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| The coastline of British Columbia can have several ecosystems within close proximity of each other. We have walked from tidal beaches, through swampy marshlands into old growth rainforest in just a few hundred feet. Given that the many of the fjord-like channels have sheer rock faces measuring a thousand feet or more both above and below the waterline, alpine growing conditions can exist only a short distance from the shoreline. | |||||
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Licorice Fern
The floor of the old-growth and temperate rainforests are slightly
more accommodating with their shading canopy above and spongy
carpets of moss. Walking through them is a sublime experience.
Shafts of light penetrate and light great masses of sword and
Licorice Ferns, Wild Lily of the Valley and hanging mosses interspersed
with multicoloured lichens and fungi. Kinsman Inlet
The tidal marshes found inside are often rampant with overhanging "Old Man's Beard" Lichen and exposed roots of trees and shrubs clinging to the rocky and mossy banks. Where shallow, eel grass and algae touch the bottom of the dingy
or kayak leaving a parted trail exposing myriads of clam shells
and darting fish. Others, fed by streams flowing through the muskeg
have dark red-brown water preventing the explorer from sensing
the depth of the water below.
Along rocky and low-lying islands where the salt spray blankets the shoreline during storms, plants have found ways to withstand this harsh environment. Tucked away from the wind or growing prostrate amongst rocks and flotsam numbers of interesting plant species flourish. Salal, Stonecrop, sedges, wild strawberries, saltwort (or sea asparagus), vetches and dune grasses are commonly seen. In open fields and small clearings, away from the harsh winds, we have also found native orchids, lilies, irises, sunflowers, violets and roses. Here too we see wild onions, carrots, peas, parsley and mint; members not always as edible as their cultivated cousins. Huckleberries, currants, and a variety of berries grow all along the coast and are relished by animals and travellers alike. There are so many plant and tree species along the coast that
we cannot list them all here. We can recommend the following books
we use: |
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