Trip Report – Snowshoeing above the Sea to Sky Gondola – January 26, 2018

February 2, 2018

Five intrepid explorers headed up the Sea to Sky Gondola for a snowshoe outing. It was very fortuitous timing, as pass-holders were able to rent snowshoes free of charge for the month of January!

It had been exciting to see a Pacific Marten (Martes caurina, f. Martes americana ssp caurina, pine marten) in the Wonderland area the day before this outing and I’d followed the tracks to get a feel for his route. I was hoping that today we would find new tracks in the fresh snow – and we did! There was also evidence that a snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) had fled his predator with some giant leaps more than one metre apart. It looked to us that the hare had successfully escaped.

Questions arose:

  • Tracks were small for a snowshoe hare.
  • Stéphane Perron has seen some hares above the Gondola and they are brown, not white, in winter.
  • No other rabbit family species is known from this area/habitat/elevation.

Follow-up discoveries about snowshoe hares in North America:

  • Winter pelage of snowshoe hares in the Pacific Northwest tends to be brown where snow cover is not continuous throughout the winter.
  • Snowshoe hares are smallest in the Pacific Northwest compared to rest of their range.
  • For more details see e-Fauna and David Nagorsen’s research.

Carl spotted a small flock of birds which he was able to later confirm were likely kinglets. (Providing additional confirmation, two days earlier Golden-crowned Kinglets and Chestnut-backed Chickadees were spotted in the same general area by Kav, a Quest University student.)

Thanks to the fun and lively participants: Family, Rhonda, Steven and Tristan, Peter, Carl and Leona

Judith


Banner photo: Tristan leaping, by Carl Halvorson. Gallery photos by Judith Holm and Carl Halvorson


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