Photo by Todd Cooper

Defecting — Temporarily — to Vancouver Island

Our neighbor to the north provides urban and rural delights

Chances are, in the past year you’ve probably thought it, maybe even said it: Let’s defect to Canada.

For many, our neighbor to the north symbolizes an idealized other. In this case, due to different forms of land management and protection, the grass literally is greener.

In search of a memorable early-summer vacation that spoke to our cosmopolitan and nature-loving sensibilities, my partner and I headed north to explore Vancouver Island. Our goal was to experience the city of Victoria and the island in nine days.

Our route to Victoria was surprisingly easy. From Eugene, we traveled to Port Townsend for two days. After exploring the quintessential hikes at Hurricane Ridge and the Hoh Rainforest, we took a 40-minute ferry ride to Victoria. On the upper deck we sat in the sun with fellow tourists and spotted a few orcas in the distance.

In Victoria, we found the iconic landmarks of old-world colonial grandeur: the Parliament Buildings and the Empress Hotel. Nestled between these vestiges of the past are reminders of the Esquimalt and Songhees First Nations peoples. Sculptures, totems, the First Nations Galleries and Our Living Languages exhibit at the Royal British Columbia Museum are an essential to understand Victoria and Vancouver Island.

It is rare to experience a city where the tensions between history, memory and representation are active parts of public visual discourse. Canada really is better, I thought.

Eager to experience the natural beauty of Victoria, we took the recommendation of a few locals and headed 15 miles north to Goldstream Provincial Park. The park is known for Railway Trestle hike — a short but steep two-mile hike to the Esquimalt and Nanaimo railroad bridge over Niagara Creek.

No longer in use, the bridge spans a canyon 450 feet below the tracks. At each end, the train tracks disappear into thick woods. In what felt like a scene from Goonies or Moonrise Kingdom, brave souls walk hesitantly on the tracks. In a mix of fear, adrenaline and reckless abandon, I ventured out on the tracks, marveling at the faith we place in wood, metal and screws.

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Top of the railway trestle hike at Goldstream Provincial Park

Photo by Todd Cooper

Leaving Victoria, we headed north on the Trans-Canada Highway 150 miles to Campbell River with our sights on our destination, Quadra Island. Known as one of the Discovery Islands, Quadra is among several small islands found along the inside passage between Vancouver Island and mainland Canada.

Accessible by a 15-minute ferry ride from Campbell River, Quadra Island is nothing short of paradise. From our guesthouse at Loon Point, we spent hours watching juvenile bald eagles and harbor seals.

Following a recommendation from our host, we booked a half-day whale watching tour with Eagle Eye Adventures. Within the first half-hour our guide brought us to a pod of orcas. With our guide’s extensive knowledge of the local pod and the visiting transient orcas, we learned about the family dynamics of the specific pod we encountered. While we were fixated on the orcas, our guide called out, “humpback whale on the right!” In a specular moment, we turned to see a massive humpback whale gracefully come up for air.

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A humpback whale takes a dive

Photo by Todd Cooper

Having already exceeded my expectations, our tour continued along the archipelago of the Discovery Islands. In the calm waters, a pod of dolphins played in our boat’s wake. Next, we arrived at a series of rapids where a massive group of bald eagles gathered to feast on fish that rise to the surface.

In nothing less than a scene from National Geographic, we gasped as hundreds of eagles took turns swooping lazily down to fish. After several awe-inspiring encounters, our guide ushered us back to Quadra Island with an invitation to return in the fall for a grizzly expedition led by guides from the Homalco First Nations.

Our fancier and slightly envied next-door neighbor  Vancouver Island left us with plenty of reasons to return — one of which being our road trip was a perfect balance of adventure and ease. Our journey did stoke my fantasies of defecting and getting a kayak.

Nadia Raza is an instructor of sociology at Lane Community College. She is urban homesteading enthusiast and has been adopted by several unruly animals.