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Writers: Peter Caverhill Brian Chan Fred & Ann Curtis Ian Forbes Geoff Hobson Gordon Honey Steve Kaye Fred's Custom Tackle Ron Newman D. C. Reid Philip Rowley Barry Thornton Birds Bald Eagle Black Brant Blue Grouse Osprey Sea Birds Trumpeter Swans Western Bird Watching Game Fish BC Fish Quiz Pacific Herring Salmon Watching Salmon and Creeks Sea-Run Cutthroat Nature Bears Endangered Wildlife Killer Whale Chronicles Killer Whale Encounters Muskwa-Kechika Odyssey or Migration? Outdoor Photo Tips River Fly Tactics Dual Purpose Equipment Saltwater Fly Patterns Black Bomber Hakai Thorn Coho Fly Salmon Dry Flies Silver Thorn Chinook Tonquin Thorn Saltwater Fly Tactics Beach Fishing Pinks Bucktailing Equipment Tips Fly Fishing Tofino Reading Land & Water Saltwater Fly Fishing for Pacific Salmon Structure for Salmon Fly Fishing Tides for Salmon Fly Fishing Steelheading April Rivers Campbell River Steelhead Fly Fishing Steelhead Gold River Steelhead History of Steelheading New Rivers Part 1 New Rivers Part 2 Playing a Trophy Fish Steelhead Survival Steelhead Trout Steelheading Truisms Tips for Steelheaders Vancr Isle Steelhead Wading the River Techniques Drift Fishing Salmon Fishing with Floats Follow the Birds Opportunity to Angle Releasing Large Fish Releasing Scorpion Fish |
B.C. OUTDOOR ODYSSEY "Muskwa-Kechika, the Northern Rockies provincial land use protection area."with Barry M. Thornton Page 1 | Page 2 Without question, the clown in this expansive mountainous land is the caribou. It was a rare day that we did not see one or more of these camel-gaited animals. Prancing, leaping, and gambolling with head tossedback - this is my fondest memory of this most adaptable of our northern deer. Mosquitoes and biting flies were ever present and these minute pests constantly kept the caribou on the move. It seemed that the caribou's only escape from these biting insects was on the few remaining snowpacks where the cool wind would flush the flies away.
All streams in the Muskwa-Kechika are a part of the Arctic watershed and therefore have grayling and whitefish. Grayling have a distinctive massive dorsal fin which glistens in blues and purples like phosphorous in saltwater kelp fronds. They readily rise to a cast black fly pattern. The Muskwa-Kechika is truly a cornucopia of wildlife with an unparalleled vista. My congratulations go to Premier Clark and all those who have worked so hard to provide this gift for those in the next millennium! Page 1 | Page 2
Barry M. Thornton |
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