Vancouver Island North:  Escape Into Nature 
 

Vancouver Island North is a region of natural and cultural wealth.  It's where some of the world's greatest predators - cougars, wolves, bears and killer whales - maintain ecological balance in pristine waters and vast rainforests.  It's where First Nations people and their culture still thrive after 8,000 years.  You can see traditional big houses and the world's tallest totem poles here, watch native carvers at work and weave a cedar bracelet at a First Nations cultural gallery. It's where intrepid European settlers first began arriving in the 1800s, building fishing villages, clearing farmland and seeking to fulfil utopian dreams. 
 
The spectacular North Island area, under the jurisdiction of the Regional District of Mount Waddington, covers the northern third of Vancouver Island and large tracts of the adjacent mainland, where several remote luxury wilderness resorts can be reached by boat and floatplane. Ecoadventure in Vancouver Island's wild North is like nowhere else in the world.  You can kayak in waters abundant with sea life, including orcas and humpback whales, take a grizzly bear viewing expedition to the Great Bear Rainforest, fish for record-breaking salmon, ski the Island's deepest powder and hike the new North Coast Trail.  Friendly communities - including Port Hardy, Port McNeill, Port Alice, Alert Bay and Telegraph Cove - offer cafes and bistros, shopping, museums and art galleries, and  accommodation from waterfront hotels and cozy B&Bs to the latest in eco-lodging.   
 
Designation: Forest Capital of British Columbia 2010   
 
Population:  Approximately 12,000. Largest communities:  Port Hardy (3,800), Port McNeill (2,600) and Cormorant Island, including Alert Bay (1,300).  
  
Weather:  Vancouver Island North has a temperate coastal climate with a lush spring season that comes as early as the end of February and mild, dry summers with average temperatures in the 17C (63F) range.  Fall is crisp and cool, still ideal for outdoor activities, while winters are wet, but moderate, with seasonal temperature averaging 4C (39F).   
 
Economic Drivers:  Fishing, logging and mining have been the traditional mainstays of the Vancouver Island North economy. The region is among Canada's largest timber producers and is home to one of only a few specialty cellulose mills in North America. Other major industries include commercial fishing, aquaculture and tourism.  
  
Claims to Fame: 
 Old-growth Sitka spruce and 115 km (71 mi) of remote oceanfront at Cape Scott Provincial Park 
 The new North Coast Trail, a 43.1 km (26.5 mi) addition to the 17 km (10.5 mi) Cape Scott 
Trail 
 Boat-access only Broughton Archipelago Marine Provincial Park, BC's largest marine park 
 The whale sanctuary of Robson Bight (Michael Bigg) Ecological Reserve in the Johnstone 
Strait 
 About 200 northern resident orcas famous for rubbing their bellies on the smooth pebble beaches 
 Scenic gateway to the Haida Gwaii and Prince Rupert on the BC Ferries Inside Passage Route  
 Mount Cain ski resort, the best powder skiing on Vancouver Island 
 Elaborately carved totem poles, including the world's tallest, in Alert Bay 
 U'mista in Alert Bay, Canada's longest running First Nations museum and cultural centre 
 The world's largest burl, up to 30 tons and 350 years old, in downtown Port McNeill  
 Finnish history brought to life in Sointula, home of BC's oldest Co-op grocery store 
 Canada's last remaining stronghold of Roosevelt elk, the world's largest species of elk 
 
Best Beaches:  The 30 km (18.5 mi) of tranquil sand beaches in Cape Scott Provincial Park, including:   San Josef Bay, Nels Bight, Experiment Bight and Guise Bay. Other Vancouver Island North beaches: Storey's Beach (Port Hardy), Raft Cove (access via Holberg), and Mitchell Bay and Bere Point (Malcolm Island). 
 
Major Attractions: 
 Black bears eating sweet grass along "bear alley," the highway leading into Port Hardy 
 The Copper Maker Gallery, totems and big house on the Fort Rupert Reserve 
 Marine wildlife in  Cormorant Channel and Broughton Archipelago Marine Provincial Parks 
 Record-breaking salmon fishing  from April to September and halibut from April to October 
 The skeleton of a giant fin whale at the Telegraph Cove Whale Interpretive Centre 
 Grizzly bear viewing trips to the floating Great Bear Lodge in the  Great Bear Rainforest  
 Ronning's Garden, a 1910 exotic wilderness garden near Holberg, complete with Monkey Trees 
 The 6 m (20 ft) tall jawbone of a blue whale, the largest ever found, in Coal Harbour 
 Sink holes, canyons, limestone arches and wild caves at Little Huson Regional Park Caves 
 The magnificent beaches, islets and carved seas stacks at San Josef Bay 
 Cold-water scuba diving in the Browning Pass near God's Pocket Marine Provincial Park 
 Surfing at Raft Cove Provincial Park, with board rentals and lessons available in Port Hardy 
 "Heli-ventures'' and freshwater salmon and trout heli-fishing at luxury fly-in Nimmo Bay Resort  
 
Arts & Culture: 
First Nations art, culture and history flourish in the region.  Alert Bay on Cormorant Island is home of the outstanding Potlatch Collection at U'mista Cultural Centre and of Culture Shock, an interactive gallery and winner of a 2009 Aboriginal Tourism of BC (ATBC) award for its unique hands-on cultural experiences. At the Copper Maker Gallery on the Fort Rupert Reserve, First Nations carver Calvin Hunt has gained international fame. Port McNeill's Just Art Gallery specializes in fine Native American works by talented local First Nations artists.  
 
The Sointula Museum on Malcolm Island documents the early life of the idealistic Finns who settled here in the 19th century looking for a new socialist order. In Port Hardy, visitors can browse the West Coast Community Craft Shop, an expressive showcase for West Coast artisans. The Port Hardy Museum & Archives is a wonderful place to relive the colourful history of the early North Island settlers, including pioneering Danes who built dairy farms at rugged Cape Scott. The Port McNeill Heritage Museum, in a log house, pays tribute to the history of the local forestry industry.   
 
Festivals & Events: 
 Alert Bay Seafest in July 
 Filomi Days, each July in Port Hardy   
 Orca Fest, every August in Port McNeill 
 Coast to Coast Foot Roast from Holberg in August 
 Winterfest, held each November in Sointula 
 
Transportation Links: 
 Port Hardy is the last, most northerly stop along Vancouver Island's main highway, Highway 19. Vancouver Island North communities along the way include Sayward, Woss, Telegraph 
Cove and Port McNeill. Port Hardy is a 502 km drive from Victoria that takes approximately 6.5 hours, and is about five hours from Nanaimo and approximately 2.5 hours from Campbell River.  
 BC Ferries routes from Port McNeill connect to Alert Bay on Cormorant Island (45 minutes) and to Sointula on Malcolm Island (25 minutes). 
 The popular BC Ferries "circle tour'' links Port Hardy to the highly remote and photogenic coastal villages of Bella Bella, Shearwater, Klemtu, Ocean Falls and Bella Coola on the Discovery Coast Passage route.  The Inside Passage route is the equivalent of a spectacular 15-hour ocean cruise from Port Hardy to Prince Rupert. 
 Pacific Coastal Airlines provides regularly scheduled flights between Port Hardy Airport (YZT) and Vancouver International Airport (YVR).  
 Seaplane service is available between the communities of Port Hardy, Port McNeill and Alert Bay. 
 Port McNeill Airport serves small private aircraft and West Coast Helicopters, the "supplier of choice'' for Nimmo Bay Resort. 
 

 
 
 
Photos courtesy of Tourism Vancouver Island - Boomer Jerritt, ChrisCheadle.com  
