The Daily Courier

Hockey in the palm trees

NHL hockey, beer and giant redwoods anchor a father-son weekend in San Jose, California

- By STEVE MacNAULL The writer was a guest of Visit San Jose and Air Canada, neither of which read nor approved this article before publicatio­n.

As we emerge from the urban, palm tree forest, there it is.

The 17,500-seat SAP Center, a silver-sided edifice better known as the Shark Tank, is the home rink of the National Hockey League’s San Jose Sharks.

This is definitely going to be NHL hockey, California-style.

Me and my son, Alex, have walked three blocks up downtown’s main drag of Santa Clara Street to the arena from our hotel, the Art Deco landmark De Anza.

The entire street is lined with palm trees, but the swath of widened sidewalk approachin­g SAP Center is populated with even more of the tall distinctiv­e trees swaying in the early evening breeze.

It’s quite the welcome for two Canadian guys seeking Canada’s national-obsession sport in sunny California.

We’re Vancouver Canucks fans and the Canucks will be taking on the Sharks tonight.

Inside, we find we’re not the only ones cheering for Vancouver.

Several hundred of the capacity crowd are wearing Canucks jerseys, Alex and I included.

Watching sports live always has an electric energy.

It’s even more electric when your team excels.

We had lots to applaud with Vancouver besting the Sharks 5-2, with two goals coming from the

Canucks’ young phenom Elais Pettersson.

Similar scenes play out at the SAP Center when the other Canadian NHL teams come to town — Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, Winnipeg Jets, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens.

More and more Canadians are finding their way to San Jose, not just because they have tech business in Silicon Valley, which San Jose is the hub of.

Canadians are also visiting San Jose to watch hockey, enjoy California’s balmy weather, hike in the redwood forests and delve into craft-beer culture.

It was tech business traffic that lead Air Canada to start flying twice a day between Vancouver and San Jose in May 2016.

But it’s the increase in leisure traffic that prompted the airline to add a third daily flight in May 2017.

Soon, Toronto will get in on the action with Air Canada announcing it will start flying between Canada’s largest city and the Silicon Valley capital in May 2020 using the new, 130-seat A220 narrow-body jet.

Taking the city of one million’s catch phrase of ‘San Jose is not just techy, but fun’ to heart, Alex and I embark on the ultimate Canadianbo­ys-in-San-Jose itinerary.

After Saturday night’s hockey game, hiking in the Bear Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve is in order on Sunday morning.

Northern California is famous for being home to Sequoiaden­dron giganteum, the redwoods that are the biggest trees on the planet.

The Alma Trail takes us two kilometres through dappled sunlight to a stand of the most majestic redwoods in the 580-hectare preserve.

The largest is Big Alma, a 70metre-tall, 10-metre-around-thebase beauty.

The small crowd gathered there oohs and aahs and everyone takes their turn getting their picture taken with giganteum.

Alex and I certainly take the photo opportunit­y, but the best picture I snap is of three women friends tree hugging Big Alma as a shaft of daylight illuminate­s them.

It’s also where we run into another Alex, Alex Cocina, from nearby Los Gatos, who is out hiking with friends.

We get to talking and he provides us with the best recommenda­tions for the rest of our trip.

That means it’s off next to Loma Brewing Co. in Los Gatos for a lunch of Loma Vida craft lager and jackfruit salad bowls.

Inspired by the brewery experience, we plan our own impromptu, self-guided beer tour.

After catching an Uber back to downtown San Jose, we hit ISO Beers to sip Modern Times Tenbier on the sunny patio; Original Gravity Public House for Kolsch

Cali Coast in the beer garden; and Floodlight Brewing for its own Remain Present India Pale Lager on the rooftop terrace.

To work off that beer the next day, we do some bouldering at The Studio Indoor Climbing Gym, followed by the IMAX movie Back from the Brink: Saved from Extinction at The Tech Interactiv­e (formerly The Tech Museum).

Check out SanJose.org and AirCanada.com.

 ?? STEVE MacNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend ?? Jean Merie Rieck, left, of Flagstaff, Arizona, Jee Yeong Malik of Oakland, California and Melissa Hassler of Oakland hug Big Alma, the biggest tree in the Bear Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve at 70 metres high and 10 metre diameter at the base.
STEVE MacNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend Jean Merie Rieck, left, of Flagstaff, Arizona, Jee Yeong Malik of Oakland, California and Melissa Hassler of Oakland hug Big Alma, the biggest tree in the Bear Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve at 70 metres high and 10 metre diameter at the base.
 ?? STEVE MacNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend ?? SAP Centre, home of the NHL’s San Jose Sharks, is located downtown on palm-tree lined Santa Clara Street.
STEVE MacNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend SAP Centre, home of the NHL’s San Jose Sharks, is located downtown on palm-tree lined Santa Clara Street.
 ?? Special to The Okanagan Weekend ?? Alex MacNaull, left, and his reporter dad, Steve MacNaull, at the San Jose Sharks-Vancouver Canucks game at SAP Centre.
Special to The Okanagan Weekend Alex MacNaull, left, and his reporter dad, Steve MacNaull, at the San Jose Sharks-Vancouver Canucks game at SAP Centre.
 ?? STEVE MacNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend ?? Waitress Megan at Loma Brewing Co. in Los Gatos delivers the Loma Vida beer and jackfruit salad bowl.
STEVE MacNAULL/The Okanagan Weekend Waitress Megan at Loma Brewing Co. in Los Gatos delivers the Loma Vida beer and jackfruit salad bowl.

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