Look Low, Look High

6 April 2026 – And also look straight ahead.

I’m in Rocky Point Park in Port Moody, headed for the Shoreline Trail that curves around the far eastern end of Burrard Inlet. It’s in forest — but right on the edge of the forest, with constant water views. For example, the mud flats I’ve just shown you — all the more dramatic with the one-two punch of low tide and bright sunshine.

All along the way, ribbons of water snake through the mud, every instant their positions that tiny bit different, true to nature’s rhythms.

The pedestrian trail, separate from the biking trail, is gravel, liberally supplied with benches, and sometimes, as here, quite broad.

But sometimes not broad — as here, with a liberal supply of tree roots.

When I’m not watching where I put my feet — an important part of “look low” — I’m giddy-stunned by the interplay of colour and texture. All around me, every level. This stump, for example, itself firm and crisply defined…

but in a context of other colours, other textures.

Reds so red!

Greens so green!

And textures smack up against each other, to punch colour & energy that much higher.

Signs of early spring.

My first Skunk Cabbage of the year…

and, up in those trees, not only nests that show this is indeed a Great Blue Heron Nesting Colony…

but adult heron heads poking out of almost every nest, and this heron (to right of the left-hand nest) perched on a branch.

I don’t know whose duties are what, up there in the nests. Like other trail-walkers, I’m content just to watch for a while, and admire.

Thanks to low tide, it’s an easy walk out to the lumber mill remnants still to be seen in Old Mill Site Park.

I look out-across to the big view, but I also look down-under a decaying concrete ledge, itself now covered in moss and colonizing plants…

to see some of the industrial decay: rotting supports, shards of brick and, but of course, yer basic bit of 21st-c. graffiti.

I’m not quite at Trail’s end, not quite all the way to Old Orchard Park, but this is always the spot I feel marks my personal trail’s end. (And, hey, it’s my walk, right?) So I turn.

One last pause to admire the snake dance of mud & water…

one last pause to admire dappled shadows thrown on trees & trail…

and I’m back in Port Moody.

Where a random walk down Clarke Street leads me first past — and then very much into — Andes Latin Foods. Run by a family from Venezuela, the bodega offers foodstuffs from all the Andean countries, both staples to take away, and foods to eat then and there from the menu.

I settle into place.

The café con leche is trans-Andean, but the alfajor is definitely the Peruvian version.

Bliss!

‘Scapes

1 March 2026 — Sub-categories of landscape. Skyscape and streetscape and alleyscape and (why not) trailscape. Plus a final skyscape flourish, courtesy of a friend and moon-focused, to round it off.

A completely arbitrary grouping! Just how I happened to cluster what I’ve noticed, over the past few days.

This brooding late-afternoon sky, (precisely 5:24:43 PST, said my camera), with reflected last slivers of sunlight in a few windows and early neon glowing on the streets.

The next morning, walking to Gallery Jones on East 1st Ave, I’m hit first by a smellscape of warm cinnamon bun…

and then, peering through the open door, see the cause of the aroma: stacks of newly-baked buns in this wholesale bakery, with a worker wiping his cheek as he advances on yet another tray.

From streetscape to alleyscape, somewhere to explore until the gallery opens its doors. Never mind, who needs curated art on walls when the alley offers a Blue Period worthy of Picasso?

All the textures, all the varieties of blue in that wall of corrugated metal. Whether long shot, as above, or up close to the window (which in turn frames reflected skyscape).

The same blue on the adjacent wall, providing a sleek, smooth No Parking backdrop…

for bicycle parts that are definitely & definitively parked.

Another cultural excursion the following day — this one for Maximilien Brisson’s glorious creation, Scorrete lagrime mie, at St. Anselm’s Church on the UBC grounds.

The church sits right next to various trails into Pacific Spirit Regional Park and, post-concert, I am pulled onto the Salish Trail…

by this sentinel tree, this doorman tree, imposing in his winter greatcoat of emerald velvet.

The trailscape unfolds around me.

Next up, an arched branch…

proving that left-over tassels of autumn red are just as striking as winter moss green.

To my left, farther away, another arched branch…

proving that (nyah nyah) you can have just as much impact, stark naked.

Round another bend in the trail, where first a ragged spire of ancient tree trunk…

and then a fresh-cut end of tree trunk…

prove that, in the bravura sweepstakes, red cedar always wins.

Back home, delighted with memories of both the concert and the trail, I open a text from a friend for yet another delight. It’s a skyscape photo to round off my collection…

her (7:55:07 PST) moon tribute to, as she points out, “the 12th day of the lunar new year.”

Thank you, ST.

  • WALKING… & SEEING

    "Traveller, there is no path. Paths are made by walking" -- Antonio Machado (1875-1939)

    "The voyage of discovery is not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes" -- Marcel Proust (1871-1922)

    "A city is a language, a repository of possibilities, and walking is the act of speaking that language, of selecting from those possibilities" -- Rebecca Solnit, "Wanderlust: A History of Walking"

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