The Daily Courier

Let’s go forest bathing

The Japanese may have coined the term, but one of the best places to forest bathe is on Salt Spring Island

- By STEVE MACNAULL

In the mood for a little forest bathing, my wife, Kerry, and I make a beeline for Mount Erskine Provincial Park.

We really didn’t even know what forest bathing was until five minutes earlier.

That’s when Janet Clouston, executive director of the Salt Spring Island Chamber of Commerce, told us this Gulf Island between mainland British Columbia and Vancouver Island was famous for it.

“Not to get too weird on you, but being in the forest affects you on a cellular level,” she said.

“You just feel good. But you also get your immune system boosted from the antibiotic and antibacter­ial properties in the air.”

This trippy sentiment is further popularize­d in the best-selling book, The Hidden Life of Trees.

The nature-starved Japanese coined the term forest bathing to reflect how they soak up positivity while spending time in the woods.

And Salt Spring has capitalize­d on the phenomena by marketing itself as the perfect forest bathing destinatio­n for greenery seeking Japanese.

However, since the majority of tourists to Salt Spring are Canadians, Americans and Europeans, other cultures are catching onto this pastime.

Not that people haven’t been trekking and hiking in the woods for thousands of years, out of necessity and for recreation. But now it has a catchy new moniker. Choosing to do our forest bathing on Mount Erskine is double-whammy fun.

We soak in the filtered sunlight along the Juniper loop trail, benefittin­g from both the exercise and the positive ions.

Plus, we come across whimsical little fairy doors along the way built into rock outcroppin­gs and tree trunks.

Fairy doors are another of Salt Spring Island’s claims to fame.

No one knows exactly how the doors came to be, but they are a heck of a tourist attraction for children and adults alike.

There’s sport in spotting the doors, wonder in reveling in the myths of forest nymphs and elves and good luck to be had making a wish on the door step or leaving a little gift or note.

One persistent girl, or woman, named Lola left a note at each one of the five Mount Erskine fairy doors, announcing her name and asking to meet a fairy one day.

Salt Spring is known as being off-beat, hippie, artsy, laid-back, recreation­al, culinary, eco-friendly, luxurious and scenic.

As such, Kerry and I endeavour to experience it all.

We eat Pacific halibut fish tacos on the harboursid­e patio of Oystercatc­her restaurant in the heart of Salt Spring’s main village, Ganges.

We sample the vintages at Salt Spring Vineyards and Garry Oakes Winery.

We assemble at Vesuvius Bay for a sunset outing with Gigi Judd of Gigi Paddleboar­d Rentals.

We pat goats and feast on cheese and ice cream made with their milk at Salt Spring Island Cheese Co.

And we canoe on Bullock Lake in front of our serene rented accommodat­ion at The Cottages on Salt Spring Island.

The 50 West Coast weathered cedar-style cottages in the developmen­t are for sale for prices ranging from $369,900 to $700,000-plus, but there are enough in the rental pool that you can also book them nightly from $175 to 275-plus.

Get to Salt Spring Island via ferry from either Vancouver or Victoria or take a float plane from Vancouver Harbour or Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport’s seaplane terminal.

Check out SaltSpring­Tourism.com and CottagesOn­SaltSpring.com.

 ?? STEVE MACNAULL/Okanagan Weekend ?? The Cottages on Salt Spring Island are the most recent addition to the island’s accommodat­ions options.
STEVE MACNAULL/Okanagan Weekend The Cottages on Salt Spring Island are the most recent addition to the island’s accommodat­ions options.
 ?? STEVE MACNAULL/Okanagan Weekend ?? Above: Hiking Mount Erskine Provincial Park on Salt Spring Island provides all the benefits of forest bathing from a sense of well being to a boosted immune system.
STEVE MACNAULL/Okanagan Weekend Above: Hiking Mount Erskine Provincial Park on Salt Spring Island provides all the benefits of forest bathing from a sense of well being to a boosted immune system.
 ?? STEVE MACNAULL/Okanagan Weekend ??
STEVE MACNAULL/Okanagan Weekend

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