Thanks guys! Generally, I enjoy bringing these posts to you as much as you enjoy reading them. But unfortunately this isn't always the case - case in point, today's post(s)...
Eastern Shore - mudslogging, pt. 1
This continuation of the week-before-last's journey along the lakeshore turned out to be a bit more than I bargained for. Initially I planned to bypass the whole Cliffcrest area (having covered much of that terrain from above already) and pick up somewhere around Bluffers Park. But then I figured, what's another kilometre, or so, to truly complete the whole shoreline experience? So off I got at Warden Station, to catch the #102 back from whence I came last post - passing, in the process, this fine reminder of my destination:
Things start off well enough as I begin where I last left-off, at Bellamy Ravine...:
...however, somewhere below the aptly named Fool's Paradise, my difficulties began in earnest as the Waterfront Trail ends abruptly, leaving a long stretch of untamed shoreline for only the most foolhardy adventurers (such as myself) to negotiate. Naturally, it had rained the night before, making this treacherous passage all the more treacherous. It's a long, tough slog through quicksand-like muck before finally making landfall again under Cudia Park:
Whereas some challenges are thrust upon you, others are purely of your own making. Reaching Cathedral Bluffs Park I find evidence of some heretofore unknown streams draining into the lake. Being the waterway sucker that I am, I now suddenly find myself slipping and sliding halfway up these muddy cliff faces in order to pinpoint their source. First this one...:
...and then, a little further down the shore, another:
Having wasted a good 45 minutes, or so, doing that, I'm rewarded with the return of a solid trail heading through a wetland towards Cathedral Bluffs Beach:
Finally, I enter the multi-peninsular Bluffers Park - heading first out into the upper arm. With its unique mix of waterfront, marina, and mountainous bluffs, you could (if you squint hard enough) almost imagine yourself in Vancouver, or some such place - if you should so desire:
Back around the yacht docks and houseboats of the park's central portion:
Then, at last, down into the lower peninsula:
Over 100 pictures, and 2 hours into my trek, and I've only now arrived at where I originally planned to start! But things don't get any easier, as you'll see in part two...