Touring B.C.’s Inside Passage through photos

British Columbia’s Inside Passage may be the one place on Earth where you’ll spot humpback whales feeding just offshore while a grizzly bear and two cubs forage for mussels on a nearby beach. By land or by sea, the region surges with life.
The area that encompasses the central and northern sections of the province’s coastline runs about 500 kilometres from Port Hardy to Prince Rupert, extending inland to the Coast Mountains.
See more photos.

Small tourism operators collaborate to make it through pandemic times


When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, tourism operators large and small had big decisions to make; most were forced to shut their doors for extended periods of time.

As lockdowns have come and gone, some smaller operators have banded together to make ends meet. 

Read the story.

Get up, stand up: A backcountry adventure

Stand-up paddle-boards are good not just for yoga or for tooling around at the cottage, but as vehicles for travelling deep into the Canadian backcountry

Read the story.

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