Hikers
on the Coast Trail in East Sooke Park
|
The Coast Trail
in East Sooke Regional Park is considered one of the premier day hikes
in Canada, a west coast wilderness experience within easy reach of
Victoria. The 10-kilometre trail is rough and winding, a challenging
6–hour trip even for energetic or experienced hikers. One moment you
travel across a bluff of windswept pines, the ocean crashing at your
feet. Next you enter a dark rainforest at the end of a ravine. Turn
a corner, and you’re back in sunlight, at the edge of the sea.
The scenery
along the rough and winding Coast Trail is simply magnificent, with
good views of the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Olympic Peninsula
in Washington state.
Begin your hike
at Pike Road, and take the trail to Iron Mine Bay. The forest is
thick with Douglas-fir, western hemlock, and closer to shore, Sitka
spruce. The route to the small, horseshoe-shaped bay is lush with
mosses, ferns and shrubs like fruit-bearing salmonberry. Heading
east along the Coast Trail, you pass sharp cliffs where pelagic
cormorants roost. Watch them swoop and dive for food, then fly back
to their rocky homes. Later, stop at Cabin Point, where the small
trap shack is testimony to a fishing past. As you travel the trail,
look for plants as old as time. Kinnikinnick, Oregon grape and salal
survive despite the harsh wind and salt spray. Continue east to
Beechey Head. Here the wild and beautiful coastline is marked by
jagged bluffs, a reminder of the ageless struggle between land and
sea.
Beechey
Head in East Sooke Park
|
Beechey Head is
also a well-known site for observing the annual fall hawk migration.
Feel the presence of the Coast Salish People at Alldridge Point, designated
as a Provincial Heritage Site in 1927. Here you'll see petroglyphs
carved into the rock, in a style particular to the petroglyphs of
the Strait of Juan de Fuca area. Near the end of the Coast Trail is
Creyke Point, a rocky headland of unusual shapes against emerald green
water. Your hike ends at Aylard Farm.
A heritage apple
orchard and cleared pasture are all that remain of the last settlement.
Where livestock once grazed, meadows are now sweet with clover,
wild rose and blue-eyed grass. At dusk, blacktailed deer wander
in from the surrounding forest to feed.
Hiking the
entire trail requires transport to return to the starting trailhead.
The easiest way to return to the Pike Road starting point at the
end of the hike is to leave a second car at the Aylard Farm parking
area, or arrange to be picked up. Parties with two cars can start
from each end and exchange car keys for the return journey home.
There is no public transportation between the Aylard Farm and Pike
Road parking areas. It is possible to hike portions of the Coast
Trail. Hikers setting out from Aylard Farm can return to the entrance
point - without backtracking along the Coast Trail - on one of the
easier interior trails through the forest.
Hikers
on the Coast Trail in East Sooke Park
|
Aside from the
Coast Trail, a number of interior trails crisscross the park. Portions
of these inland trails can be combined into assorted loops and figure
eight hikes of varying lengths. This negates the need to leave vehicles
at each end of the park, and provides an easier and shorter return
option if the Coast Trail proves too demanding. The interior trails
are relatively flat and fairly quiet even in summer. Families will
find hiking from the Aylard Farm end the most rewarding, as there
are regular park facilities, green meadows and access to sandy beaches.
Visitors to
East Sooke Park should be aware that the natural attractions of
East Sooke are themselves potential hazards, especially if you’re
unprepared. Sharp cliffs wrapped in mist, crashing waves, and sudden
tide changes can all provide an element of danger. Winter hiking
can be hazardous: Trails on rocky ledges are very slippery, and
some inland trails can become submerged after heavy rains.
Hikers
at Cabin Point, Coast Trail
|
Steep
section of the Coast Trail
|
East
Sooke Regional Park is located off East Sooke Road on the East
Sooke Peninsula near Sooke,
22 miles (35 km) west of Victoria. Access from Victoria is via Highway
1 and the West Coast Highway 14 (Sooke Road). Turn left off Sooke
Road onto Gillespie Road. Turn right on East Sooke Road to reach
the park entrances at Anderson Cove and Pike Road, or turn left
to reach the park entrance at Aylard Farm (turn right on Becher
Bay Road). Allow approximately 1 hour driving time from Victoria.
Public Transportation:
Take BC Transit #66 East Sooke Loop Bus from 17 Mile House to East
Sooke Road. There is a bus stop close to the entrance to Anderson
Cove. Please note that BC Transit #66 runs Monday to Friday only,
with no weekend service. Contact BC Transit for scheduling information.
Click for companies
that offer Hiking
& Backpacking services, or visit our Recreation
section for more information on Hiking and Backpacking in British
Columbia.
Trail information
for Vancouver Island is provided in three superb Hiking Trails guides
by the Vancouver
Island Trails Information Society.
|