight spots. The road to Ucluelet and Tofino is just a logging road that they paved. It was never properly built. It's not a bad drive. I know the first time I went there I thought the road was awful but by the time we lived in Ukee for a few months, we were so used to the road we never gave it another thought. We could always tell a tourist by the slow driving and the frantic grip on the steering wheel and the road hasn't changed since we lived there. It's probably still one of the most beautiful places on this planet. (the entire west coast of Vancouver Island). There is one area of the road between Ucluelet and Tofino where you come over a little hill and round the corner and the scene is absolutely breath taking. I never once failed to have those feelings everytime we drove out there. Anyone who hasn't been there doesn't know what they are missing. It's Canada's little gem in the rough.
Sorry JLM - I was wrong.

You are right, the road from Taylor River over Sutton Pass and along the Kennedy R. and Kennedy Lake is the old logging road, but the road from the head of Sproat Lake was built in the early 70s. I worked at upgrading most of the old bridge sites between Sutton Pass and Kennedy Lake off and on over a period from the late 70s to the late 90s when I retired. By the time I was done I could pretty well drive it with my eyes closed. About an hour and 15 minutes from Alberni to Ucluelet Jct. :lol::lol::lol:
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
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Vancouver Island
very confusing, there is answer above with my name above, and it isn't mine, how
does that happen.??

the switchbacks I'm referring to is nearing kennedy lake. They have improved the highway so much
but haven't got to that spot yet. They have been working hard on that road for the past five years,
and have made huge improvements.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
548
113
Vernon, B.C.
very confusing, there is answer above with my name above, and it isn't mine, how
does that happen.??

the switchbacks I'm referring to is nearing kennedy lake. They have improved the highway so much
but haven't got to that spot yet. They have been working hard on that road for the past five years,
and have made huge improvements.

Yep, the thread can be hard to follow at times. It's been 12 years or more since I was last over there, but I think the area you are referring to is just west of the four lane section, but east of the Kennedy Lake boat ramp. It's all getting rather vague now.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
63
Vancouver Island
Yep, the thread can be hard to follow at times. It's been 12 years or more since I was last over there, but I think the area you are referring to is just west of the four lane section, but east of the Kennedy Lake boat ramp. It's all getting rather vague now.

yeah, along that stretch and up the hill, I suppose that will be such a big project, much harder than
all the improvements they have made recently, guess they will have to dynamite the side of the mountain
all the way up that hill, not much else they can do, guess you would know best, since you worked on
that road. I was driving west one day, came around the corner on that very narrow section, only to see
large semi coming toward me, I had to pull over close to edge and wait so he could edge on by me, not
a dangerous situation, but something that shouldn't be happening any more on that highway, so much
traffic goes to and from these days, and people spend a lot of money over there, as everything one does
in ucluelet and especially tofino is more expensive than many other areas.