Tag Archives: Victoria

Victoria, BC and Gulf Islands – Day 5 – Sidney and Travel to Pender Island

Today we are moving from our campground in Sidney, outside Victoria to Pender Island. Pender Island is where my mom lives and a large part of the reason for this trip. Our ferry isn’t until the afternoon. Since it is the ferry that the locals take when they just need to run into town to do some errands and it is a holiday on the following day it is going to be very busy.

On the Ferry
On the Ferry

We start our day taking down the campsite, burying the kids in the backseat. We need a bigger vehicle but that will have to wait. We went into Sidney which is this gorgeous little village on the ocean. It is an extremely walkable town and we traversed the entire main street. This is another place that I stop at frequently when I lived on Pender. It has a number of great new and used bookstores that I could spend hours in. We also stopped and picked up a picnic lunch to eat in the ferry terminal.

Ian and the Crab
Ian and the Crab

While we were on our walk we stopped outside the Ocean Discovery Center. We didn’t have time to go in but there was a pool outside with various local creatures in it. Ian made friends with a crab. In the picture Ian is walking like a crab and clicking his fingers. The crab followed him which was cute. We were debating between coincidence and learned behavior from tourist throwing food in.

The last few cars to squeeze on
The last few cars to squeeze on

We got to the ferry terminal about an hour and half before the sailing and had our lunch. We also met up with my mom in the line. She had been in town for some tests. We both got on the ferry but lots didn’t. They will have wait for the next sailing which will probably also fill up. At least they are now first in line but it is a 3+ hour wait. There used to be a hole in the fence that would allow you to sneak out and walk to a nearby pub for some good food while your car waited in line. The hole is long gone thanks to increased security. As you can see this is a much smaller ferry than the first one we were on and has much less in the way of amenities.

Our Campsite Under a Big Cedar Tree
Our Campsite Under a Big Cedar Tree

We got to Pender and set up our camp again. We then took the electronics to my mom’s place to be charged. We couldn’t stay long as she was tired from her day. We had an early dinner and read books for the rest of the evening.

Favorite Things…

Ian – Ferry to Pender
Margaret – Ferry to Pender
Philip – Sidney Bookstores
Mom – Used bookstore and finding some books by Monica Hughes that she had been looking for.

Linking up at…

Hip Homeschooling

Victoria, BC and Gulf Islands – Day 4 – Royal BC Museum

The note taking for the day started in the middle of the night. Margaret had somehow ended up out of her sleeping bag, cold and barely awake she tried to crawl into Philip’s. That woke him up and he decided that she was an invasive species. You know those moments that you know your family, particularly big brother, are not going to let you live down for years? Well…

Today we spent the entire day at the Royal BC Museum. The place is massive and certainly takes a full day. It also means that this post will only be the highlights. The last time I was here was a child and I remembered a number of things but most of it was new or updated.

It is a little disconcerting to find item you remember in a museum.
It is a little disconcerting to find item you remember in a museum.

The first exhibit we went to see was on gold and the search for gold. There were rumors of a gold mountain. Some of these stories came from finding indigenous people with gold artifacts. These took years of gathering and were passed down many generations. They also frequently had religious significance. They were commonly stolen and melted down. Explorers thought that since the indigenous people had so much gold there must be a big source of it. This would start a gold rush and bring people from all over the world in search of the gold mountain; South America, Fraser Valley here in BC, Australia and Yukon.

Waterwheel
Waterwheel

The next area was one that has been there since I was a child and I have very found memories of. They have a working waterwheel and a place to pan gold. Ian spent 20 minute, half a hour there. He kept wandering away from us making it difficult to read some areas as we tracked him down. My wife reads everything and it turns out that so does Philip. I read what interests me. It meant that I did most of the chasing and sat, Yeah, watching him pan for gold.

Gold Panning
Gold Panning

We then saw a replica of Captain George Vancouver’s ship, the HMS Discovery. He was tasked with making charts of the west coast for Britain. A number of places are named after him or others on his ship.

Cougar
Cougar

The natural history section had a lot of familiar area but with new information particularly to do with the environment or climate change. One part showed how the biomes in BC would move as we moved to a warmer, drier climate. In the displays there is a cougar that is hidden around a corner. If you are just walking through you will miss him. You have to stop and peek back around a corner. Just like a real cougar.

Living Languages
Living Languages

The top floor was all first nations. The entrance to the area had poles with a traditional greeting of the languages of the various tribes. The residential school system tried to eradicate these languages for all sorts of bad reasons. Unfortunately most of these languages are now endangered.

Longhouse
Longhouse

The longhouse crest and carvings belong to a local chief. He allowed the museum to use them and his son and grandson did the carving. It would be like letting someone use you family crest.

Longhouse Interior
Longhouse Interior
Cave Art
Cave Art

We also bought a ticket to one of the Imax shows. We decided on “Journey to Space” which tells the story of the Space shuttles, the building of the ISS and what is coming next. The next is eventually putting people on Mars. The only thing I didn’t know about already is the thought of using an inflatable habitat for the journey. While it sound insane it actually makes sense and offers the most protection to the crew.

We went back to Sidney and had Ice cream since it was hot and back to camp for a dinner of beans and wieners, a camp classic.

Favorite Things…

Ian – Panning for gold and the waterwheel
Philip – Gold exhibit and the Imax show
Margaret – Old Town in the museum. ( There was an replica of early Victoria you could walk through)
Mom – The First Nation Languages exhibit.

Linking up at…

Hip Homeschooling

Victoria, BC and Gulf Islands – Day 3 – Church and Parliament

We started the day attending church at the Cathedral that my wife had when she had attended university. The church was built in 1889. We all enjoyed the classic Gothic architecture. I particularly liked the addition of native art especially in such a prominent place as the alter and candle holders. Overall I think the images tell this story better.

St Andrews Alter
St Andrews Alter
St Andrews Stained Glass
St Andrews Stained Glass
St Andrews Arches
St Andrews Arches
St Andrews Exterior
St Andrews Exterior

After church we walked to the parliament buildings. There was a tour leaving just as we got there and we managed to join that group. The tour taught us all some cool things.

The first is that the main entrance is only for heads of state. Since our head is actually Queen Elizabeth she can enter through the main doors but our Prime Minister can’t. He has to use the side entrance.

Parliament Chamber
Parliament Chamber

The second is that the chamber is set up in accordance to the original British requirements. The distance between the two halves and thus the ruling party and the opposition is two sword lengths. Long ago the elected politicians in Britain would carry swords. The wave in the seating is because as our population has grown so has the number of representatives. That required more seating and that was the only way to fit them in. It also means they are no longer two sword lengths apart.

Queen Victoria Stained Glass Diamond Jubilee
Queen Victoria Stained Glass Diamond Jubilee

The third thing was BC’s big mistake. While we were getting our coat of arm approved Queen Victoria had her Diamond Jubilee (60 years on the throne) and we made a wonderful stained glass. Unfortunately the proposed coat of arms was reject for a number of reasons. First was the lion on top which is restricted to the Queen’s use only. Second we had a setting sun (Sun sets in the west) over the Union Jack. That could be interpreted as the sun setting on the British Empire. The stained glass got ‘lost’ in the basement for 60 years. The rejected coat of arms can be found everywhere on the building from the main entrance to the lamp posts.

Sequoia
Sequoia

After the tour we walked the grounds. There is a Sequoia tree that was planted in 1908 and is huge.

Totem Pole
Totem Pole

There was also a totem pole titled “Knowledge Tree” that was carved for the Commonwealth Games in 1994.

After that we walked along the waterfront. There is a seawall and artist booths. On caught our eye. He carved whales out of wood such that the grain was an integral part of the art. He talked about the energy of the wood. While I can’t understand that, it was clear that it was real for him and allowed him to do such beautiful carvings.

Hungry Seagull
Hungry Seagull

We had lupper at a fish place called “Red Fish Blue Fish” that my mother recommended and we had seen on “Eat St”. Even though it was the middle of the afternoon there was a line up. It was worth it though. We did have some friends just waiting for us to drop something. I guess seagulls like it better battered and fried.

Coin Operated Busker
Coin Operated Busker

Coming off the seawall we came upon this street performer. That mildly freaked out Ian. She had been completely motionless and as Ian walked past she moved and played a note like a machine that hadn’t quite wound down. Ian quickly recovered and we put a loonie in her hat and she played a song. She has the act down perfect right down to luring us in. The little yellow tag is her busker’s license.

Victoria Chinatown Entrance
Victoria Chinatown Entrance

Our next stop was historic Chinatown. This is the oldest Chinese community in Canada and dates back to 1858. The only older on in North America is San Francisco. On of the books that Philip read in Grade 5 called “White Jade Tiger” By Julie Lawson is partially set in this Chinatown during the building of the railway. It also features Fan Tan Alley which we visited. Would you enter an alley like this without know what was in it?

Fan Tan Alley Entrance
Fan Tan Alley Entrance

What is in it is a collection of shops. Originally there were many of such alleys which are now gone but they preserved this one.

Fan Tan Alley Inside
Fan Tan Alley Inside

We then walked back to our car and drove back to the campground for an early night.

Favorite things…

Ian – Everything
Mom – Coat of Arms mistake
Philip – Parliament Building and the mistake
Margaret – Cathedral particularly the architecture

Linking up at…

Hip Homeschooling