Maffeo Sutton Park

The heart of Nanaimo

A delightful seaside park
Maffeo Sutton Park

A delightful seaside park downtown Nanaimo is the focal point of this city. It was the first place my late husband brought me to in 2007 after we met. Just a few blocks from his condo, we hung out there all the time, walking along the seawall, listening to buskers, eating raspberry cheesecake ice cream, and attending all kinds of outdoor concerts. We always ran into people we knew.

Memories of park people

Now, fourteen years later, although still a favourite place, a hollow feeling lurks. Sid is gone, as are most of the people we knew at the park. I was surprised to see one lady recently, who has been there all along. She used to sit on a bench, the focus of attention in a circle of men. Once Sid told me she brought egg sandwiches to share, and it was the best egg sandwich he’d ever eaten. Now she can only drive there and enjoy the view from her car. She’s had cancer for over a year, and can’t walk any more.

I remember another lady who passed away several years ago. She used to float through the park in long summery floral gowns, her flowing brunette hair streaming behind. Always happy, sharing cheerful snatches of conversation. As her Alzheimer’s worsened, one evening we found her sitting on a bench holding hands with a man who wasn’t her husband. He told us he’d just got out of prison. He was sitting in the park feeling dejected, when along came this angel. Squeezing his hand, she said, “Wait till you meet my husband! He’s the real angel!” That was the last time we saw her.

A cacophony of music

Weird and wonderful buskers used to sing and play at posts every few feet apart. Wailing Willy is still around, but I haven’t seen him down there lately, thrumming on a guitar and bellowing out songs in his straw hat. He’s famous in Canada and has often travelled around with his wife putting on concerts. Now that the COVID-19 restrictions are easing, I hope the keyboard player, and the trumpet player and his dad, who play oldies return. Once I was sitting on a bench enjoying the keyboard, when the musician remarked to me, “I’m just glad that blasted bagpipe player isn’t up there on the bluff competing with me this evening.” I chuckled inside, but didn’t tell him the bagpipe player was a dear old friend of mine from our teens in Vancouver. I kind of like the bagpipes.

I still walk my dog in this delightful seaside park full of memories. The cool ocean breeze refreshes my spirit. I hope to run into someone I know, or even exchange a few words with someone new. It’s the best!

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Brannen Lake

Here’s an inviting little sandy beach that’s perfect for a refreshing swim. The water is clear, and deep enough to swim just a few feet from shore. During the day you can lie on a towel on the soft sand to dry in the sun. Sid used to take me there in the evening, which was fine for a swim, but I didn’t like going home cold and clammy, wrapped in a towel in the car. There’s unfortunately no change room–just one blue plastic outhouse at the top of the parking lot.

An inviting little beach

I wanted to go there with Bear the other day. It had been a couple of years since Sid last took me there. At that time we lived on the other side of town, so we came by a different route, and because Sid always drove, I didn’t pay close attention to the way.

So, this time, we ended up driving all the way around the lake, past The Black Bear Pub, farming areas, a Christmas tree farm, a campsite, and the prison, before ending up back on the highway at the wrong end of the lake.

Second try, I got lost on dead end roads part way up Mt. Benson, where the forest secludes beautiful large homes on acreages, interspersed with junky, scary-looking trailer homes. Determined to find Brannen Lake Beach, third try I turned into a small road next to The Black Bear. It lead me into a lovely development, which I wound through over speed humps. Bingo! At the other end of that was the Beach. I could have gotten there much easier if I had gone over the highway rather than across it. It’s actually quite close to where I live now. Just have to go down Mostar to Dunster, which has an overpass that leads directly to this beach.

It’s not much of a beach for a dog, though. Especially one who doesn’t like swimming. There’s not much of a trail for dog-walking. I’ll have to go some afternoon when Bear has already had his walk and I can leave him home.

There’s even a boat ramp, if you want to do some water skiing or fish from your boat. But for me, it’s an inviting little sandy beach that’s perfect for a refreshing swim.

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Linley Valley Forest Trail, Nanaimo

Linley Valley Forest Trail, Nanaimo, is a refreshing naturalized area to come to when you need to blow the cobwebs out of your head.

If you like sampling berries as you walk, go here for a stroll. These huckleberries, thimble berries, and small wild raspberries are out now in July. Salmon berries are ripening, and next month there will be blackberries. My dog, Bear, and I went this week, and I had a berry feast!

Linley Valley Forest Trail is in the centre of the city of Nanaimo. I parked in a new residential development at the peak of Rutherford Road, where there are signs at the entrance to the trail. Dogs on leash. Use poopy bags (provided there, alongside a garbage can). A map of the area. Facts about the flora and fauna. The trail by this lily pond even has illustrated story boards along the way, about a bird who went for a walk with her friends. Cute.

We started mid afternoon, strolling and feasting slowly for an hour or two. On the way back I was glad to rest on a bench by the pond as the sun lit up the trees and undergrowth in golden shades. Couples, singles, children and families came out with dogs of all kinds on leashes. A boy on a bicycle called his dacshound named Ava, just as a family with a little girl named Ava approached. Must be a popular name these days. I’ve noticed there are more ‘Ada’s around too. When I was growing up I hated my names, Pearl Ada, because nobody I knew had those kind of names. And there was funny old Aunt Pearl on the Beverly Hillbillies. How embarrassing! I’m glad these old-fashioned names are making a bit of a comeback. Now I like mine. And I’ve become Aunt Pearl and I like that too.

It’s another new favourite place for me. Maybe we’ll run into each other there sometime. Hope so!

Trail along Long Lake

Bluff overlooking Long Lake

For a small city, Nanaimo has many beautiful nature parks.  If you crave fresh air, forest trails, lakes, rivers and ocean, with four seasons of the year, this may be the place for you!

My little shitzu and I discovered a new trail the other day right in the middle of the city near our home.  The all-but-hidden entry to it is off of Rutherford Road, behind the new Memory and Complex Care building.  It looks like they may have upgraded the first part of the trail as part of the landscaping back there.   I noticed it when my friend and I were driving by after picking up a pizza from Papa Johns last week, so Bear and I walked down there to check it out.

The first few yards are freshly gravelled, featuring a couple of new wooden bridges over trickling brooks, and benches overlooking mossy bluffs above the lake.  The lake is surrounded by forest, and at the far end you can see a sandy swimming area.  A few kayaks and fishing boats dot the lake.

Continuing along the trail, the gravel peters out into soft needle-covered dirt.  To carry on you need to be agile enough to navigate roots and rocks.  Not TOO difficult–I at 65 years of age and Bear, a ten year old dog with short legs–had no problem!  My husband, though, at 76 and having recently gone through spinal surgery, would be better off sticking to the gravelled area.

Bear and I spent at least an hour meandering along.  We only ran across two people with bicycles near the entrance, but were not too far from the odd fisherman paddling past.  Up above us some branches of the pathway lead to lovely-looking complexes and houses.  I considered going up there and returning home on the road, but it was so refreshing and peaceful enveloped in the quietness of nature, that  I stuck with the trail along the lake.

My senses were being satiated with scents of cedar, pine and fir and reflections of sunlight glinting up from the water, as a gentle breeze wafted the odd droplet of rain onto my warm skin.  But I had lingered long enough and was beginning to look forward to the steaks my husband was barbequing!  Not in too much of a hurry to resist a blackberry patch that we walked through above the mall though!

Happy Chinese New Year!

On the ancient traditional Chinese calendar it’s New Years Day today.  On our Western calendar it’s February 5th, 2019.  The old Chinese calendar goes by a different system altogether, so Chinese New Year falls around this time every year but not always on February 5th. 2016-02-28 10.24.41

This photo of koi fish was taken by me at Hong Kong’s Gold Coast outside of a luxury hotel when I was there a few years ago.  Koi or goldfish represent good luck to the Chinese.

Hong Kong is one of my favourite places.  I have been there several times and have many happy memories of exploring interesting different districts with family and friends.

Today Hong Kong and all parts of China will be lighting strings of firecrackers and wishing each other a happy new year full of good luck and riches.  Families will be visiting their relatives, and grandparents, aunts and uncles will be giving children red envelopes containing money.

In 1985 we were in Guangdong on Chinese New Year, at a college studying Chinese.  Our sons were 3 and 5 years old then.  All the families got together outside on the campus on Chinese New Years Eve and lit firecrackers.  The children all had the small type that my brother and I and our friends used to light in the 60s.  The boys thought it was great!  Of course we hovered over them to make sure they didn’t burn themselves.

The Chinese calendar revolves around a list of animals.  This year is the year of the pig.  A whole system of astrology surrounds the Chinese zodiac.  If you are born in the year of the pig you are said to have shared characteristics with everyone else born in the year of the pig.

Also called Spring Festival, people usually get a week off work to travel to visit family and also to participate in activities such as going to flower markets and visiting ancestral graves.

Here’s wishing a Happy Chinese New Year to all, and may you be blessed with health and prosperity!

 

Englishman River Falls

Englishman River Falls is near Parksville on Vancouver Island.  A short walk from the parking area along a forest pathway, a wooden bridge takes you over the river.  From the bridge you can view this incredible rushing waterfall.  My photo below was taken from the trail across the bridge.  Forest scents of evergreens and mist surround you and invigorate you.  Regenerated with cool fresh oxygen from trees and spray and the beauty of creation, one cannot help but praise our Creator who gave us all this!20180204_151927.jpg