Vancouver Sun

LET THE SUNSHINE IN

Outdoor enthusiast­s love B.C. haven

- LAUREN KRUGEL

Howe Sound is glass-still on the voyage from Gibsons Landing to Keats Island, save for the odd motorboat wake jostling the kayak. The peace is also broken momentaril­y as a seal bursts out of the water, letting out a hearty snort before it dives back beneath the surface. Gibsons is a quaint and colourful town at the southern end of B.C.’s Sunshine Coast, a 180-kilometre stretch of picturesqu­e oceanside communitie­s and jagged coastline along the Strait of Georgia. Many visitors to Gibsons get a kick out of the numerous nods to the longrunnin­g Canadian sitcom The Beachcombe­rs, which was filmed in the town and ran from 1972 to 1990. The Persephone, the tug piloted in the show by log salvager Nick Adonidas (played by Bruno Gerussi), sits on a prominent street corner in the centre of town, right by Molly’s Reach, the café where much of the action took place. “Someone gets their picture taken every day in front of Molly’s Reach,” says bed and breakfast owner Celia Robben, who heads up Sunshine Coast Tourism. “To a specific demographi­c, it’s definitely a draw … If you’re under 30, you don’t have a clue.” Most visitors arrive at the Sunshine Coast via ferry from Vancouver’s Horseshoe Bay. The northern part of the Sunshine Coast can also be accessed by ferry from Comox, on Vancouver Island. Robben estimates up to half a million visitors come to the region every year, with summer by far the busiest time. The permanent population is only about a tenth of that. “We’re very much a cottage country for Vancouver and the Lower Mainland,” she says. Robben and her hus- band moved to Gibsons about a decade ago from Houston to open their B&B, Arcturus Retreats. She recalls making the decision while on a ski vacation in Whistler.

“As we were driving up the Sea to Sky (Highway), we were looking over at the Sunshine Coast, seeing our future home at a distance,” she says. That was in February. “By July, we were house hunting.” Outdoor activities are a big draw, Robben says. In a climate where temperatur­es rarely dip below zero, kayaking, mountain biking and hiking can be done year-round.

In the winter there’s cross-country skiing and snowshoein­g on Dakota Ridge — a quiet alternativ­e to packed resorts elsewhere on the West Coast.

“You can come over here and be on the trails on your own,” Robben says.

For hikers on the Sunshine Coast Trail, warming huts are also available throughout the winter.

In Gibsons, there’s a steep but short hike up Soames Hill that ends with stunning views of the town, Howe Sound and the surroundin­g mountains. A gem for locals is Cliff Gilker Park, in Roberts Creek to the north, with trails of varying lengths and scenic views of waterfalls.

Farther up the coast is Skookumchu­ck Narrows Provincial Park, where hikers, if they time it right, can see powerful tidal rapids in action.

The Sunshine Coast is a magnet for art lovers, with painters, potters, jewelry makers and glass-blowers setting up shop in the region.

The region’s tourism website boasts the area is “home to the highest per capita population of artists and crafters in Canada.”

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 ??  ?? Keats Island is a quick kayak across Howe Sound from Gibsons Landing.
Keats Island is a quick kayak across Howe Sound from Gibsons Landing.
 ?? PHOTOS: LAUREN KRUGEL/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A view of Howe Sound from the top of Soames Hill, a short but steep hike on B.C.’s Sunshine Coast.
PHOTOS: LAUREN KRUGEL/ THE CANADIAN PRESS A view of Howe Sound from the top of Soames Hill, a short but steep hike on B.C.’s Sunshine Coast.
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