Really great hike with gorgeous views all around. It is great that you mention to people to respect the vegetation. Will be watching more of your videos after. Got some catching up to do. Excellent job
This is actually part one of three! lol I featured Egypt Lake Campground in one video, then this video is for the Egypt & Scarab Lakes. The third video is Mummy Lake, where I did the BC route thru Talc Lake then around Mummy Lake & all the way back to the Whistling Pass. These were all recorded in the same 4 days.
that one is called Scarab Peak, I seen a trail report of some guys who summit it a few years ago (www.explor8ion.com/2019/09/22/scarab-peak/) and there's actually a heavily melted glacier in behind it with a bergschrund (glacier separation leaving a large crevasse) making the summit a bit treacherous!
Thanks for posting the video. What is the campground like at Scarab Lake? I wish to camp closer to a lake, and thinking about not staying at Egypt Lake.
This is the video for the campgrounds ruclips.net/video/FTnWAKH46OY/видео.html and this is another hike I did from Egypt Lake ruclips.net/video/GStlzPi7RRQ/видео.html - Basically you cannot camp directly beside Egypt Lake or Talc or Scarab Lake or Mummy Lake. Generally lakes are poor water sources so you wouldnt want to camp there. There's a loop you can do there by staying at Ball Pass & Shadow Lake. Also neither are close to a lake. The rare backcountry campground that are close to a lake that I've seen is Luellen Lake. ruclips.net/video/DSoHF9T295I/видео.html - even there getting water is done from a creek & not the lake.
You should work for parks Canada. Some of the friendliest and most helpful people were in campgrounds in northern BC and Alberta. but they weren't always back country campers.
@@ParadoxdesignsOrg Actual career paths with the federal government with parks is pretty limited & most of their hires for operations are students. To be honest, the plan is to expand our outdoor information videos well beyond the roughly 40 parks we have in Canada.
There’s another video coming next week about the rest of this area! Enjoy! 😊
Wow!! Amazing views. Fantastic video. Thanks for sharing. 👍13
Really great hike with gorgeous views all around. It is great that you mention to people to respect the vegetation. Will be watching more of your videos after. Got some catching up to do. Excellent job
This is actually part one of three! lol I featured Egypt Lake Campground in one video, then this video is for the Egypt & Scarab Lakes. The third video is Mummy Lake, where I did the BC route thru Talc Lake then around Mummy Lake & all the way back to the Whistling Pass. These were all recorded in the same 4 days.
soo cool. Thanks for sharing! def in the list before snow comes 😁
Great video, I think I'll add this one to my bucket list.
@@david_onthetrail hiking this area in the fall would be an excellent larch showcase as well!
beautiful place! my favorite scene is 13:11 - wow. there's got to be an amazing story to the life on that cliff.
that one is called Scarab Peak, I seen a trail report of some guys who summit it a few years ago (www.explor8ion.com/2019/09/22/scarab-peak/) and there's actually a heavily melted glacier in behind it with a bergschrund (glacier separation leaving a large crevasse) making the summit a bit treacherous!
Thanks for posting the video. What is the campground like at Scarab Lake? I wish to camp closer to a lake, and thinking about not staying at Egypt Lake.
This is the video for the campgrounds ruclips.net/video/FTnWAKH46OY/видео.html and this is another hike I did from Egypt Lake ruclips.net/video/GStlzPi7RRQ/видео.html - Basically you cannot camp directly beside Egypt Lake or Talc or Scarab Lake or Mummy Lake. Generally lakes are poor water sources so you wouldnt want to camp there. There's a loop you can do there by staying at Ball Pass & Shadow Lake. Also neither are close to a lake. The rare backcountry campground that are close to a lake that I've seen is Luellen Lake. ruclips.net/video/DSoHF9T295I/видео.html - even there getting water is done from a creek & not the lake.
You should work for parks Canada. Some of the friendliest and most helpful people were in campgrounds in northern BC and Alberta. but they weren't always back country campers.
@@ParadoxdesignsOrg Actual career paths with the federal government with parks is pretty limited & most of their hires for operations are students. To be honest, the plan is to expand our outdoor information videos well beyond the roughly 40 parks we have in Canada.