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  Category   Wildlife Viewing in BC: Sunshine Coast, British Columbia
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Wildlife Viewing Tour Operators in British Columbia



Sechelt Peninsula: California and Steller's sea lions and harbour seals gather during winter months at the mouth of Chapman Creek south of Sechelt. Walk out onto Mission Point for the best views. The best approach to the point is from the beach at Davis Bay.

The marshland around Sargeant Bay Provincial Park is an important stopover for waterfowl such as harlequin ducks, Canada geese, and trumpeter swans, as is the upland area for a host of migratory songbirds. Local volunteers have undertaken an ambitious project to restore wildlife habitat around the bay. To reach the park, follow Redroofs Road west of Hwy 101, about 6 km north of Sechelt. You'll have to watch carefully for the road sign as it is not prominent. Follow Redroofs to Sargeant Bay Park Road a short distance to the undeveloped shingle and sand beach, and begin stalking from here.


The Marbled Murrelet's dependence on mature forests for nesting puts it squarely at odds with clearcut logging - and at the mercy of timber companies

Some of the oldest yellow cedar and western hemlock in western Canada grow in the Caren Range, the backbone of the Sechelt Peninsula. Home to the marbled murrelet, a drab, starling-size seabird whose numbers are in as precipitous a decline as the old-growth western hemlock on which it depends. Although most murrelets nest in cliffs and rock walls, the marbled murrelet, having evolved beside the majestic, ramrod-straight, temperate old-growth forest, lay their eggs on the hemlock's broad, moss-draped limbs.

A bittersweet victory was gained here when the last of the great Caren forest was recently protected as Caren Provincial Park, but not before some of the oldest trees in Canada - in excess of 2,000 years old - were cut, then left to waste!

You'll have to drive a long way through open hillsides before you reach the shade of the park, but the tranquillity you'll experience there will be a grand reward. Look for a paved road that begins 13 km north of Sechelt on the east side of Hwy 101, marked by a Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre sign. Drive a father 13 km up what soon turns into the Caren Mainline Forest Rd. Parts of this road are deteriorating, and those with a four-wheel-drive vehicle will have the easier go of it. At the three-way fork in the road, take whichever direction seems best suited to your vehicle. Each leads to the forest, still some distance above.

Malaspina Peninsula: Come fall, many of the streams that feed into Malaspina Strait team with spawning salmon. Depending on the year and the spawning cycle, Lang Creek Hatchery and Spawning Channels, about 22 km north of Saltery Bay, will be thick with returning salmon. The best viewing is right next to the well-marked pullout on Hwy 101.
As sure as salmon return to spawn in late summer, so too do raptors and bears follow. Although black bears in the Powell River region tend to frequent the backwoods logging roads, osprey and eagles, otters and pine marten have no fear of approaching the coastline around Sliammon Creek in search of carrion.


Black Bear cub

Occasionally, even a black bear will put in an appearance. One particularly good viewing spot of both predator and prey is near the Sliammon fish hatchery, about 5 km north of the Powell River bridge.

Sliammon is the site of a native village that has been in continuous habitation for the past two millennia. To reach the hatchery, follow Klahanie Rd, which begins beside the Native handicrafts store of the same name on the south side of Hwy 101. Watch for an enormous eagle's nest in one of the trees as you near the strait.

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