Road trip Squamish
We had officially made it into Canada and the next leg of our
adventure had begun. In order to
avoid further excitement in downtown traffic we opted to go up 15 on the east side
which would skirt downtown Vancover to the Transcanada (Hwy 1). This eventually turns into 99 North,
AKA the Sea to Sky Highway and leads to Squamish. As we turned on to the TransCanada we started to see signs
for “last exit before tolls”. It
quickly dawned on us that we did not have any toonies yet, and we took the exit
in order to find an ATM. The
missus took us the scenic route via some figure eights as the streets were all
similarly numbered, though some were avenues and some were streets depending on
direction.
Soon enough; however, we were back on the sea to sky highway
where the cars started to thin out and the driving slowly got less
stressful. Unfortunately the
weather was not cooperating as we kept driving through thick, dark clouds that
poured nonstop. The first
challenge as we drove north to Squamish was to find lodging. We realized on our way up that labour
day weekend is recognized on the same day in Canada as in the U.S., adding an
extra level of complexity to the travel.
I remember a good visitor information center in Squamish from my prior
travels. This was to be our first
stop to get local beta for camping and trail conditions. We settled on an in-town location,
Brennan Park/Kinsman Campground.
The big upside was that you could ride to the trailheads from town, and
better yet, they had a bike was station at the rec center next door. We took full advantage of both as we
rode to the trailhead later that day, but not before trying out the bike
wash.
We kept waiting for the clouds to clear but they remained
stubborn and hovered while emitting a slow drizzle/rain. We took our chances and got on our
bikes to make our way up through town and fireroads, which would eventually
lead to our objective of Half Nelson.
I had fond memories of this trail from the BC Bike Race and was anxious
to see how that rode in non-race mode.
It did not disappoint as the machine-made trail put an ear-to-ear grin
on our faces. When we got down to
the bottom the wifer decided she wanted to do it again, so we climbed the 800
feet of elevation to the top of the trailhead for a repeat smile-a-thon. At the bottom of the second lap we took
a look at the map and tried to figure out how to take as much singletrack back
down to town and the trailer. The
maze of trails begged questions that remained unanswered and thusly we took the
path of least resistance via fireroads after the trail we chose to descend on,
Pseudo Tsuga, ended. We made our
way to the bike was where we washed our bikes off for the second time that
day. We did a quick washdown and
retreated back to the campsite where we watched the circus roll into town.
The circus consisted of our fellow camp neighbors made up of
screaming out of control children, barking dogs, firewood-stealing campers- in short, it was a
bit of a goat rodeo. As opposed to
staying in the trailer at the campsite we opted to head out for dinner in order
to avoid further exposure. We hit
the local brewery/restaurant Howe Sound and ordered a flight of beers and some
food. This is when we realized
that living in Bend makes you a bit of a beer snob as we were happy to drink
the local beer but kept comparing them to our favorite local counterparts. After a good meal we made our way back
to the campsite where things seemed to have settled down and it was more or
less lights out.
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