Vroom with a View

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28 August 2012

A drive up the Sea to Sky Highway, from Vancouver to Whistler, British Columbia, serves up some of the world’s most spectacular views. Here’s our picks for 3 top spots to stop.

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UB Hawthorn

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There are few highways in Canada as controversial as the Sea to Sky Highway (Route 99). Nicknamed the Ski-and-Die for the many people who have died while driving on it to ski in Whistler, it was the subject of intense protest when it was expanded for the 2010 Winter Olympics because of the environmental impact it was going to have on the area’s forests. The protests became so intense that police had to remove demonstrators, including Harriet Nahanee, a respected Squamish elder, who died from health complications, reportedly relating to her imprisonment.

Few, however, debate the beauty of Sea to Sky country. The 409 kilometre journey hugs the Pacific coastline around Vancouver, serving up spectacular views of Howe Sound, a series of fjords that stretch inland from the Pacific, before pulling away from the water and up into the semi-arid Coast Mountains.

As the massive Western Red Cedars of the coastal temperate rainforest around Vancouver give way to hardy mountain evergreen trees at the end of the road around Lillooet, the climatic change from sea to sky in this part of British Columbia is remarkable. One indicator is rainfall—North Vancouver’s average annual rainfall is 1,500 millimetres compared to Lillooet’s much drier climate that averages 400 millimetres. Here are a three recommended stops to make along the way.

A drive up the Sea to Sky Highway, from Vancouver to Whistler, British Columbia, serves up some spectacular views. Here's our picks for 3 top spots to stop.1. Squamish—Canada’s Outdoor Adventure Capital

Most people fly through Squamish on their way north to the ski town Whistler, missing out on Canada’s Outdoor Adventure Capital. Squamish means “Mother of the Wind” in the local First Nation Squamish language, attracting kite surfers and wind surfers from afar to rip through the waters of the Howe Sound.

Despite its gift of wind, Squamish is best known for the Stawamus Chief, an imposing 700 metre mountain with a steep rock face best known for its many rock climbing routes and surrounding bouldering sites. Whether you’re a climber or hiker, the Chief has a route for you. The main hiking trail will take an hour or so to get to the top and offers such magnificent views of Howe Sound that people come back time and again to repeat the hike. The parking lot is right off the highway, which services the hiking trail and some of the area’s climbing routes. For an added sight, take a side trail leading just south of the Chief to Shannon Falls, the third-highest waterfall in the province.

2. Brackendale Eagles

From late-November to March, Brackendale, on Squamish’s northern edge, is home to one of the world’s greatest concentrations of Bald Eagles, who spend their winters preying on easy meals of dead salmon exhausted from their run up the Squamish River. Though there are other sites in the province where eagles are abundant, Brackendale’s viewpoint is superb because it’s easily accessible. Walk along the viewpoint, hike along the rugged Squamish River or kick back with a drink in hand at the well-located restaurant. Peak viewing is from mid-December to mid-January. Exit just north of Squamish at Mamquam Road and head north on Government Road to the viewing area, Eagle Run Park.

A drive up the Sea to Sky Highway, from Vancouver to Whistler, British Columbia, serves up some spectacular views. Here's our picks for 3 top spots to stop.3. Britannia Mine Museum

If history is more your thing, just off the highway at Britannia Beach is the Britannia Mine Museum. Learn about the fascinating history of this former mining town and gain a better understanding of how mining works, and the minerals themselves, through interactive displays. You can also go underground for a feel of what it was like to mine Britannia’s dark tunnels. You’ll come away with a different perspective of mining and an appreciation for the difficult job.

Explore Canada all week long in an end-of-summer salute to the ultimate holiday destination: home.

 

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UB Hawthorn

Kiva Bottero writes about travel-living on his blog at The Mindful Word. He also writes and edits for a variety of other publications on the topics of mindfulness, spirituality, holistic health, and the environment. Bottero has lived in various places since 2006 and now calls the world his home.