Close X
Monday, February 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Guidebook Explores Long-distance Hike Along Vancouver Island's 'Wildest Coast'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Mar, 2015 12:03 PM
  • Guidebook Explores Long-distance Hike Along Vancouver Island's 'Wildest Coast'

PORT HARDY, B.C. — Shushartie Bay, the east trailhead of Vancouver Island's remote North Coast Trail, greets visitors "with brooding silence and isolation," writes Maria Bremner.

"And with no cellphone access, you are left simply with the here and now."

In her thorough new guide to Cape Scott Provincial Park — "Cape Scott and the North Coast Trail: Hiking Vancouver Island's Wildest Coast" (Harbour Publishing) — Bremner divides the wilderness route into 10 sections that add up to about a week's worth of continuous hiking.

The terrain ranges from easy forest walks to strenuous climbs that require "caution and confidence." The park includes 115 kilometres of coastline, rocky headlands, sandy beaches, estuaries, rivers, bogs and rainforest, not to mention a host of wildlife.

Access to trailheads is by water taxi or shuttle van from Port Hardy.

Along with practical information on trip planning and what to expect along the trail, Bremner devotes a chapter to the human history of the Cape Scott area, which includes such surprises as a brothel, or "blind pig's inn," that serviced fishermen a century ago in Sea Otter Cove.

Bremner also evokes the park's "here and now" essence.

"Beaches greet you with wide-open solitude," she writes of the approach to Cape Sutil, the northernmost tip of Vancouver Island.

"There is no better way to feel alive."

MORE National ARTICLES

Jury At Via Rail Terror Trial Still Deadlocked On 1 Of 9 Terror Charges

Jury At Via Rail Terror Trial Still Deadlocked On 1 Of 9 Terror Charges
TORONTO — A Toronto jury deadlocked on one of nine terror-related charges against two men accused of plotting to derail a passenger train has been told it can be discharged on the specific count.

Jury At Via Rail Terror Trial Still Deadlocked On 1 Of 9 Terror Charges

Ontario Police Ordered To Pay $345K After Not Keeping Identity Of Informant Confidential

Ontario Police Ordered To Pay $345K After Not Keeping Identity Of Informant Confidential
TORONTO — A judge has ordered an Ontario police force to pay $345,000 to a woman who was found to have been repeatedly harassed after an officer released her identity as a confidential informant.

Ontario Police Ordered To Pay $345K After Not Keeping Identity Of Informant Confidential

Ultimate Road Trip: Edmonton Hockey Fan On Quest To See 30 Games In 30 Nights

Ultimate Road Trip: Edmonton Hockey Fan On Quest To See 30 Games In 30 Nights
Edmonton hockey fanatic Rob Suggitt is on an ultimate sports road trip — 30 games in all 30 National Hockey League arenas over 30 consecutive nights.

Ultimate Road Trip: Edmonton Hockey Fan On Quest To See 30 Games In 30 Nights

Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages

Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages
OTTAWA — While controversy swirls around Hillary Clinton for deleting tens of thousands of emails in a personal account she used while serving as U.S. secretary of state, the Canadian government has based its own approach to officials' private text messages on the honour system.

Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages

Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

MONTREAL — Federal Justice Minister Peter MacKay says he'll carefully examine a request to review the case of the only Canadian judge ever convicted of first-degree murder.

Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border
SUMAS, Wash. — A U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot a man Tuesday afternoon near Sumas, Washington, near the border with British Columbia.

U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border