You know, Kamloops has some beautiful mountains around it. Occasionally, the weather will be just right to get a good shot of clouds hugging Mount Peter and Mount Paul, just as the sun sets.
Category: Photos and Adventures
Greenstone Mountain is an absolutely gorgeous view, if you ever take the adventure to the top. Atop of this windy mountain, is this small hut, which I can only assume was a forestry fire lookout. Nowadays it has a couple bunkbeds, a table and a chair for visitors to use, as well as a logbook to write down when you visited this place and see who did the adventure before you.
I know, I know… ANOTHER gold panning photo… This photo was taken just a week or two after the last post of the cans, even further along the trail. By this time, my buddy Brad and I convinced three other friends to join us on our panning adventures. After an hour or so of walking (including walking up the creek itself) we came to this absolutely gorgeous spot. Although this spot was terrible for gold panning, it gave us a nice little island almost to relax on, and just do what teenage boys in the wilderness do: mess around with the scenery. We stayed at this spot for an hour or two, skipping rocks across that little open water area you see in front of Brad, and discussing whatever was going on in our lives at the time.
Another photo from gold panning adventures, this taken a month after the first one. As I stated in the last post, this area that we gold pan in has a rich history of gold panning. As you walk deeper and deeper into the canyon that the creek is located in, you begin to find massive piles of tailings left over from the mining. It’s just hundreds of square meters covered in stones. Among these stones are some garbage piles left over from the mining days, and this photo of a pile of old cans is one of the many little garbage spots around the area.
This photo is a bit of a throwback to February of 2016, when my buddy Brad and I went out for my first time gold panning. Heading out into a bit of a chilly late morning, we hiked about two (maybe three, my memory is pretty bad) kilometers down the path, looking for a decent place to pan when we settled on this spot. The area that we gold pan in has a rich history of gold mining, with a couple decrepit old mineshafts here and there to see. The photo doesn’t really show it, but it was pretty chilly that morning, and with the cold, wind, and frigid water, my fingers were having a tough time working.