Wednesday, July 6, 2022

At the Williams Lake Stampede

Photo thanks to Rhea Clements

 The Williams Lake Stampede was canceled for the Covid years so everyone was excited to be back and attendance at all the events was out of this world.  

On Canada Day Leo and his group played at the public market and the Community Band gave a concert in Boitanio Park  later in the day.


In honor of the return of the Stampede, Rocco Catalano, our euphonium player arranged the Williams Lake Stampede song by Alan Moberg for the band.

There's a recording of it on Facebook.  It's a little raggedy! We're suffering a bit from our Covid layoff. We'll do it better next year. 


On Saturday we played in the Stampede parade.  There was a great turnout and it didn't even rain.

From Facebook

You may have heard what happened Sunday at the Stampede Grounds.  That put quite a damper on our community's big weekend.

Immediately after the shooting, a big windstorm swept through.  Our friends were downtown (not at the rodeo grounds) and came home to find their big cottonwood had fallen on their house.



Fortunately, no one was home but there is quite a lot of damage.  They had already made an appointment with a tree faller to assess the tree for the very next day.  So he came and removed the debris instead.

And that was our Stampede weekend.



 

Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Bluebird boxes


 We acquired a bluebird box route again this year, but between the terrible weather and  Leo's busy schedule this spring we didn't make it out till the end of June.

Unfortunately by then Leo had forgotten how to get to the route and we drove out to the Meldrum Creek road the instructions he'd written down didn't make any sense.

Still it was a nice drive even in glowering weather, covering much of the same ground we traveled on our Farwell Canyon trip.

The Chilcotin meadows are lush and green this year due all the rain with lots of wildflowers.

I see timber milk-vetch, death camas and heuchera in this shot.

An arnica?

Very pretty member of the pea family


Death camus

Old man's whiskers

Blue-eyed grass

A white cinquefoil

A yellow cinquefoil


We checked a bunch of nest boxes but none of them turned out to be on our route.  

There were more swallows around than bluebirds.  Both species are thought to have been hard hit by the heat dome we had last year at this time. 

How many birdies in the nest?

Not bluebirds but tree swallows

The next week, armed with the map coordinates, we went out again and found our actual route.



Again the wildflowers put on a great display!

Don't know this one

Brown-eyed Susan

Paintbrush

Geranium 



Larkspur

Is this a penstemon?

Animals were seen too.

A pretty butterfly

A savannah sparrow with a grasshopper in its beak


Here's our second line at Copeland Flats.

Photo doesn't show the rambunctious bull bellowing just down the road (on our side of the fence)



Monday, July 4, 2022

Day Trip to Farwell Canyon



Our friends Ken and Sue stopped by on their way home from Haida Gwai and we made a day trip out to Farwell Canyon together.

On our way in we got a great view of a cinnamon bear walking through the woods (but no good photos).

Leo and Ken hiked up to the sand dunes

But first they had to go down to cross a gully

And Sue and I drove down to the homestead on the Chilcotin River.




See those two black spots perched on the dune?

They made it!

Afterwards we drove back down to the bridge to check out the view.


The water was roiling.



Next we visited the nearby pictographs.



 What a beautiful spot!


As we drove up out of the canyon we spotted the cinnamon bear again and then this big mama bear


And her yearling cub (?).  

We took the Meldrum Creek road backand checked out the Till Lake recreation site for possible future low gas consumption camping. Maybe not (The road in was muddy and rutted due to active logging in rainy conditions).


We spotted a large red-legged frog hanging out near the shore.


We crossed the Fraser River on Rudy Johnson Bridge and drove home on the Soda Creek Road past the fire that forced the evacuation of Williams Lake in 2017.

Sunday, July 3, 2022

What's going on?

 Had a big thunder/hailstorm last week:


Hail collected on the canopy of our trailer.  We'd put it out to dry off.  Oops!


And on our patio furniture.  


Our flowers and vegetables got shredded.  Streets were flooded with water gushing out of manholes.

Iwn between showers, we went for a walk one evening at Scout Island.
 

I like the effect of these photos taken as the sun was coming out of a cloud.