11 February 2026 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm PST
Get Tickets
Problems using the ticket form below? You can also get tickets here.
SPES uses the Zeffy platform to process payments, so your entire purchase goes to us. If you’d like to help Zeffy keep running its services, you can choose to tip them. If you don’t want to, choose “Other” in the drop-down menu and then enter $0.
IN-PERSON PROGRAM
Welcome senior participants! Join us for a slow-paced stroll around Lost Lagoon to admire the late winter birds and other wildlife in the nearby waters, trees, and shores. We’ll turn our attention to the colourful ducks and lively hummingbirds, listen for nearby eagles, plus look out for recent beaver activity and whatever else we can find along the way. This is a beginner-friendly nature outing!
PROGRAM DETAILS
Accessibility notes: This program will move at a slow pace with 1-2 inclines on some uneven surfaces (such as packed gravel and pavement) for up to 1.5 hours, mostly on flat terrain around Lost Lagoon (packed gravel and dirt). If you have any questions about accessibility, please email Julia at publiced@stanleyparkecology.ca
This program will meet at the Nature House on Lost Lagoon (located near the intersection of Alberni and Chilco Street, under the viewing platform facing the Lagoon). Please arrive 5-10 minutes early to sign in.
Terms and Conditions
(1) Registration required - NO DROP-INS ARE ALLOWED. This is a free program for seniors!
(2) Cancellation policy – Please let us know if you can no longer make it, and we can offer the spot to someone else.
(3) Weather – Our tours typically run rain or shine. Rarely, programs may be postponed or cancelled due extreme weather like high winds or extreme heat. We will alert you by email if the program needs to be rescheduled.
(4) Program Availability – Program full? Sign up here to be notified if a spot opens up. We also have a monthly events newsletter that you can subscribe to here.
The land on which we gather is the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Peoples. Their stewardship and respect for this land has carried forward for thousands of years long before settlers named it “Stanley Park”.
