Considerations for biggish, unsettled families who are debating whether to move to Nanaimo, Ucluelet or Tofino.
Nanaimo
is like Victoria's tattooed younger sister. The downtown core is just a
few blocks of staggering winos (based on our ~10 minutes spent there),
with concentric circles of big-box shops around it. First impression
pretty bleh. But turns out there's ANOTHER concentric circle of
awesomeness! An amazing aquatic centre with wave pool, three slides and
in-water playground! Trail systems that connect kids to their schools
via ravines! Mountain biking and trail running galore! A wooden boat
museum that lets kids make their own (crooked) model boats with hammer
and nails! It seems like people are very happy there once they've carved
out a nice circuit of outdoor pleasure. Also, houses do not cost 25x
the average family income, which is refreshing.
Sadly,
you will need to be an Etsy maven, B&B host, or otherwise work from
home, because the floatplanes are fickle (fog) and the ferry is well
over two hours (the terminals are interminable) ...
commuting to Vancouver is not really on the cards.
Ucluelet
is Tofino's younger sister who wears jeans. Tofino is just plain
charming. We had a really nice time in both towns despite endless rain.
We found geocaches, climbed Incinerator Rock in violent winds, ate the
world's #1 best fish chowder (in Jakob's opinion) at Sobo (recipe
online! You need fish bones and pounds of salmon), We watched a
floatplane rattle its way into the sky (looked awfully doubtful that it
could stay up, left the water at like 40 kph), hiked to a lighthouse
while Jakob trail-ran and the girls cowered in terror (there were signs
about active wolves), saw a large pod of whales shooting white plumes
into the air.
It rained the whole time. At bedtime we asked
the girls what their favourite part of the day was. Sophia said, "going
on the windy beach." Tova said, "the rain". Turns out she is extremely
fond of jumping in puddles, so her shoes are now sodden. It's pretty
ironic that we can barely coax her to hike a kilometer among gorgeous
views, but she's happy as a clam in miserable weather. At Cathedral
Grove everyone was floundering at the fringe of the mud-washed trail,
trying to stay dry, while she splashed gloriously through the thick
black goop, all dimples.
So it looks like Vancouver
Island would be a wonderful place to spend a few years: you'd eat a lot
of good chowder, get a pearly complexion, own several pairs of gumboots,
and sneer mellowly at the busy-bee mainlanders who are too rabbity to
take life at the right pace (slang: to "Vancouver" someone is to make
plans with them and then cancel at the last minute). But first you need
to retire, save 2 million bucks, or make it big on Etsy.
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You, too, can have translucent skin if you jump in puddles! |
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It's so foggy around here that the mooing, pressure-driven buoyhorn is much more useful |
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Graveyard of the Pacific |
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Sophia, helpless to prevent Tova from triumphantly soaking her New Balances |
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A giant 800-year old cedar. Aurora poses behind three layers of concealment |
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The exact moment when Tova discovered that her Provincial Park Scavenger Hunt included a "loup-loup" |
Are you considering giving up your nomadic life to settle on an island?
ReplyDeleteNo idea
DeleteVancouver Island! Do it! I'll come too. I"m sure we can come up with something to sell on Etsy...I'm super artistic (Tova's last photo is priceless)
ReplyDelete