Tag Archives: leadership

We are Growing and Need Leaders!

We are Growing!
New Trip Leaders Needed

Great news! We are growing so fast that we need more trip leaders. Right now, we need more Saturday and Sunday events. Multi-day trips as well. With close to 400 members, we should be able to fill our schedule with a broad selection of hikes, bikes, kayaks and other adventures.

Many of you know the North Shore and other ranges better than anyone. Find a weekend when you are available and pick a day. If there is already a hike scheduled on a Saturday, take the Sunday or vice-versa. Or, if there is a B hike scheduled, choose to lead a C hike or an A hike. Similarly, If you see a bike ride scheduled on a day you can lead a hike, schedule a hike. The two activities don’t necessarily conflict. 

Please also motivate fellow members to lead a trip. Sometimes people just need to be asked and encouraged. There are a lot of potential trip leaders out there who just need a nod. You know who you are : )  

Thanks to all of you amazing trip leaders out there. We wouldn’t exist without you. 

Contact the planners below for help to get your hike or bike ride, on the schedule.   

A Hike Planner Lesley Bohm lrbartist@gmail.com
B Hike Planner Brent Ehrl brentehrl@gmail.com
C Hike Planner Ramona Muljar ramona_muljar@hotmail.com
D Hike Planner Alastair Ferries natlakeele@hotmail.com
Midweek Activities Planner Mariken Van Nimwegen marikenv@yahoo.com
Ski Trip Planner Lesley Bohm lrbartist@gmail.com
Multi-day Trip/Back-pack Planner Diane Whiteley diane_whiteley@telus.net
Bicycle Trip Planner Katy Poon easyhiker88@gmail.com

Brent Ehrl Receives Honorary Lifetime Achievement Award

Brent Ehrl
Brent on his amazing lime-green snowshoes

Brent Ehrl joined North Shore Hikers in 1988, after receiving a membership as a birthday gift. Since that fateful day, he has been an active member for over 33 years. Brent is currently the “B” Hike Planner and has held the positions of “C” Hike Planner, Vice-President, and President for the club. He has served as President on three separate occasions. In addition, Brent always helped with the small tasks that keep a club alive,  helping to mail out the Raven Newsletter for years -- back when we still had to stuff envelopes.

Brent leads a mix of A, B and C trips year-round, even when he was mostly a C or D hiker, back in the day. He shows up in the parking lot to hike come rain, sleet, or snow, eagerly looking for participants to join him on the trail! Brent is known to ‘fill in’ where there are leadership needs to keep club activities moving forward. On his hikes, he shares his extensive knowledge of birds and is known for his eagle eye, identifying a specific bird a long way off.

Mount Frosty gang

Brent is a strong mentor to other hikers in the club. He used to go on all the trips to support new leaders. Recently he was not able to attend Ramona Muljar’s hike to Elk Thurston and felt bad about not attending. Brent has led the most hikes in the club over the years. His trips were and continue to be extremely popular and enjoyable. He is a great trip leader, always leading a hike according to the level, ability and needs of the group. He is cognizant of people’s ability, instead of what people are dictating. When he leads an A hike, he leads at the group’s pace, not like the C hiker that he is.

Brent consistently goes ‘the extra mile’ to support both new and long-term club members to enjoy all the activities that the club offers. He started, organized, and led the Wednesday Grouse Grind Potluck hikes for over a decade. Twenty to twenty-five hikers come out for those potluck hikes which were a lot of fun! Brent always supported all club events -- every AGM, and every social.

There is always a crowd on a hike with Brent

Brent treats club members equally, fairly and with respect and he stands up for what is right. The executive is very pleased to award Brent the 2022 Honorary Lifetime Achievement Award. We thank him for his service.

Brent and wife, Carol Kautz -- our current president on Mt. Snass

The Raven eNewsletter

The Raven eNewsletter

Winter 2021/2022 

Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Let it Snow

Whoa, let’s play in the snow! With over 100 cm of fresh on the hills this week the mountains are looking superb. But with all the snow, please be careful in the backcountry. 

Make sure you consult Avalanche Canada’s site for the area you are interested in. Put a link to their South Coast forecast on your phone so you can check it anytime, anywhere. 

Avalanche Training Discount

Canada West Mountain School is offering 20% off any AST-1 course for North Shore Hikers members. Their AST-1 course for back-country skiing and AST-1 for snowshoeing cost $285. Interested? Please contact Alastair Ferries 604-329-1637 or natlakeele@hotmail.com to receive a discount code.

Hike Leaders Needed

The best way to attract club members is to fill the schedule with interesting and varied hikes at all ability levels. To do this, we need more hike leaders. If we all agreed to lead just one hike per year, we’d have a lively program full of choices in no time. 

Most of us don’t just hike with our club, but also with other groups and personal friends. We invite you to share some of the hikes you’ve learned about and enjoyed, by proposing them on the schedule and leading them. We really need more B and C hikes.

And that’s the beauty of joining a hiking club: you learn new routes and meet new, compatible people to hike with. Don’t worry about leading a hike: if you’re already comfortable with whatever level of hiking you normally do, you know what it takes in terms of fitness and stamina. 

Here are the steps:

  1. Decide which hike you would like to lead and when
  2. Categorize it as per our system here
  3. Create a trip announcement with details about location, category, date, time,  pace, car-pool spot etc.
  4. Email this information to the club trip planner depending on the category. He or she will post it to the schedule. Or if you are a pro, post it to the schedule directly using the add event function on the website, then wait for the trip planner to approve it. 

Read more >>

Get the Picture? 2022 Photo Contest

We are pleased to announce a member's Photo Contest for 2022! North Shore Hikers members can submit one photo for each category, up until October 31, 2022. There are six categories:

Category Prize
A scenery photo from a 2022 North Shore Hikers trip. $100
A scenery picture shot anytime, anywhere. $50
A wild animal (mammal, bird, reptile, insect, etc.) picture taken anytime, anywhere. $50
A wild plant (tree, flower, mushroom, etc.) photo taken anytime, anywhere.  $50
A people (companions or locals) picture taken anytime, anywhere.  $50
A humorous photo snapped anytime, anywhere.  $50

Professional photographer, Chris Barton, will judge the entries in the first five categories. At the November Annual General Meeting, he will present a slide show of the winners and best submissions. At the AGM members will cast their vote for the best humorous submission. For rules and how to submit, click here.

New Instagram Account north_shore_hikers_bc

Send us photos. Email photos from hikes etc. to
instagram-nsh@northshorehikers.org. If there are any recognizable people in them please ask their permission to be on Instagram (scenery pictures are also encouraged). Like our posts, comment, share. Tell your friends and family about the Instagram page, the more the merrier.

Woof! Dogs and our Hikes

We are discussing the idea of including “dog-friendly” hikes. These hikes would allow dogs at the trip leader’s discretion -- so long as the trail permits our furry friends and all potential participants are made aware of the possible presence of dogs prior to the hike. 

Carpooling is a Gas (or an E)

We are all in this (car) together. In addition to protecting each other from Covid-19 by wearing masks, please ensure you contribute to the driver's operating costs. The suggested rate is $5.00 per person/hour of driving on paved roads and $10.00 per hour on rough logging roads or in adverse conditions. If the driver prefers cookies, gummy bears or hotshots as compensation, that is cool and they can let you know, but always offer. If you switch rides, going to the hike with one person and back with another, offer the appropriate treat to each. 

New Vision Mission Values

The executive recently approved a new set of Vision, Mission and Values statements for the club.

Our Mission

To inspire members, potential members and the general public to safely engage in self-propelled outdoor activities in the spirit of camaraderie and appreciation of nature.

Our Vision

To facilitate participation in self-propelled activities (such as hiking, biking, canoeing, snowshoeing, and backcountry skiing) by offering and leading a wide variety of trips every week, year-round. 

Our Values

Discovery: Explore routes and trails both new and not well-travelled.

Excellence: Provide effective leadership for all participants and thoughtful mentorship for members new to an activity.

Respect:  Foster deep respect for the environment and ecology. 

Service: Be of benefit to our stakeholders and the public. 

Integrity: Carry out all our endeavours safely, with responsibility and accountability beyond reproach.

Hike Leaders Needed

Hike Leaders Needed

by Mariken Van Nimwegen, mid-week hike planner/coordinator

Mariken - hey where's my group?

The best way to attract club members is to fill the schedule with interesting and varied hikes at all ability levels. To do this, we need more hike leaders. If we all agreed to lead just one hike per year, we’d have a lively program full of choices in no time. 

Most of us don’t just hike with our club, but also with other groups and personal friends. We invite you to share some of the hikes you’ve learned about and enjoyed, by proposing them on the schedule and leading them. We really need more B and C hikes.

And that’s the beauty of joining a hiking club: you learn new routes, and meet new, compatible people to hike with. Don’t worry about leading a hike: if you’re already comfortable with whatever level of hiking you normally do, you know what it takes in terms of fitness and stamina. 

Here are the steps

  1. Decide which hike you would like to lead and when
  2. Categorize it as per our system here
  3. Create a trip announcement with details about location, category, date, time,  pace, car-pool spot etc. 
  4. Email this information to the club trip planner depending on category - they will post it to the schedule. Or if you are a pro, post it to the schedule directly using the add event function on the website and the planner will approve it. 

Pace information

The best thing about being a trip leader is: you get to call the shots. Indicate the speed you’d prefer to take - easy, moderate or fast. This is perhaps the most important info for many people. Will you be taking breaks? Some people see hiking as a form of exercise and go straight to the summit; some like to take photos, groove on the landscape, take a snack and break from time to time. Discrepancies regarding pace may make a hiking group incompatible, leading to unnecessary frustration. 

Take a look at the A, B, C, D and mid-week categories on the website to judge where your trip fits in best. The mid-week hikes tend to be a bit more relaxed, aren’t too far away and don’t need to take all day, but there’s nothing keeping you from scheduling a C or D-hike on a weekday – fewer people on the trails, that’s for sure. 

Carpooling and Cancelling

Consider reducing our carbon footprint and increasing access for members without vehicles, by encouraging shared-cost carpooling from a central point. Take Covid-19 precautions into account. If the weather is truly ghastly that day, the trip can be postponed or cancelled, no worries, just send an email to the planner, or make the announcement yourself using an update. 

Changes can be made up to one week ahead of time and sometimes even within a few days. We welcome your trip proposals anytime and thank you for helping to build our club.

It's worth it being a leader - for the views alone. Try it out!