Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Traboulay PoCo Trail is a 25.3 kilometer (15.7 mile) bicycle and hiking trail in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia. The trail encircles the community, with it passing through the Coquitlam River. It is next to the Fraser and Pitt River, running along a route that offers views of various ecosystems, farmlands and mountains.
The Coquitlam River is located within the Coquitlam River Watershed, which has a total area of 340 km 2 and formed during the last glacial advance. [7] The watershed is split into two sections, the upper and lower Coquitlam River Watershed. [14] Its source is Disappointment Lake, which is in the Coast Mountains near Indian Arm. [2]
Quarry Trail; Mid-Marsh Trail; Lodge/Fern Trails; Minnekhada Regional Park is a designated Wildlife Watch site. There are five lookout points in the park. Of these, Low Knoll with its full view of the lower marsh, and High Knoll with its 600 ft (180 m) elevation and view of the Pitt River and Pitt Meadows beyond, are among the most popular. A ...
An elusive American Bittern photographed at ƛ̓éxətəm Regional Park in Port Coquitlam by Kyle Bailey. ƛ̓éxətəm Regional Park (tla-hut-um, formerly known as Colony Farm Regional Park), is a park along the Coquitlam River in the Tri-Cities area of Metro Vancouver. It is 260 hectares in size.
Conservation groups in the area like Friends of Burke Mountain and Burke Mountain Naturalists were formed by concerned citizens to oppose the logging. [9] Friends of Burke Mountain worked towards protecting the Pinecone Burke Provincial Park area and including it in the Lower Mainland Nature Legacy, a group of parks within the southwestern region of British Columbia which were viewed as ...
The Halvor Lunden Trail is named for a local prolific trail builder and maintainer who blazed many of the trails around Buntzen Lake in the 1980s and 90s. The trail is composed of the Lindsay Lake Loop, Swan Falls Loop and Dilly Dally Loop (described below).
Coquitlam Mountain is a mountain located in northeast Coquitlam, British Columbia, 6.2 km (3.9 mi) east of Coquitlam Lake and 9.7 km (6.0 mi) north of Minnekhada Regional Park. The mountain is located at the head of Or Creek, completely within the Coquitlam watershed , and thus public access is forbidden by law.
Mount Burke, 1,270 m (4,167 ft), [1] is a mountain located in northeast Coquitlam, British Columbia, north of Port Coquitlam on the ridge system leading to Coquitlam Mountain. Most of the mountain is part of Pinecone Burke Provincial Park. [2] Mount Burke is found in Coquitlam near Minnekhada Regional Park.