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Hiking the Baden Powell Trail

September 29, 2009 | Tips from Us > Vancouver, Hiking
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Sikanni River Falls

View a larger image on flickr.com

Most people hike the Baden Powell trail in sections, though there are some hardcore runners who do it in a day during the infamous Knee Knackering North Shore Trail Run. Me? I fall somewhere in the middle and set out to tackle it in a weekend.

The trail is 48km long and runs from Horseshoe Bay to Deep Cove. Three unique aspects of this trail are:

1. It’s accessible by public transit at either end, as well as in a few points in the middle.
2. It’s more of a traverse that a summit, so when you look at the skyline from Vancouver you’re likely to be looking at a section you completed.
3. If you live near Vancouver, you can go home to make dinner and sleep in your own bed in between days – awesome!

Baden Powell Trip Report

Day 1: Horseshoe Bay to Cleveland Dam, 10 hours (we took it slow and there was loads of snow)
Transport: 257 bus (Horseshoe Bay express) to trailhead at Eagle Ridge; 236 and 240 buses from Cleveland Dam back to Vancouver

Highlights:
-    Seeing a deer 10 minutes into the hike
-    Having the trail to ourselves for hours at a time, with no one around except for friendly ravens and whiskey-jacks
-    Incredible view from Eagle Bluffs (the pic shown is proof)
-    Neat old cabins in Cypress Provincial Park

Day 2
: Grouse Mountain to Deep Cove (7 hours)
Transport: 240 and 232 buses to Grouse Mountain, nice friend-with-car from Deep Cove back to Vancouver (but buses would have been possible, too)

Highlights:
-    Watching mountain bikers hop and balance (with hooting and hollering) their chunky bikes on the trails
-    More people meant lots of friendly trail dogs giving slobbery hellos
-    Seeing wiry runners training for the Knee Knacker run
-    Interesting section from Lynn Canyon towards Deep Cove – never been here and was cool to check it out. Boardwalks, a mini-Grouse Grind, and beautiful forests.

Would I do the whole thing again? Heck yes. It’s a great trail that passes through forests, bluffs and wetlands – and it’s practically in my backyard. Highly recommended.

Posted by Karen, Vancouver at 02:51 PM