Blog

British Columbia / Vancouver Island

Summer 2022

This map shows the location and size of British Columbia

British Columbia is the third largest province in Canada, and for our American friends yes it is over 30% larger than Texas, it was the sixth province to join the dominion, it has a population of 5.2 million and 50% of the population lives in the metropolitan of Vancouver making Vancouver the third largest city in Canada. It is located on the west coast of Canada, and is bounded on the north by the Yukon and the Northwest Territories, on the east by the province of Alberta, the south by the States of Montana, Idaho, and Washington and on the west by the Pacific Ocean and the Alaskan panhandle. the province is 1180 kilometers (730 miles) from north to south and 1030 kilometers (640 miles) at it widest point, and the length of shoreline is over 27,000 kilometers (16,500 miles).

My first impression of British Columbia was that it is nothing like I remembered from nearly fifty years ago, yes it’s been close to fifty years since my last visit to British Columbia, not something I’m particular proud of, but it is a fact, and a lot of things have changed, and we are just on Vancouver Island right now. As I write this blog it doesn’t appear that we will spend any time on the mainland this year, we had hoped to spend the month of October there, but with the chance of a Mexican caravan, the mainland will have to wait for another visit.

Vancouver Island

Our time in British Columbia will be confined to Vancouver Island, so that is where I will direct the balance of this blog. The capital of British Columbia is the city of Victoria and it is located on the southern tip of Vancouver Island. Here are some statistics on the island 456 kilometers (283 miles) long and at it’s widest point 100 kilometers (62 miles) wide, the population of the island is just under 865,000 of which 397,000 live in the metropolitan area of Victoria. The island only has one main highway from Victoria on the south to Port Harding at the north, and is located on the east side of the island. Driving it is fun in the coach with stop lights every few miles, the highway has a concrete divider so it is not uncommon to have to drive to U-turns located at some intersections to access desired businesses or destinations.

Vancouver Island is located in the southwestern corner of the province of British Columbia. It is separated from the mainland of British Columbia by Johnstone Strait and Queen Charlotte Strait on the north and northeast, and by the Strait of Georgia on the southeast, which along with the Strait of Juan de Fuca along its southwest separate it from the United States. West of the island is the open Pacific Ocean, while to its north is Queen Charlotte Sound. The Straits of Georgia and Juan de Fuca are now officially part of the Salish Sea, which also includes Puget Sound.

A view across the straits of Juan de Fuca to Washington State

The fauna of Vancouver Island is similar to that found on the mainland coast, with some notable exceptions and additions. For example, mountain goats, moose, coyotes, porcupines, skunks, chipmunks, and numerous species of small mammals, while plentiful on the mainland, are absent from Vancouver Island. Grizzly bears are absent from the island, where black bears are prevalent, but in 2016, a pair of grizzlies were sighted swimming between smaller islands off the coast near Port McNeill. Vancouver Island does support most of Canada’s Roosevelt elk, however, and several mammal species and subspecies, such as the Vancouver Island marmot are unique to the island. Columbian black-tailed deer are plentiful, even in suburban areas such as in Greater Victoria, as well as the native Douglas squirrels. The Eastern grey squirrel is found in the south and is considered invasive for its voracious appetite and scaring away of the Douglas squirrels. The island has the most concentrated population of cougars in North America. The Vancouver Island wolf, a subspecies of grey wolf, is found only on the north part of the island. Harbour seals and river otters are common.

Resident orcas live in two major groups, one in the waters of the south island and one in the north, while a third group of transient orcas roam much farther and avoid the resident orcas. Residents are watched from a distance and are numbered, with many being named as well. Humpback whales and gray whales are often seen on their migration between Alaskan waters where they feed in the summer and southern waters such as around California and Mexico where they give birth in the winter.

The island’s rivers, lakes, and coastal regions are renowned for their fisheries of trout, salmon, and steelhead.

Vancouver Island lies in the temperate rainforest biome. On the southern and eastern portions of the island, this is characterized by Douglas fir, western red cedar, arbutus (or madrone), Garry oak, salal, Oregon grape, and manzanita; moreover, Vancouver Island is the location where the Douglas fir was first recorded by Archibald Menzies. Vancouver Island is also the location where some of the tallest Douglas fir were recorded. This southeastern portion of the island is the most heavily populated region of Vancouver Island and a major area for recreation. The northern, western, and most of the central portions of the island are home to the coniferous “big trees” associated with British Columbia’s coast – western hemlock, western red cedar, Pacific silver fir, yellow cedar, Douglas fir, grand fir, Sitka spruce, and western white pine. It is also characterised by bigleaf maple, red alder, sword fern, and red huckleberry.

The Vancouver Island Ranges run most of the length of the island, dividing it into a wet and rugged west coast and a drier, more rolling east coast. The highest point in these ranges and on the island is the Golden Hinde, at 2,195 m (7,201 ft). Located near the centre of Vancouver Island in 2,500 km2 (970 sq mi) Strathcona Provincial Park, it is part of a group of peaks that include the only glaciers on the island, the largest of which is the Comox Glacier. The west coast shoreline is rugged and in many places mountainous, characterized by its many fjords, bays, and inlets. The interior of the island has many lakes (Kennedy Lake, north of Ucluelet, is the largest) and rivers.

I have tried to tip toe around this topic but I have to just put it out there, the people on Vancouver Island have been for the most part the most unfriendly people that we have ever experienced, they even make New Yorker’s seem friendly, and we know New Yorkers. I understood when we decided to visit here that many in the western provinces did not like people from the eastern provinces, but this has been border line hostile. Even meeting someone on a local street and saying hello, will in most cases at best get you a cold glare, and when dealing with businesses’, that has been a horrendous experience. We will leave the Island with some great experiences but none have to do with the people of BC, in fact I think BC could just stand for “bring cash“, as everything here is over priced, and the whole experience has left us debating about our plans to come back to explore the mainland, I guess only time will tell on that topic, but whether it was at the campground or just meeting people in public, people have been cold at best and in many situations have been just plain nasty. There I said it, beautiful country but unlike Canada’s east coast, the people on the island are not an asset.

Blog 447

Goodbye CMR

Sunday September 25th, 2022: Well it is 6:45am and Mister Sam is playing with a cabinet door, just pulling it open far enough to let it bang closed, our coach has no end of cabinets, and he just does this to get us up, and it obviously has worked again. So Mister Sam has just had his morning treats and by seven o’clock I’m being rewarded with some valuable kitty lap time, I’m off shift today and actually only have one day shift left tomorrow. Miss Laurie on the other hand has three shifts in the office left, so she is off to to the office this morning, while I’m left behind at the coach with Mister Sam as I clean up a number of items around the coach and get the toad packed.

Well it was a busy, busy day, so now the toad is loaded, with just bikes and kayaks left to load, the campsite is pretty much packed up, the rugs are up and folded, just have to move the coach off of the flag pole base, but by now I’m pretty much whooped and after Miss Laurie got back to the coach she made pizza for dinner and we caught up on YouTube videos before calling it a night.

I would be amiss if I didn’t take a moment to mention the destruction caused to Port-aux-Basque in Newfoundland by the brutal hurricane Fiona. As we watched the news and seen how this typical little Newfoundland seaside village was ravaged by the storm surge and the beating continually by the waves. This touches us personally was we spent a lot of time in this village when we last visited Newfoundland, and we met so many amazing people from that area. To our RV family in Newfoundland, please be well and stay safe, and know our hearts and thoughts are with you.

Monday September 26th, 2022: Six o’clock and the call of nature, got me out of bed this morning, Mister Sam was still asleep on his cat post but wasn’t long getting up for his morning treats. Well today is my last shift at Country Maples RV Resort, and while I wasn’t looking forward to it I was looking forward to it being over. I need to finish off the packing the coach and I want to wash the coach before we pull out, so I need to get through today. I wonder what will be on my task list today?

Miss Laurie has shifts today and tomorrow, but wants to catch up on all of the laundry before we hit the road. Breakfast this morning is a couple of eggs easy over, some perked coffee before we head off for our work shifts. We had a report of a black bear in the park this morning, one of the staff let her dog out, and he immediately started to bark, when she went to see why there was a black bear at the back of her site, but she had no photo so as we told her there is no real proof.

Well today was full of crappy tasks, task one was the Gem EV car, it is quitting, and setting a code 15, and according to the innerweb it is because of low voltage, my voltage tests had found a defective battery, but after replacing it with another used battery, it does not seem to be charging properly. So I load tested all the batteries and three more batteries failed the load test, my conclusion … it needs six new batteries! This is not the first time that I have made this recommendation … jus’saying.

Next there was a couple of new signposts that needed to be dug in, then a little tractor work, to clean up an area at a campsite entrance, then there was a septic tank riser that needed to be installed, dug in by hand, in an occupied site, and finished the day by replacing some rotten landscaping ties at the clubhouse. So a day basically full of dirty little tasks, but it is officially over and I’m free!

Back at the coach shortly after four, Miss Laurie was well into the laundry catch up, and we spent the evening just kicking back, we had samosas for dinner before watching the most recent epesode of “The Rings of Power” before watching some Halloween baking competition on the food network just what you should watch before turning in for the night.

Tuesday September 27th, 2022: Well 6:30 apparently is my start time for my first day of freedom, there was no Baileys in my coffee this morning, I guess that’s because today is Miss Laurie’s last day, her last four hour shift in the office. Again Mister Sam was asleep on his cat post when I got up, I’m thinking this is maybe because of the new fall daylight hours, as we slipped into the fall season sometime last week when I wasn’t paying close attention. Pancakes for breakfast this morning, before I head up on to the coach roof to start the coach washing process, I knew it would be dirty up here but it was much worse than I was expecting.

So I spent over two hours cleaning the roof, and this was just a mediocre clean up job, not as detailed as it really deserved, and with the amount of tree sap on the roof, I will most likely be cleaning it for some time to come. But for now I was able to get the worst of it cleaned up, I needed to clean off the solar panels as we will be boondocking a lot as we head south. After the roof I started around the coach, but couldn’t get to the drivers side because of where we were situated in this site, I needed to unhook and move the coach over, the process had taken till noon with one side of the coach left to wash.

Our Beaver is buckled in and ready to go!

Next the bikes and kayaks, on the toad, by now the site is pretty much cleaned up and I have moved to a pull thru site for the night, the toad is already attached to the coach, everything is packed up, and we are ready to pull out early tomorrow. This afternoon we went to a gathering to celebrate a birthday for one of the staff members, it was a bit of a weird gathering with the birthday girl leaving early, which changed the whole dynamic of the get together, shortly after we left as well and returned to the coach, and Laurie made tacos for dinner because it “Taco Tuesday”.

We left the coach in travel mode tonight with the slide in, as we will most time when boondocking, it is easier and everything is still totally accessible with our slide in, this is one of the reasons that we loved this design and layout. So one last load of laundry, some showers, and we are pretty much done for the night, we started watching a new series “Resort”, lets just leave it at the jury is out on the this show, but it filled an evening, I’m thinking that I will sleep good tonight, because I’m tired.

Wednesday September 28th, 2022: Sorry but there’s not really much to tell here, we had tucked Thunder and the toad into one of the pull through sites last night, so we could just fire Thunder up before eight o’clock, unplug the power supply and we could drive straight out by eight. There will be no breakfast this morning, we are only going north on the TransCanada to Ladysmith today, as have a service appointment for Thunder is scheduled for 8:30, so we will have time to get some breakfast after we arrive. So by a few moments after eight o’clock CMR (Country Maples Resort) was in Thunder’s rear view mirror – now let the adventures begin as we embark on three month of new sights and experiences!

As we leave CMR our journey begins again!

Blog 448

Day 1822