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Stamp Falls off the Radar

February 27, 2009 | Tips from Travellers > Port Alberni, Attractions

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Sikanni River Falls

View a larger image on flickr.com

There are, in fact 4 other provincial Parks in the area. Each has features for the Vancouver Island explorer to enjoy.
Stamp River Provincial Park is the King. A huge falls tumble in to a narrow gorge lined by a fenced path. Tens of thousands of the largest species of salmon, the Chinook, work their way up the fish ladder in August September and reaches a peak in October when the spawning begins. As a spectacle, it's the best place on the island to see the migration. There's signage telling about the salmon life cycle, and in the fall, there is even a television monitor on site to count the fish going through the ladder.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/rain-bird/sets/72157607277318395/

In April, the area is alive with huge stands of the exquisitely shaped Trout Lily and the song of American Dippers, a unique perching bird that walks around underwater eating aquatic insects.  

Wait! There’s more! Upstream lies a trail that wanders through some of the largest Douglas fir in British Columbia. We measured one veteran that was within the top 6 in the Great Tree Register of British Columbia for height. The Grove is at the far end of the trail so you have to drive around to it. There are maps of it in the park. It’s spectacular by the large river; and no crowds!

 

Fossli Provincial Park is a jewel! But it is for day use only. It is probably one of the least used Provincial Parks. But it is a mistake to miss it! The big reason why no one goes to it is because there aren’t any signs to it all! To get to it you need to either take a motor boat or paddle to a small sandy beach or hike down a trail across a suspension bridge from a logging road. It is on the other side of Sproat Lake from Highway 4. After the suspension bridge, you take a fork to the right and come to a beautiful little falls with a babbling woodland stream below it. In the summer kids love to play among the moss-covered rocks in the stream looking for crawfish. And then enjoy the worm summer sun at the beach.

Sproat Lake Provincial is home to some unique petroglyphs. The signs don’t say much about them because little is really known. Both first nation tribes in the Alberni Valley claim them. They are purported to represent some sea creatures; part wolf and part killer whale as well as others. Although there is camping at Stamp Falls too, Sproat Lake has a larger and more popular campsite. It is the main public boat launch at the lake. So it you want to go to Fossli by water, start here!

 

The final Provincial Park is not the most spectacular of the parks. Taylor Arm Provincial Park is another day use park although there is a small group camp ground above the road. Its claim to fame is a nice smooth gravel beach where you can enjoy a swim in the clear mountain water of Taylor Arm, an arm of Sproat Lake.

Posted by Rainbird, Port Alberni at 04:48 PM