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![]() | Get Vancouver travel and vacation advice from over 1,000,000 VirtualTourist members. Post a Vancouver travel question and get unbiased, timely answers and insights from real travelers and Vancouver locals. | |
| Forum | Question | Posted By: | Replies: |
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| Vancouver | Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 06:14 AM UTC
Hi,
My wife and I will be in Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria region for 9 days/nights in mid-July. We will be flying in/out of Seattle and we are planning to drive to Vancouver. We like an good mix of city and outdoor stuff. Hiking, nature trails, mountains, forests etc. We also enjoy cafes, trying different cuisines, window shopping, city strolls. I have the following questions which will help us plan the trip better, (i) Any suggeested itineraries. How do we split the days among these cities. Especially how many days in Vancouver and Victoria since we might be returning to Seattle in a few months. Would we be able to cover Olympic National forest (western Washington) in the itinerary. Or will it be too cramped? (ii) Good locations/hotels to stay in Vancouver and Victoria - nothing fancy but descent and clean. (iii) Any recommendation for outdoor activities around Vancouver and Victoria - hiking, mountains, nature trails etc. (iv) How is public transportation within Vancouver? Or do we need to drive our car to most places. (v) Any not-to-miss attractions, events, activities in Vancouver/Victoria. we will be there in mid-July '08 Thanks a bunch! |
arunrm ![]() |
7 replies
[Reply] |
| REPLIES to SEATTLE-VANCOUVER-VICTORIA (1 - 7) |
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 06:48 AM UTC
Victoria is 2 days, Vancouver is 3 days, Seattle and ONF is 3 days. Your travel days will be 2 off days. That is the simple calculations.
Please look at the hiking options of the Baden Powell Trail in Vancouver and the Grouse Grind. The ONF is a full day trip
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YVRDave
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 09:31 AM UTC
I would recommend you do some research on Victory Island. You can take your car on the ferry, to and from Seattle. A very nice trip. One night in a bed and breakfast there is a good idea. Stay outside of the center of town and walk in. It is a wonderful port with many nationalities, the gardens there are beautiful, http://www.butchartgardens.com, you will find lots of pubs and music. Prostitution is legal there so you will see lots of colorful street walkers. The public transport is good in Seattle. There are lots of good places to stay to fit all budgets. The market place which is right on the water is a must see Seattle and a good place to eat and drink. If you stay at the big chain hotels you will be able to walk just about everywhere, if you pick a B&B on the outskirts you will use the buses. There is a large gay population in Seattle which adds to the enjoyment of the Seattle experience. Good Luck
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luckybluesman
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 09:38 AM UTC
We have 3 days in Vancouver in September and we are doing the following:
Day 1) Grouse Mountain, Capilano Suspension Bridge & Stanley Park Day 2) Day trip to Whistler on the Wjistler Mountaineer returning by floatplane. Day 3) Day trip to Victoria. Doing a whale watching cruise and a city & Butchart Gardens tour. Have a great trip Col & Sue
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2Cities1Love
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Sat May 31, 2008 07:24 PM UTC
You posted a similar post on Seattle's page .,.. I have a lengthy answer there discussing Seattle, Victoria, Vancouver, and the Olympics
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elbegewa
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Sat May 31, 2008 07:35 PM UTC
On second thought ... here is the same reply I posted on your Seattle thread ... lot's of times ideas in a reply prompt others
(i) Itineraries A couple of generic thoughts: In 9 days you would have time to do any 3 of these 4: Seattle, Olympics, Victoria, and Vancouver Id recommend either of the following: If you wanted to do all 4, IMHO the fastest reasonable would be as follow more days preferable: Day 1 & 2: Seattle: 2 days (maybe on one of those days driving to Mt Rainier?) Day 3: drive down I-5 to Olympia, thence across to the beaches at SW of Olympics, spend ½ day at beach Day 4: Drive along west side of Olympics to Port Angeles, stopping for ½ day for a rain forest hike Day 5: morning drive to Hurricane Ridge (Alpine terrain), walk a few hours, then back to Port Angeles and catch late ferry to Victoria (not many ferries, watch schedule closely) Day 6: Victoria Day 7: Ferry to Vancouver Day 8 & 9: Vancouver Day 10: Drive to Seattle A less rushed trip in 9 days would be: Day 1 & 2: Seattle: 2 days Day 3: take ferry from Edmonds to Kingston then drive towards Port Angeles. On the way choose to stop at Dungeness Spit for beach, or drive to Hurricane Ridge (Alpine terrain), walk a few hours.s Day 4: Morning ferry to Victoria, afternoon: Victoria Day 5: Victoria Day 6: Morning ferry to Vancouver, afternoon: Vancouver Day 7 & 8 Vancouver Day 9: Drive to Seattle take slower roads along Puget Sound instead of freeway, some beach stops Both above have lots of driving and lots of ferry trips (car + ferry = $) If you wanted to minimize driving, a possibility would be: Days 1, 2 & 3: Seattle: 2 days doing city things sans car, 1 day rent car and drive to Mt. Rainier Day 4: Passenger-only ferry downtown Seattle to downtown Victoria, afternoon: Victoria Day 5: Victoria Day 6: Morning bus & ferry to Vancouver, afternoon: Vancouver Day 7 & 8 Vancouver Day 9: Most of day in Vancouver, 6PM train to Seattle If given the choice, I would spend more time in Vancouver than Seattle more things to do. Ii Hotels: Ill leave to others, Ive lived both places and have friends in both, so never used a hotel iii. Outdoor activities: Seattle: Dive to the mountains (Mt. Rainier or many other places in Cascades 1 to 2 hrs away); Rent kayak or canoe on Lake Union; Stroll in parks (visit the outdoor Sculpture Park and/or Government Locks) Victoria: Rent bikes and ride the 55km long Galloping Goose trail (former RR) from downtown beside the harbor and along the strait of Juan de Fuca; go on a whale watching trip; rent canoes or kayaks and explore the water; stroll through Butchart Gardens; visit BC Museum; walk around Victoria Vancouver: For sure: rent bikes and ride the seawall from downtown around Stanley Park and around the entirety of False Creek to Granville Island lots of stops and sightseeing a great and full day leave lots of time for Granville Island en route there is a tremendous variety incl. views, nice beaches, parks, busy shopping and residential areas, its great Lots of walks possible in Stanley Park Go to North Shore: lots of ½ day hikes (get a guide book to show you); 3 examples: drive or city bus to top of Seymour lots of subalpine hikes while overlooking Vancouver; drive or bus to Lighthouse Park in West Vancoucer natural area on the shore of Burrard Inlet, nice hikes, nice views; Drive or bus to West Vancouver and hike the Capilano Canyon from the waters edge to Capilano dam (about 2,000 ft elev. gain) Being young and active dont bother with over-rated tourist traps of Grouse Mtn or Capillano Canyon Suspension Bridge. In North Vancouver Lynn Canyon Park has lots of hiking and a similar suspension bridge for free. Vancouver is a very cosmoplolitan city lots of cuisine from all over the world including especially Chinese and East Indian.
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elbegewa
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Sun June 1, 2008 05:12 AM UTC
Re public transport:
Vancouver has an excellent public transport system: susses, skytrain (its a subay downtown, elevated outside of downtown), seabus (a great and very frequent and fast ferry across Burarrd Inlet from Downtown to North Vancouver, with excellent transport connections at each end, and the small little passenger ferries running across False Creek between the downtown peninsula and Granville Island. Any with the *long* seawall meandering along almost the entire waterfront, excellent bike possibilities. Re things to do, festivals: see: http://www.tourismvancouver.com/visitors/things_to one of many interesting thing: in July Vancouver hosts an international fireworks competition in English Bay with each competitor allocated one night.
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elbegewa
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| Vancouver | Re: Seattle-Vancouver-Victoria Posted: Sat June 7, 2008 05:13 PM UTC
Thanks for all your responses. A lot of good information and this will help me plan our trip better.
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arunrm ![]() |
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