The Tswassen - Swartz
Bay ferry took us over to the southeast part of Vancouver Island in British Columbia,
Canada. We had two definite ideas on our trip list - Butchart Gardens and bungee
jumping - and the rest was all back roads exploring to seaside towns and unique
accommodations.

Butchart
Gardens' Sunken Garden. This exact location was a desolate mined rock quarry 100
years ago, and the wife of the quarry owner transformed it into a world renowned
garden.

Butchart
Gardens' Ross Fountain has multiple computer-controlled jets that continually
change their relative shapes, intensities, and directions. At night, a light show
is also synchronized onto the changing fountain shapes.

That
blur is me bungee jumping off the bridge above to the chasm and river below at Nanaimo's Bungy Zone. I
asked the dudes at the top to let out some extra rope so I would get dunked before
being whipped back up.

We
explored the out of the way waterfront town of Cowichan Bay, talking with locals
and investigating their little shops. True Grain Bread had scrumptious organic
breads, and the chocolate chip thingy was delicious.

The
town of Chemainus was economically going downhill after their mainstays of mining,
fishing, and logging started dwindling. So the townspeople wanted to create something
that would attract others from outside to visit, and they decided to create a
town full of professionally painted historical murals. They took the "build
it and they will come" approach, and it worked.

The
little roadside stands sprinkled throughout the back roads of Vancouver Island
are great. Karen decided that there were enough breads, fruits, vegetables, drinks,
meats, and more available that she tried to eat entire meals by just selecting
items from stands!

Apple
pressing equipment at Merridale Ciderworks in the rural town of Cobble Hill. The
cidery offered a self-guided walking tour of the orchards and the processing barns,
and then we sampled all of their alcoholic cider beverages. Our favorite: the
sweet and syrupy Winter Apple Cider.

Part
of Nanaimo's long waterfront boardwalk, complete with boats, beaches, beer, and
bagpipe players. Very nice setting with an interesting mix of history, shops,
restaurants, walking paths, parks, and pleasant scenery. We also explored the
boardwalks of Sidney, but preferred Nanaimo.

The
Nanaimo Bastion has a long and varied history as a centerpiece for the town: protection,
military arsenal, meeting place, clerks' office, and more. It overlooks the Nanaimo
waterfront now and can be toured inside.

We
really enjoyed the veranda - and the whole experience - at Fairburn Farms Bed
& Breakfast. It is on a working 130 acre farm, and has great hosts, lots of
intriguing history, fun places to explore, cute dogs, and a genuinely relaxing
peaceful environment.

Karen
feeding water buffalo at Fairburn Farms. The hosts make dairy products and sell
meat from the water buffalo, plus have sheep, chickens, logging / saw mill, a
tea room, casual tours, and of course the bed & breakfast.

Rowing
a boat around Yellow Point. We camped overnight at an old waterfront camping/cabin
resort called Mermaid's Cove, and borrowed this boat from the resort's dock. Picking
fruit from the orchard, dinner at the nearby Crow and Gate English-style pub,
and the beach bonfire rounded out our stay there.
British Columbia, Whistler, Vancouver, Capilano, Ziptrek, Shannon Falls 