Nootka Trail

A photo essay of a time with a group of great friends, laden with large backpacks, hiking from north to south on a slightly underestimated trail down the beautiful and rugged island of Nootka off the coast of Vancouver Island. The terrain underfoot varied drastically which lead to some very long-lasting kilometers. Scrambling up and under slippy logs and up steep muddy banks to walking through ankle-deep seaweed (I will never forget that smell), to what we deemed the Devil’s pebbles, just big enough to twist your ankle but too small to walk comfortably across. While some things were hard on the mind and body, the views and nature here certainly made up for it. I have certainly not visited a more rugged and unspoiled part of the world, with numerous otters spotted, bears, whales, and even wolves, we were lucky enough to get the full spectacle in this beautiful part of the world.

Day 1

The journey plus a few too many kilometers:

The first day excitement is always such a special moment, what are we undertaking? What we will see or will the weather hold? We had a boat scheduled first thing in the morning, coffees slurped, bags stuffed and the excitement palpable. The boat journey really set the mood for what a beautiful few days we were about to have. Seeing Sea otters immediately to the serene inlets around the island. Once out of the bay we had a short few kilometres of rough open sea to get to our drop, the ramp goes down, off the boat we go and now were really doing this, alone on this island for 4 days.

We got our first taste of what the trail was going to be like very quickly, from muddy slippery rock hopping to pulling on ropes up steep embankments. Luckily this day all the water crossing were easy enough to cross without taking shoes off so some fun balance logs and hops got us on our way. The going was tough, the rain was ever so persistent and the infrequently traveled trail meant some very wet foliage making there no escape for soggy shoes. 17km later we stumbled into camp, a small forest enclosure with enough space for a few tents off the sand and somewhat sheltered from extremely bad weather to come.

Day 2/3

An unneeded rest day followed by the longest day of hiking I have ever had:

Day 2 had us feeling a little deflated, sore from not having hiked with backpacks in a while and then heavy rain got us back in our tents for the morning while we waited for it to pass. It didn’t, so we packed up our soggy selves and got moving to the next spot. Just a short 5km got us to the most popular camping spot on the Nootka trail, Calvin Falls. To our absolute delight we found there was a shelter built here. We were stoked to have a spot to dry off our clothes, bags and shoes. There even was a firepit under cover! This little place was very needed for our morale. It was awesome to see all the name placards in this shelter dating back to people first doing this trail as early as the late 80’s. A cold swim, campfire chats and a good night rest had our spirits back up and ready to tackle the next day, (or so we thought).

Day 3 was meant to be our biggest day, thinking we had around 20km to take us close to the end of the trail for our boat pickup the next day. But we very much underestimated what this would entail. the first 10 km were relatively smooth, from technical rock walking to traipsing through the sickenly smelly seaweed. We were less fortunate with the water crossings this time, stacking them all into this day, though relatively straight forward the last one before lunch claimed one person to the slippery rocks underfoot and much deeper than anticipated last few steps. We thought were doing great by this point a couple hours in and plenty of km’s under our belt. Unfortunately, the tide and trails had other plans for us. The tide being high meant a couple of long detours up and through dense bush, spider webs and brush constantly berating you only to come out on the other side having gone what would have only take 5 minutes if the tide were out. This is also where we discovered our 20km was definitely not going to be 20km, with plenty of distance left on the map and evening starting to kick in real quick we know we were in it for the long run. Lots more ups and downs winding through the forest and out into beautiful secluded coves, the going was tough but the weather was stunning and the scenes unreal. It felt a little unfortunate we had to buckle down and keep moving not giving us all the time to really enjoy this part of the trail, but with night approaching and no campsite for a while we kept moving. A few hours later we finally made it to a little spot of paradise at 10pm making our day a 12hr 26km day. A beautiful sandy beach with the sunset glow over the mountains and a cute hand made bench for us chow down some food before a much needed sleep.

Day 4

A great way to wrap up a trip:

The last morning of our stay on the island, all the distance behind us and a morning to enjoy this little spectacle of a place. A final few hours walking along the quiet beaches to the dock where we would be picked up.

I recommend anyone to get out on this or any trail and see something a little different. These trips where you push yourself and get out your comfort zone are always so rememberable. Its can sometimes be so close to where you live, a bit of planning and the willingness to get out there will be sure to bring some epic memories.

The End

I hope you enjoyed this little recap of my time on Nootka. Hopefully the photos speak a little louder than the words here, truly greatful for these experiences and I always welcome feedback while I learn and grow on the blogging side of my work.

Till next time

Aron