
Taking care of the park so many of us love is worth it
KAMLOOPS — Last Wednesday, rain made Peterson Creek burst with the freshest green I’ve seen in a long time. At just past 8am, there were no other people. Just rain-bejewelled leaves, tiny buds coaxed by overnight dampness and the wild rushing creek, now a fixture as the snowpack melts up high.
Dog and I start up the Billy Miner Trail, then turn right and follow the Falls View Trail for a view of the falls. At the start of the trail, a sign advises that the trail is now closed to cyclists due to steepness and erosion. There are bike tracks on the steep trail just the same.
I’ve met cyclists on this trail before. Some flew by us without stopping, as we barely got out of the way. Hiking, more so on the bike-restricted trails, can be a wonderfully quiet experience. Not if a trail hairpin becomes a startling encounter.
There are no bikes on this rainy Wednesday. We get to the viewpoint and watch the waterfall exploding down the canyon, volume and brown hues amplified by rain. The muckiness tumbles down and becomes an endless stream of bubbles. Quite the sight. From where I stand I see an undesignated trail that crawls up from the bottom part of Billy Miner. It has become more evident now with the daily pilgrimage to the waterfall and getting wider by the day as more people trample on it. Then there is its sister trail, also undesignated, which starts from the viewpoint and goes all the way up on the plateau.