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This week we head to Tunnel Bluffs. There are two main different trails to reaching the view point at Tunnel Bluffs, the first trail starts directly off next to Highway 99, is about 7.4km long round trip, with about 680m elevation gain, and climbs a steep incline in the beginning sections before leveling off after the first 2km. The second trail starts in Lions Bay near Lions Bay Elementary School; the trail is about 11km round trip, with about 530m elevation gain, so it is slightly longer but less steep. I hiked the first trail on a solo hike in the summer of 2017 and the first 2km was indeed very steep. So, when my wife told me she wanted to hike Tunnel Bluffs in 2022, I took us to the second trail, as we were bringing all three kids and the first trail was simply too steep for them, especially to steep for the little one.
The trailhead had bear warning signs as well as some trail information signs. I was familiar with this trailhead, as it shares the same trailhead as the West Lion trail (a difficult trail that I went with my friend in 2017), Mount Brunswick trail, and Mount Harvey trail. The trail starts off on a wide forest logging road that climbs on a moderate but steady incline for the first two kilometers within the forest. Eventually, the trail reaches a fork where turning right takes you to the West Lion and turning left takes you to Brunswick Mountain and Tunnel Bluffs. The trail also levels off after the first two kilometers and the hike becomes more of a walk in the forest. There were a couple of makeshift bridges made of logs that allowed hikers to cross streams and creeks. I tried to train my little one to hike and kept him off the carrier for as long as possible, but I eventually started to carry him about 1hr30mins into the hike. There was a short but steep section just before reaching the viewpoint, which we passed without any issues. When we reached the viewpoint, we were greeted with thick fog that completely blocked out the view.
Beginning section of trail, wide logging road with steady gradual incline.
Fork towards Brunswick Mountain and Tunnel Bluffs
Couple of makeshift bridges made of logs.
My little one trying his best to hike on his own.
Final short but steep section before reaching the viewpoint.
Viewpoint completely blocked by thick fog.
Just as we thought it was another one of those hikes where we put in the effort but don't get rewarded with a view, the fog started to fade, and the view began to reveal itself behind the dense fog. We sat down on the bluffs to eat our snacks while we waited for the fog to fade. About fifteen minutes later, the fog had faded enough for us to admire the beautiful scene of Howe Sound plus the nearby islands and mountains. At that moment, I thought to myself, if we had reached the viewpoint half an hour earlier, we would have missed the fog clearing and would have left the viewpoint without seeing the views. Sometimes the timing happens to work out just right; sometimes you just get lucky.
Fog started to fade.
Fog continues to fade.
Beautiful views of Howe Sound.
Check out my previous hikes.
  1. The Panoramic Views of Panorama Ridge
  2. The Golden Larches of Frosty Mountain
  3. The Winter Snow of Pump Peak at Mount Seymour
  4. Sapphire Waters and Azure Skies of Battle Bluff
  5. It Isn't Always Sunshine and Blue Skies
  6. The Frozen River and Waterfalls of Maligne Canyon
  7. The Amazing Arches of Arches National Park
  8. The Bizarre Hoodoos of Bryce Canyon National Park
  9. The Magnificent Stones of Zion National Park
  10. The Flowing Walls of Lower Antelope Canyon
  11. A Glimpse of Hope at the Hope Lookout Trail
  12. Turquoise Waters viewed from Sea to Summit Trail
  13. The Three Peaks of Mount Seymour
  14. The Serene Winter Scene at Dog Mountain
  15. Murrin Loop and Jurassic Ridge
  16. Yosemite National Park
  17. The Bear's Hump at Waterton National Park
  18. Views of Okanagan from Pincushion Mountain Trail
  19. The Half Frozen Waterfalls at Franklin Falls
  20. Hole in the Wall of Vancouver Island
Amazing scenes!
I have always dreamt to be a hiker and Nomad like you. Whenever I read explorations from you, my heart makes me feel as if I were also climbing those cliffs and edges.
Thanks and please keep posting. I love to read about Nature and explorations.
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Thanks.
I'm not a nomad. We just like to go on different hikes and most of these hikes I post were ones we went throughout the past few years.
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Oh! Okay I thought you're a Nomad sorry for that.
Your hikes are really amazing and inspiring.
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Thank you! I'm glad you enjoy reading my hiking posts.
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Great view after the fog but the fog looked pretty cool too.
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Personally, I think fog with partial view or fog not so thick that it's semi-transparent is still fine. But it gets quite disappointing to hike kilometers with hundreds of meters of elevation gain, expecting to see this:
But being greeted with this:
This was a true story, it was our hike to St. Mark's Summit...
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Yeah that's not optimal but a bit of fog makes a nice effect in the pics at least.
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21 sats \ 10 replies \ @Fabs 28 Apr
A question: how much does it cost to make a post including that many pictures?
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This one cost 21 sats. It seems I did not get charged extra for posting the pictures. I don't know how the picture posting cost works here. Sometimes I get charge for posting lots of pictures, sometimes I don't. I usually upload all the pictures I want to post and look at the total cost of the post. If the cost is too high, I just start reducing the number to pictures until it hits an acceptable amount.
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175 sats \ 3 replies \ @ek 28 Apr
I don't know how the picture posting cost works here. Sometimes I get charge for posting lots of pictures, sometimes I don't
You get 50MB free per 24 hours. After that, every picture costs 10 sats until you hit the next fee level which is 75MB. Then every picture costs 100 sats. After 100MB, every picture costs 1k sats.
So it's structured like this:
MB per 24 hoursFee per image [sats]
0-500
50-7510
75-100100
100+1k
We don't explain this well but the hope was that most stackers never have to pay for images. I ran the numbers before updating to 50MB and realized that most stayed below 50MB with their images per day.
But that analysis might have suffered from survivorship bias since I didn't think about this:
If the cost is too high, I just start reducing the number to pictures until it hits an acceptable amount.
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Fabs 28 Apr
Ah, see? That's clear, you should include it somewhere in the FAQ!
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @ek 29 Apr
I think you're right ๐Ÿ‘€
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Thanks for taking the time to explain this. I guess it makes sense to scale down the pixel size of the photos before uploading if I want to upload a lot of photos. I used to just upload the photos as-is in their original resolution. I had a few posts where I did remove photos because the posting fee got into the 1000 sats tier, but I think that was before you guys up it from 10mb to 50mb.
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21 sats \ 4 replies \ @Fabs 28 Apr
Oh, I've posted three pictures once, and had to pay >1000 Sats. ๐Ÿงก๐ŸŒ
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @ek 28 Apr
It used to be 10MB free per day, we changed it to 50MB per day a while ago
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Photography territory fee used to be set at 1000 sats. Looks like it has been reduced to 21 sats now.
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41 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fabs 28 Apr
Damn fine move.
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Really? Maybe it's set by territory owners? I have no idea. But usually, when I see that the posting cost is too high, I just start reducing the number of pictures until the fee becomes manageable.
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