Dubbed Canada's 'Paradise on the Pacific', Vancouver Island is
an exquisite combination of dense rainforest, pristine coastline,
rugged mountains, glittering glaciers and crystalline lakes and
rivers, all within an easy distance from the Mainland of British
Columbia. The Island is 285 miles (460km) long and 50 miles (80km)
wide, and the Vancouver Island Ranges, running down most of the
island's length, divide it into a drier, undulant east coast and a
wetter, rockier west coast. The rugged west coast (known as the
Pacific Rim) is littered with bays, inlets and fjords and boasts
beautiful landscapes and a diversity of wildlife, making it a
popular spot for tourists, who come to indulge in hiking, fishing,
kayaking with Orcas, whale watching and more. This area does,
however, receive some of the heaviest precipitation in the world
and visitors should plan activities around the possibility of heavy
storms in winter and plenty of rain. Inland, one finds dozens of
lakes (the largest of which is Kennedy Lake), and dominating the
central part of the Island is the popular Strathcona Provincial
Park, home to the Island's glaciers, including the largest, the
Comox Glacier, as well an abundance of birds and wildlife that
includes Roosevelt Elk, cougars and wolves. Victoria, on the
southern tip of the Island, is the capital of British Columbia, and
home to just less than 50 percent of the island's population. The
city is a major tourist destination and visitors flock to enjoy its
many sights and sounds, including the Legislative Buildings and the
famous Butchart Gardens. Vancouver Island is well worth a visit and
with so much to see and do, one could never claim to be bored.Resorts:
Tofino