Re: TR: Day Trips with Wildlife in the Canadian Rockies: 9/7 - 9/12 / 2022
Posted: Sun Dec 04, 2022 8:26 pm
I think it may require that extra bit of planning to be assured of a site. We got the sense that it was still very crowded, and we were also there in late Aug. early Sept. That is one reason we continued with our "guerilla camping'" M.O.
For instance, we were told that to get a parking place up at Moraine Lake, we'd have to be persistent, and lucky. So many photographers camp out up there in the parking lot. As it turned out, we decided to drive up there in the early morning hours, ~2AM, and when we arrived at the base of the road to Moraine Lake, there was a barrier across it, with a guard monitoring traffic. We only got in when a car came out, and the guard was still reluctant. They must be in radio contact with another staff person at the P. lot, because sure enough, there was really only half a spot open. We squeezed in, and slept a few hours up there along with a hundred other people also sleeping in their cars. This is perhaps quasi-legal- don't know?
Whether the campground spaces are equally tough to get is another thing we never tried, since we had the van. We didn't try to book anything ahead of time, but I reckon it may be necessary. Wandering Daisy, how did your time in the parks on the north and west sides of the Rockies compare with Banff and Jasper? Was it a lot quieter? I too am dead keen to see the Bugaboo Spires, but that was one of the Provincial Parks which did not allow dogs
For instance, we were told that to get a parking place up at Moraine Lake, we'd have to be persistent, and lucky. So many photographers camp out up there in the parking lot. As it turned out, we decided to drive up there in the early morning hours, ~2AM, and when we arrived at the base of the road to Moraine Lake, there was a barrier across it, with a guard monitoring traffic. We only got in when a car came out, and the guard was still reluctant. They must be in radio contact with another staff person at the P. lot, because sure enough, there was really only half a spot open. We squeezed in, and slept a few hours up there along with a hundred other people also sleeping in their cars. This is perhaps quasi-legal- don't know?
Whether the campground spaces are equally tough to get is another thing we never tried, since we had the van. We didn't try to book anything ahead of time, but I reckon it may be necessary. Wandering Daisy, how did your time in the parks on the north and west sides of the Rockies compare with Banff and Jasper? Was it a lot quieter? I too am dead keen to see the Bugaboo Spires, but that was one of the Provincial Parks which did not allow dogs