Chik Weid
  • Chik Weid
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13 years ago
Anyone else from BC?
Kootenays?
Slocan Valley?

Nice looking site.
Chik[i][center]
rustydog
13 years ago
I'm from England but welcome :thumbsup:
http://www.altitudesafety.co.uk/contacts/ 
Give them a ring. They are very competitve and friendly.
Chik Weid
  • Chik Weid
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13 years ago
Thanks, Rusty Dog
I'm enjoying exploring the web site. The entrys are very different from my experience here. I am located in the heart of the Slocan Mining District - primarily "Galena" ( an ore containing silver, lead & zinc). It is very mountainous country with literally hundred of old mine sites nearby. Most of our exploration is limited to surface workings although there also a number of sites where (with great care) you can go underground. I have been a mine carpenter for one of the remaining working mines, but now spend as much of the summer months as I can in the hills trying to re-locate some of the long-abandoned claims. I also do a little prospecting although most of the more promising claims are already held. I hope to upload some photos soon.
Cheers
Chik[i][center]
Grumpytramp
13 years ago
"Chik Weid" wrote:

Anyone else from BC?
Kootenays?
Slocan Valley?



Not quite 😉 ......... at least you won't be the only Canadian here!

Many are fooled by my West Yorkshire accent and its attendant abuse of every vowel sound known in the English Language but I am a Canadian! ........ well sort of being born in Ottawa in 1960's before being whisked into exile to East Leeds [my parents went out there as newly weds when my father got a job with the Canadian Geological Survey, though before that my mother had lived and worked on reservations at Friendly Cove on Nootka and Opitsaht on Meares Island off Vancover Island]

Over the years I have travelled extensively through the Kootenays in winter on long road trips sampling as many ski centres as possible (Fernie, Red Mountain, Kimberley, Kicking Horse, Panorama, Whitewater not mention over the border in Northern Montana and Idaho) mixed with the occasional day off or passing visits to mining sites.

I have been to Red Mountain on at least three different occasions, but always avoided the tourist trap of Rossland as I really enjoyed staying in a real working town, Trail, which with its big Teck Cominco Lead/Zinc smelter has the comforting feel of a proper mining town. I was singularly underwhelmed by Kimberley despite the lovely people I have met there and it's rich mining heritage.

The place I most enjoyed visting from a mining perspective was Fernie (not the town .......... the skiing is awesome though) but I have spent a good few happy evenings exploring the coal mining districts of Crowsnest Pass. Here I felt at home (although the mountains and forest are more spectular it did have the feel of the Nith, Ayr and Doon Valleys of East Ayrshire, Scotland where I spent a good ten years coal mining).

Getting too old for skiing but will be heading back to the Kootenays in the next few years armed with a fly rod for the trout and a camera for the mining heritage 😉
fjällvandring
13 years ago
Well, I'm not Canadian, but I plan on making a trip to Bella Coola next year to get a sample of the native Salishan culture 😛 ;Maybe visit a few mines whilst I'm there, what are the laws on exploring mines in Canada? And are there any in the area?

Cheers 🙂
jeg elsker Norge, landets dialekter, folk, landskap og naturen!
Chik Weid
  • Chik Weid
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13 years ago
Almost all mines are located on public lands (Crown Land). Active mines may be gated and access restricted. I have rarely encountered any difficulty with current owners of claims which are not now being worked. You may find open adits but is rough terrain so you will need to careful that you do not lose your way. The usual precautions respecting bad air and bad ground (loose rock, open raises and shafts, etc.) will have to be taken. If you happen to encounter any argillite deposits - leave them alone. The Coast Salish, Tshimshan, Haida & other peoples claim almost all of these (they use it for carving). Bella Coola is a long way from the Slocan and I am not familiar with it's mining history. I suggest you do a little research at the following site and first look in the Index then in specific volumes.
Good Luck,

http://www.empr.gov.bc.ca/Mining/Geoscience/PublicationsCatalogue/AnnualReports/Pages/AnnualReports.aspx 
Chik[i][center]
fjällvandring
13 years ago
I'm generally interested in all the NW Pacific Indian tribes so where I go isn't too important, I thought about visiting the Tsimshian parts of British columbia too. Thanks for the help, it's good to know that they're accessible, I'll just have to look more into individual mines in BC.
jeg elsker Norge, landets dialekter, folk, landskap og naturen!

Disclaimer: Mine exploring can be quite dangerous, but then again it can be alright, it all depends on the weather. Please read the proper disclaimer.
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