Quesnel, BC
Quesnel, BC
Quesnel, BC
10 Mile Lake near Quesnel, BC
Everything must come to an end.
End o season.
Linda
Hard at work.
Getting rid of leaves.
Fixed up by my son.
My truck.
Antique Model Railroad building.
Rocky Mountaineer Fellow.
Experimental Fall Photos
Experimental Fall Photos
Experimental Fall Photos
Experimental Fall Photos
Experimental Fall Photos
Experimental Fall Photos
Experimental Fall Photos
Mural West Quesnel, BC
Mural Downtown Quesnel, BC
The Jack.
I don't know what this is.
A walk along the Fraser River.
A walk along the Fraser River.
A walk along the Fraser River.
A walk along the Fraser River.
Fraser River in Quesnel, BC
The Old Crow.
The Old Crow.
Something to think about.
This guy is finished.
The Quesnel River.
West Fraser Timber Park. - Quesnel, BC
West Fraser Timber Park. - Quesnel, BC
Found this one on the sundeck railing.
Found this one on the sundeck railing.
Linda
Puntchesakut.
Puntchesakut.
1/500 • f/3.2 • 25.0 mm • ISO 200 •
OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. E-M1
OLYMPUS M.25mm F1.2
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Morning walk downtown Quesnel, BC
Long before the arrival of prospectors during the Cariboo Gold Rush of 1862, the Southern Carrier (Dakelh) people lived off the land around Quesnel, occupying the area from the Bowron Lakes in the east to the upper Blackwater River and Dean River in the west. The Southern Carrier Nation were known among themselves as ‘Uda Ukelh’, meaning ‘people who travel by boat on water early in the morning’. The name "Quesnel" is derived from Jules Maurice Quesnel, who accompanied Simon Fraser on his journey to the Pacific Ocean. Quesnel came to be called 'Quesnelle Mouth' to distinguish it from 'Quesnel Forks', 97 kilometres (60 mi) up river. In 1870, it had been shortened to Quesnelle and by 1900, it was spelled the way it is now. Quesnel is located along the gold mining trail known as the Cariboo Wagon Road and was the commercial centre of the Cariboo Gold Rush. It also marks one end of the Alexander MacKenzie Heritage Trail. Because of its location on the Fraser River, it was also an important landing for sternwheelers from 1862 to 1886 and then, from 1909 until 1921. The last sternwheeler on the upper Fraser was Quesnel's own namesake craft, and home town product, the Quesnel.
Trudy Tuinstra has particularly liked this photo
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