• Weekly Photo

    Trekking the Southern Cordillera

    View of Torres del Paine mountains

    At this time last year, a few friends and I were beginning our exploration of Torres del Paine National Park on the Chilean side of the Patagonian Region. Part of a larger adventure that took us to many remote terrains.

    This picture was taken at one of the numerous lookouts along the highway, each with its own hike and unique view of the Andes. We tend to romanticize things, and I definitely had a mixed vacation owing to an illness that lingered throughout, but I still cannot believe that I was there only a year ago. Its memory may as well be a dream, for all its waning impressions.

    The upside-down night sky of another hemisphere was an apt metaphor for a most unusual break from waking life. Outrun briefly but not escaped.

    If you are curious, you can read my thoughts on the lure of faraway lands (what we seek), pre-trip musings (what we expect), or the more meditative post-trip reflection (on time and its binding nature).

    The southern cordillera still calls to me. May the next retreat be as inviting.

  • Weekly Photo

    Wiped Out

    A pug sleeps lazily on its side on carpeted ground

    This image – of our family’s dog in his preferred state – is an accurate reflection of my current condition. Today’s pic: the pooped pug.

    I am at the end of a whirlwind couple of weeks, largely spent in transit around the Lower Mainland. Reconnecting with friends in an attempt to strengthen tenuous bonds. One of my fears is to become memory when I am only a text away; sliding glacially into irrelevance on the tertiary of social circles. Especially as everyone’s narrative gathers pace, or settles, into familiar patterns.

    To avoid the idle feat of being forgotten takes energy, often more than I can muster. Though promises made need to be kept and commitments cancelled leave sour aftertastes.

    It will all happen again, too soon for this chronic crowd-sidestepper. Wholly tiring yet gratifying, dreaded yet welcomed in equal measure.

  • Weekly Photo

    Alberta’s Fossil Trove

    A couple of years ago, I had the pleasure of driving into the Canadian prairies for the first time. (No sarcasm there; I had a companion, and our entertaining conversation was invited to fill the pleasant emptiness of the flatlands.)

    The journey had actually begun in Richmond. Eleven hours through winding roads and mountains later, I was in Calgary, to connect with an old friend visiting from the U.K. I had proposed that we drive out to Dinosaur Provincial Park, because it was a bucket list item and because I had no interest at the time in surveying another car city (living in one is bad enough).

    We agreed to the plan, met the morning after, and made our way there. It was another two hours or so East from Calgary to the park. Endless farmland, blue skies and scorching sun. The occasional, lonely cloud or tractor interrupting the monotonous land- and skyscapes.

    To get to the dinosaurs, you have to zig-zag via gridded farm roads. And just like in the movies, the ancient reptiles leap out at you dramatically. It is genuinely unbelievable how abruptly the fossil-ridden badlands appear. One moment, you are coasting through wheat and pavement. The next, you are descending on rock and gravel as the land around you concaves into another era. Canyons and valleys of unbelonging hills, buttes, and most surprisingly, greenery, emerge from nowhere, evocative of another, older time.

    The park is a must-see. The bus tours are largely family-focused but informative for all. It was cool to walk around and see millions of years of our history so accessible; bones protruding from soil as commonplace as the straw-like grass stubbornly staking its claim to the area. It was also clear to understand why the badlands were considered sacred by the local Indigenous populations. Among the many reasons they originally left it undisturbed were the shadows cast by the hoodoos – interpreted as spirits lying in stone. After all, much of what casts shadows is living. People, trees, animals and the like.

  • Weekly Photo

    Dunes at Carcross

    Carcross desert panorama 1

    East of Whitehorse and west of Watson Lake, Yukon, along the Alaskan Highway, there lies a detour worth taking. You can either turn south at the aptly named Carcross Cutoff or instead at Jake’s Corner*.

    Continue down and you will find yourself in a small town in the rain shadow of four mountains. Its relatively dry environment is the location of an anomaly: a collection of sand dunes. Fed over time by silt sailing on winds from nearby lakes and home to unique vegetation.

    Today’s photo feature: a peculiar, arid destination supported by verdant surroundings in the far North. Taken August 2022.

    Here is another look:

    Carcross desert panorama 2

    *The name is listed as “Jakes Corner” online, but nearly every sign I saw there had the apostrophe, so I am leaving in the possessive.

  • Weekly Photo

    Reflection

    Islands near Lax Kwa'alaams

    A passage to serenity.

    Located between Aero Point in Prince Rupert and Tuck Inlet at Lax Kwa’alaams. The greenest greens floating on the bluest blues, drifting liking a daydream through bracing mists.

    Just remember to turn ‘roaming’ off before you arrive, lest the Alaskan signals snag your device.

  • Weekly Photo

    Sky Lights

    Eleven years ago, on a late winter evening in February, young adults – mostly students from local post-secondary institutions – made their way to Vancouver shores for a protest in solidarity with those marching the streets of Kyiv. They lit biodegradable sky lanterns and cast them into the darkness, reflecting on the symbolism afloat and enjoying the company of friends.

    The gathering lasted an hour or so before the crowds dispersed. The flickering candles drifted away like reverse snowfall afire, above a city of more permanent embers. The dimming lights settling amongst stars.

    Ephemeral wanderers cloaked by the cosmic veil. Yielding to its insignificance.