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Botany Photo of the Day
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Lac Du Bois Grasslands Provincial Park

Mara Hill Trail

Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) is seen in the distance, eking out an existence. It is perched on the eroded bottom of the long-gone, ancient Tranquille Lake northwest of present-day Kamloops, British Columbia (Google Maps link centred on the area where this photograph was taken - zoom in for a close-up). This is the 15 000ha Lac Du Bois Grasslands Provincial Park, one of three provincial parks that protect British Columbia grasslands.

Photographed while on a southern ascent of Mara Hill (in the southeast portion of the park) I was struck by the lines of both the near and distant rockforms. The pine appearing in the groove was the icing on the cake.

I wasn't searching for any specific plants, but I did find one I've always wanted to see (I'll feature it tomorrow - it's cool). The point of the trip was to see hoodoos, naturally-formed columns of rock. The hoodoos of this area do not seem to be well-known, perhaps overshadowed by the Deadman's Creek Hoodoos further northwest. I still thought they were impressive, including the one that I've dubbed Rabbit Eating Douglas Fir Hoodoo.

I was planning on using this entry to also highlight the BC Grasslands Blog, but I see that it is being abandoned, and they are pursuing a newsletter instead. Somewhat disappointing.

3 Comments

pam in DM,CA commented:

Was this your field trip this weekend? lucky duck!

Daniel Mosquin commented:

Pam - you bet! It's beautiful there, and a hike that is definitely worth doing more than once.

sandy in chicago commented:

oooh, I see the rabbit now! Very clever name and beautiful pics. Thanks!

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