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Destinations

What to see on Vancouver Island British Columbia

May 26, 2014 by admin Leave a Comment

There is such a “wow” factor about Vancouver Island.

There are big vistas, like the one atop Mount Washington. There are impressive mountain ranges, like the jagged Mackenzie Range. With more than 2,100 miles of coastline, there are choices of water views, such as the wide expanse of the Pacific Ocean or the island-studded Johnstone Strait.

But visitors can find plenty of hidden gems on this island of more than 12,400 square miles, the largest island on North America’s west coast. My family and I discovered some great places, despite the limited size. And if young children are among the travelers, an hour or two at these locales are well spent. Here are some worth including on a family vacation itinerary.

Ucluelet Aquarium

Vancouver Island
Ucluelet Aquarium


Where:
Ucluelet, B.C., south of the Long Beach Unit of Pacific Rim National Park Reserve on the west side of the island.

The attraction:
There are bigger living rooms than this diminutive operation, but it’s all about the creatures and the kids.

What we liked:
The kids got wet, they learned something new and they had fun. They have touch tanks and aquariums filled with sea stars, sculpins, crabs, a Pacific octopus, anemones, rockfish, jellyfish, sea slug, pipefish, coho salmon fry and more. All the creatures come from nearby Barkley and Clayoquot sounds, and are returned at the end of the summer.

The young staff of volunteers is eager to get kids to touch the underside of a sea star or touch the tentacles of an anemone. “I’ll touch it if you touch it,” was the common challenge among visitors.

And that’s the idea, said curator Dave Hurwitz. “When you make it fun, kids will learn. That’s what we’re all about.”

Inside scoop:
The place was crowded on the rainy morning we visited. Now that permits have been issued to allow construction in the intertidal zone, the aquarium is moving forward with plans for a new building. Hurwitz said he is going to invite architecture students from a Victoria university to submit designs for the building. The goal is to have the new building open by 2010.

Cost: $5 per adult and $2 per child.

Information: www.uclueletaquarium.org

Museum at Campbell River

Museum at Campbell RiverWhere: At the south end of Campbell River, B.C., on Highway 19A

The attraction: A museum that focuses on the local history of this town on the island’s east side.

What we liked: This award-winning facility, celebrating its 50th anniversary, could serve as a model for small-town museums. Visitors are first introduced to the history of the First Nation people who lived in the region. From the First Nation gallery, exhibits led us through the growth of the logging and fishing industries, the community’s development and the rise of recreational salmon fishing and the gamed Tyee Club.

Among the movies at the museum is one about Ripple Rock. With its top just feet below the surface, the rock made the south end of Seymour Passage one of the most dangerous waterways in British Columbia. The movie detailed the amazing engineering feat in which tunnels were dug underneath the twin spires and then filled with explosives. The top of Ripple Rock was lowered in 1958 by as much as 61 feet by what the movies call the world’s largest non-atomic explosion. There is a viewpoint off the highway north of town that overlooks the passage.

Inside scoop: There is a great display of First Nation masks that are used to illustrate the narrated story of “The Treasures of Siwidi.” Robert Ostler Park downtown offers views of the busy harbor and Discovery Passage. They playground is a great place to let the young ones burn off energy before a picnic lunch.

Cost: $6 adults, $4 students or $15 for a family (2 adults and children younger than 19)

Information: www.crmuseum.ca

Sproat Lake

Sproat Lake
Sproat Lake

Where: On Highway 4, 15 minutes west of Port Alberni, B.C.

The attraction: There is Sproat Lake Provincial Park that has a good beach, picnic area, campground and petroglyphs and the nearby Coulson Flying Tankers, the world’s largest firefighting bombers.

What we liked:
Be sure to do the short hike to the petroplyphs. There are nine images in a rock wall just above the waterline. A small dock gives visitors a good view but also protects the images by keeping people back. Little is known about the images, known as K’ak’awin, most of which depict sea creatures.

Coulson, a private firefighting operation, flies two World War II-vintage Martin Mars flying boats. The planes, with 200-feet wingspans, can carry 7,200 gallons of water or foam. When not in service, you can tour the planes at the lakeside headquarters. The small visitor center is filled with photos of the planes in action, and there are two videos to watch.

Inside scoop: Of the seven Mars planes built during the war, only two remain, Hawaii Mars and Philippines Mars. When we were there, the Hawaii Mars was fighting fires in California. Gift shop prices seemed high.

Cost: Day fees at the park differ depending on how long you stay, but $3 will give you plenty of time. Plane tours are $10 a person, but the visitor center is free.

Information: www.env.gov.bc.ca/bcparks, www.martinmars.com

MacMillan Provincial Park

MacMillan Provincial Park
MacMillan Provincial Park

Where: On Highway 4, about 10 mile east of Port Alberni, B.C.

The attraction: The small park is home to Cathedral Grove with its stand of 800-year-old Douglas firs.

What we liked: It was hard to grasp the scale and the ages of these giant trees. The largest Douglas firs measure more than 29.5 feet in circumference. There are plenty of places for kids to climb and crawl among the trees. But the park is more than big trees; we saw plenty of snails and slugs. The Cameron River flows along on edge of the park, leading to Cameron Lake. There is a picnic area just east of the park on the lake.

Inside scoop: A trail on the south end of the park is closed because several bridges were washed out by flooding. The park is on both sides of the busy highway so be cautious when crossing. Parking can be at a premium on busy days, so be sure your vehicle is well off the road if you’re not in the main parking lot.

Cost: Free

Information: www.env.gov.bc.ca/bcparks

Whale Interpretive Center

Whale Interpretive Center
Whale Interpretive Center

Where: Telegraph Cove, 15 minutes from Port McNeill, B.C., at the north end of Johnstone Strait.

The attraction:
A great place to learn about the creatures that live in the nearby waters and the environmental and human challenges they face.

What we liked: This is the kind of place where you can let the kids go and know they will learn something, have fun and not get lost. The staff was very attentive, answering all the questions a visitor might have, regardless of age. The museum has an impressive display of full skeltons, including an orca, Dall’s porpoise, fin whale, bald eagle and a cougar.

Suspended from the ceiling, the 65-foot skeleton of a fin whale that was struck and killed by a cruise ship in 1999 dominates the museum. Fin whales are second in size to blue whales.

There also is a set of blue whale jaw bones that stretch from the floor to the ceiling almost two stories above visitors.

Inside scoop: The museum’s core message came through loud and clear. “One of our goals here is to educate the public that we can do things to protect the whales,” said museum guide Calida MacKenzie. “The good news is we are slowly learning, we just need to learn more. Every person can make a difference.”

Cost: By donation

Information: www.killerwhalecentre.org

Old Country Market

Old Country Market
Old Country Market

Where: On Highway 4A in Coombs, B.C., not far from the popular destination of Parksville.

The attraction: Homemade pastries, bread, Cornish pasties and ice cream.

What we liked: OK, the goats on the grass-covered roof is pure kitsch, but the goodies inside are well worth the stop. So good, in fact, that we managed to stop three times while traveling around the island. We are fans of Cornish pasties, and the small ones sold made for a perfect lunch. They also had Jamaican patties, brioche, steak and kidney pies and African samosas. We also enjoyed the market’s desserts, such as fruit tarts, eclairs and hazelnut ganache-covered brownies. The lines were long in front of the ice cream counter featuring more than 20 flavors.

Inside scoop
: A fun way to pass the time is to eat your ice cream outdoors and count the number of times a kid jumps out of the way after an adult says that the water trickling from the roof is really coming from the business end of the goats. There are a number of souvenier shops in the complex.

Cost: Depends on what you buy

Information: www.oldcountrymarket.com

Alert Bay

Alert Bay
Alert Bay

Where: On Cormorant Island across Boughton Strait from Port McNeill, B.C.

The attraction: The island is the home of the Namgis (pronounced Namm-geese) First Nation. Places to visit include the U’mista Cultural Center and what is called the tallest totem pole in the world at 173 feet high.

What we liked:
Our plans to visit the cultural center, featuring tribal masks and ceremonial regalia, were scrapped when there was a power outage on island shortly before our ferry arrived. But we did get to meet wood carver Johnathan Henderson, who is part of a well-known family of First Nation artists and has works at The Legacy gallery in Seattle.

The power outage forced Henderson outdoors to work on a large red cedar mask. When it’s completed, he plans to mount it on a carved circle of cedar measuring 46 inches across.

Inside scoop:
Head for the cultural center first, especially if you are going to walk. It’s about 15 minutes from the ferry terminal. A cemetery featuring a number of totem poles is in the other direction.

Cost: The ferry was $30.50 for two adults and two children to walk on.

Admission to the center is $5 for adults, seniors and students and $1 for children younger than 12.

Information: www.umista.org

Vancouver Island Info Sources

Books

“The Essential Vancouver Island Outdoor Recreation Guide” by John Kimantas (Whitecap Books). Lots of good information on island parks.

“Hidden British Columbia: Including Vancouver, Victoria, and Whistler” by Eric Lucas (Ulysses Press). Offered plenty of information on towns and things to see.

“Backroad Mapbook Vancouver Island, B.C.” This is the Canadian eqivalent to the DeLorme Gazetteers so popular with outdoors types here in the United States.

“Frommer’s Vancouver Island, the Gulf Islands & the San Juan Islands” by Chris McBeath (Frommer’s). Your standard Frommer’s guide, very formulaic.

Filed Under: Canada Travel

An Introduction To Buenos Aires

May 22, 2014 by admin Leave a Comment

Update: At the time of writing, eight Argentine pesos was equal to exactly one US dollar. Recent political upheaval, however, has led to a major devaluation of the peso and rapidly fluctuating exchange rates. Please keep this in mind when referring to any mention of costs throughout this guide.

BUENOS AIRES is a city which lends itself perfectly to aimless wandering. Though vast, it’s mostly a very walkable place, and orientating yourself is made pretty straightforward thanks to the city’s regular and logical grid pattern.

Buenos-AiresThe city is approximately triangular in shape and its boundaries are marked by Avenida General Paz to the west, the River Plate to the northeast and by its tributary, the Riachuelo , to the south. Holding the whole thing together is Avenida Rivadavia , an immensely long street (Porteños claim it is the longest in the world) which runs east to west for nearly two hundred blocks from Plaza de Mayo to Morón, outside the city limits.

Major Routes in Buenos Aires

Parallel to Avenida Rivadavia run four major avenues, Avenida de Mayo, Corrientes, Córdoba and Santa Fe. The major north-south routes through the city centre are, to the east, Avenida L.N. Além – which changes its name to Avenida del Libertador as it swings out to the northern suburbs – and, to the west, Avenida Callao. Through the very heart of the centre runs the spectacularly wide Avenida 9 de Julio – an aggressively car-orientated conglomeration of four multi-lane roads.

The city centre is bounded approximately by Avenida de Mayo to the south, Avenida L.N. Além to the east, Avenida Córdoba to the north and Avenida Callao to the west. At its southeastern corner lies the city’s foundational square, the Plaza de Mayo , centrepiece of the Haussmann-style remodelling that took place here in the late nineteenth century, and home to the governmental palace, the Casa Rosada . Within the centre lie the financial district, La City , and major shopping, eating and accommodation districts.

It’s a hectic place, particularly during the week, but from the bustle of Florida , the area’s busy pedestrianized thoroughfare, to the fin-de-siècle elegance of Avenida de Mayo and the café culture of Corrientes , the area is surprisingly varied in both architecture and atmosphere. With the exception of the Plaza de Mayo and the Teatro Colón – Buenos Aires’ world-renowned opera house – it’s perhaps not so much the centre’s sights that are the main draw but rather the strongly defined character of its streets, which provide a perfect introduction to the rhythm of Porteño life.

Read more at the Buenos Aires Destination Guide

Filed Under: Destinations

Visiting Parliament Buildings in Ottawa

May 20, 2014 by admin 1 Comment

The most notable and famous site to visit is probably the Canadian Parliament Buildings.  Parliament Hill, or “The Hill” as locals call it, is a scenic spot on the banks of the Ottawa River on Wellington Street in the downtown area.

The architecture of the Canadian parliament buildings is impressive in its Gothic Revival style, and the suite of buildings has served as the home of the Parliament of Canada since 1857.

Three Parts of Parliament Buildings

The best known building is the Centre Block with its national symbol of the Peace Tower.  This building houses the House of Commons and the Senate.

Visitors can watch either chamber in action from the visitor galleries at the Canadian parliament, take a tour of the building, or go up the Peace Tower for a spectacular view of the city.  The Peace Tower also houses the Memorial Chamber which honours Canada’s war dead.

The East Block of the Canadian Parliament Buildings looks much the same now as it did in the time of Confederation.  You can tour the restored offices of Canada’s first prime minister, Sir John A. MacDonald, and other early statesmen, and you can interact with historical characters from that period.

The other building of the Canadian parliament buildings, the West Block, which houses offices for members of parliament is closed to the public.

When to go to Canada Parliament Buildings

One of the best times to visit Parliament Hill would be on Canada Day, July 1st, where many activities take place, including street parties, live music, performing and athletic shows, an air show performing aerial manoeuvres over Parliament Hill, the RCMP Musical Ride, and a major fireworks event.

There are children’s activities from face painting and crafts to poster competitions, as well as cooking demonstrations, art shows and comedy reviews.  It is a fun grand event that is well worth attending.

From the Ottawa airport it is a short drive to downtown Ottawa and then the Canadian parliament buildings are just a short walk from downtown. Give yourself lots of time to look around, picnic and hopefully even see parliament in session.

Filed Under: Canada Travel

What is Xcaret?

March 18, 2014 by admin Leave a Comment

Xcaret is a Maya civilization archaeological site located on the Caribbean coastline of the Yucatán Peninsula, in the modern-day state of Quintana Roo in Mexico. The site was occupied by the pre-Columbian Maya and functioned as a port for navigation and an important Maya trading center.

Some of the site’s original structures are contained within a modern-day tourism development, the privately owned Xcaret Eco Park.

xcaretXcaret is majestic archaeological park located in Riviera Maya, Cancun in the Mexican Caribbean Sea shore. Enjoy a show at night, with more than 300 actors on stage, resulting in a musical journey through the history of Mexico since pre-Hispanic times to the present day, with all the colorful costumes, folklore and dancing.

The recreation of a pre-Hispanic ball game, a charro celebration, a Mexican cemetery, a coral reef aquarium, a butterfly pavilion moreover underground rivers, beaches and natural pools, a place where you can swim with dolphins and have fun with countless attractions and activities that will make you live magical experiences. Come to Xcaret, one of the best Cancun attractions, and enjoy while discovering the natural and cultural wealth of Mexico.

How to Get to Xcaret

Car Rental

Rent a car at the Cancun airport, there are plenty of options, you can also get the services from Anytime Limousines company, which can be found right outside of the airport. Playa del Carmen is roughly 45 minutes from the airport. Tulum is another 45 minutes. After passing through Playa del Carmen, the main highway (Rte 307) turns from a modern 4-lane highway into a two lane highway. There are two regular lanes and an extra-wide shoulder to allow slower vehicles to pull over to let faster vehicles pass.

From the city of Tulum, the Boca Paiala road provides access to the beach-side hotels and areas further south, such as Punta Allen. This dirt road, if not freshly resurfaced, has massive potholes (commonly wider than a car). It is passable with a VW bug or a scooter, but the trip will be much tougher than if you drive a car or truck.

Tour Bus

There are tour buses that take people from the hotels in Cancun to Xcaret. These are pretty expensive but the busses look fantastic and the tour is likely a lot of fun. The tour includes entrance fee and lots of activites on the Xcaret grounds. The cost though is $116 per person (this works out to $90 for admission and $26 transportation per person).

City Bus

From the bus stations you can find first class bus service from bus station to bus station as well as limited bus service to the Cancun International Airport. ADO one of the largest national providers of first class and luxury bus transportation has routes from Cancun, Playa Del Carmen and Tulum to most major cities like Merida, Chetumal, Mahajual, amongst the most popular from the Riviera Maya. The cost for this is about 100 pesos which is about $20.

xcaret view

How Much Does a Visit to Xcaret Cost?

While Xcaret [Eco Park] offers many tourist packages, ranging from about $90 and over, a visitor can request to visit the archaeological ruins only for about four dollars according to an agreement with the Instituto Nacional de Antropología y Historia (INAH). However, park officials report that only about one person every three months requests that opportunity.

What is there to do at Xcaret?

There are lots of things to see and do in Xcaret. People like to do the snorkeling, swimming with dolphins ($149 per person), scuba diving and a few other things but these all cost money on top of your day pass. so what do you get to do for free? Lots!

Some of the real highlights of Xcaret seem to be:

  • The butterfly pavillion
  • Mayan Village
  • Equestrian show
  • Mayan ball game
  • ..and the Cemetery

Also make sure you go to the chapel after the cemetary. It’s the best view in the park (except for the observation needle). The kids really enjoy the aquarium area with the gigantic turtles.also the buffet food is a big hit with a lot of the people that go.

No matter how tired you are at the end of the day, STAY for the night show. It is awesome.

Filed Under: Mexico

Mayan Riviera – Destination for Mayan Riviera

July 20, 2013 by admin Leave a Comment

Here is an article by Russell Frank. Russell is a writer for many newspapers

I am in a place so nearly perfect it’s obnoxious to even talk about it. Picture any cliché screen saver or calendar photo of a tropical beach: the near-white sand, the leaning palms, the seawater shading from swimming-pool blue close to shore to navy blue beyond the reef. Imagine the magic-fingers feel of the breeze on such a beach. Cue “The Girl from Ipanema.” Ask yourself why in the world do humans live anywhere else?

I am sitting on this Mexican beach watching kitesurfers tack and, heaven help me, I am thinking: We’re doomed.

Maybe it’s my visit to the Mayan ruins at Tulum.

Or maybe it’s the flimsy end-of-the-decade issue of Time magazine I paged through when I got up this morning with its reminders of the 2000 election and 9/11 and Katrina and tsunami and earthquake and Iraq and Afghanistan and the global economy and global warming.

Or maybe it’s just the yummy but undercooked tamales I bought from a street vendor on the way to the beach.

As apocalyptic visions go, this one’s as benign as the breeze. I don’t see a whirlwind destroying the planet. I don’t even see the human race dying off. Rather I see us dying back — a kind of cosmic pruning whereby an exhausted earth sustains a smaller and less resource-devouring human population while it repairs and replenishes itself.

Arguments about the human prospect tend to revolve around human intelligence. The optimists have faith in our capacity for technological innovation: We don’t need to change the way we live to reduce our consumption of natural resources. We just need to develop new extraction and processing techniques that enable us to both tap new resources and tap existing ones more efficiently and more sustainably.

According to this line of thinking, the answer to American dependence on other people’s oilfields isn’t to turn down the thermostat; it’s to develop our own oilfields while allowing the power companies to continue to burn coal and spin turbines and split atoms so they can generate the profits they need to invest in the search for new energy sources.

The pessimists worry that we’re not smart or nimble enough to solve our problems before they overwhelm us. Maybe the human tendency to think about short-term needs and gratifications was a viable survival strategy when there were fewer of us. Now, as the human population burgeons and more and more of us participate in the global economy, consumption threatens to outpace regeneration and innovation.

According to this line of thinking, the most powerful stakeholders in the global economy, from the business tycoons to the politicians whose campaigns are bankrolled by the tycoons, are the least likely challengers of the status quo, which means that the public will never get called upon to make the sacrifices that will need to be made to head off ecological disaster. Change can bubble up from below, but we’re probably too enthralled with our games and toys to get off our duffs.

The vision of the kitesurfers skimming down the sea lanes of the ancient Mayans marries the two views. The kite, harness and board of the kitesurfer – simple, elegant, eminently suited to the purpose—are a testament to human ingenuity and the spirit of adventure. At the same time, the gear is the perfect embodiment of human ingenuity in the service of amusement.

Far be it from me, a vacationer on the Mayan Riviera, to condemn amusement. But as we devote more and more of our time and attention and brainpower to the pursuit of pleasure, it feels more and more like we are dancing on the edge of a cliff. The Mayan calendar is coming to the end of a cycle at the end of 2012. I don’t see civilization collapsing in the next two years, but I can see where eventually – in a few decades? a few centuries? a few millennia?  – environmental pressures will kill most of us off. Our cities will be as silent as the ruins of Tulum and Chichen Itza. That’s the bad news.

The good news: The lovely, resilient Earth will heal and we, bold and ingenious kitesurfers that we are, will develop from the simple to the complex all over again.

Which means that some lucky-so-and-so may once again be able to come down from the frozen north at the end of one year and the beginning of the next and drink too many cervezas and dip too many chips into too many bowls of guacamole and spend too much time in the sun gazing out at the ancient Mayan sea lanes considering the future in light of the present and the past.

Russell Frank
Russell Frank worked as a reporter, editor and columnist at newspapers in California and Pennsylvania for 13 years before joining the journalism faculty at Penn State in 1998. He roots for the Yankees, plays blues guitar and harmonica (badly), bikes and hikes for physical exercise and does The New York Times crossword puzzle for mental exercise. He is, by academic training, a folklorist (Ph.D., UPenn), which means, when you strip away all the academic jargon, that he loves a good story. His views and opinions do not necessarily reflect those of Penn State University.
More articles by Russell Frank

Filed Under: Mexico

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