Travel
/ Tourism Information
COMOX
VALLEY, Vancouver Island, BC
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Copes`
Islander Oceanfront Bed and Breakfast
1484 Wilkinson Rd, Comox, BC
Vancouver Island, British Columbia
Length : 454 Km (282 miles)
Width : 100 Km (62 miles)
Area : 32,134 sq. Km (12,408 sq. miles)
Courtenay/Comox
Distances by Road :
Victoria (219 Km),
Vancouver (126 Km - approx 4 hrs.
including ferry), Nanaimo (108 Km) |
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Comox means "Place of Plenty" and the Valley certainly lives
up to its name. With the ocean to the east, and mountains to the west,
the Comox Valley offers a wide range of cultural and recreational opportunities.
Gateway to picturesque Hornby and Denman islands on one side, and to the
renowned Mt. Washington Alpine Resort on the other, the Valley remains
one of the few places where you can ski, golf, dive and kayak all in the
same day.
LOCATION
The Comox Valley is situated mid-way on Vancouver Island's
east coast, encompassing the City of Courtenay, the Town of Comox, the
Village of Cumberland, the rural areas of Merville and Black Creek and
CFB Comox Airbase. It is bordered on the west by the Beaufort Mountain
Range with its breathtaking Comox Glacier and Strathcona Park, and on the
east by the Strait of Georgia, Comox Harbour and Baynes Sound. The Valley
area extends south to Royston, Union Bay, and Fanny Bay and includes Denman
and Hornby Islands. It extends North to Oyster River near Black Creek and
the sands of Saratoga Beach and Miracle Beach.
CLIMATE
The region enjoys short, mild winters and warm, dry summers.
Weather systems that bring heavier rainfall and storms generally pass over
us en route to the British Columbia mainland. The Comox Valley is one of
the few places in Canada where, in the winter months, one can ski in the
morning and golf in the afternoon.
Click here
for current Comox weather conditions.
GETTING HERE
The Inland Island Highway
(Highway 19) has superseded the old Island Highway (Highway 19A) as the
main access route to the Comox Valley. Highway 19, a four-lane expressway,
allows quick access from Nanaimo to the Comox Valley. Highways 19 and 19A
link the Comox Valley with southern Vancouver Island. Approaching from
the north, Highway 19 links the Comox Valley with Port Hardy at the northern
end of Vancouver Island. The Comox Valley is a three hour drive north from
Victoria, a 70-minute drive from the ferry terminal at Departure Bay in
Nanaimo, and a 90 minute drive from the Duke Point terminal south of Nanaimo.
Comox Valley Regional Airport
in Comox is fast becoming a regional transportation hub. There are daily
direct flights from Vancouver airport and Westjet now operates daily connections
between Comox and Calgary and Edmonton in Alberta. Small aircraft and floatplanes
land at the Courtenay Airpark near downtown Courtenay. Via rail
operates a dayliner passenger service between Victoria and Courtenay. Daily
coach
lines connect all parts of Vancouver Island with the Mainland, and
local bus service is also available in Courtenay, Comox and Cumberland.
Those travelling by boat will find a full range of facilities including
moorage, showers, restaurants and shops adjacent to the Comox Marina. Regular
ferry service links the British Columbia Mainland and Washington State
to the Comox Valley on Vancouver Island. Click on the link below for more
information on ferry routes, and travel
to the Comox Valley.
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LOTS TO DO
The historic Filberg Lodge on Comox Harbour will captivate
you with its beautifully landscaped waterfront gardens, charming Herb Gardens,
and the Tla wa sints guy a las Totem Pole. Filberg Lodge hosts the annual
Filberg
Festival every summer on the August 1st long weekend, when hundreds
of British Columbia's best artists and performers display their artwork,
their crafts and their music.
The Comox Valley boasts three excellent museums. The Courtenay
and District Museum has exhibits of Native Indian heritage, pioneer
settlement and local paleontology, including British Columbia's only reconstructed
Elasmosaur fossil. The Cumberland
Museum offers displays of pioneer Chinese heritage and coal mining.
The Comox Air
Force Museum focuses on the history of aviation, with permanent exhibits
reflecting the heritage, customs and traditions of Canada's Air Force.
Historic aircraft are preserved at the museum's Heritage Air Park, including
the recently restored H-21 Piasecki Flying Banana. The restoration of a
WWII Spitfire is the museum's current project.
Comox is home to four marinas, which hold over 500 pleasure boats
and a commercial fishing fleet. The marinas
are protected by a rock breakwater. The breakwater is in turn protected
by Goose Spit, which extends out into Comox Harbour, providing one of the
safest year-round harbours on Vancouver Island. Comox Harbour is a great
launching spot for some of the best salmon fishing in the world. The Comox
Marina offers a boat launch located right next to Marina Park, with plenty
of parking, washroom facilities and a play area for children.
Some of the best saltwater fishing on the island, particularly
for salmon, can be found in the waters of the Strait of Georgia north of
the Puntledge River Estuary between Courtenay and Comox, and off of Cape
Lazo, King Coho, and Bates Beach. The valley's lakes and rivers are also
superb flyfishing waters.
The protected, nutrient rich waters off the east coast of Vancouver
Island provide an astonishingly rich display of underwater life - scuba
divers won't be disappointed!
Golfers can tee off at their choice of 6 year-round
golf
courses and 3 seasonal courses.
The Comox Valley abounds with parks
and beaches. Strathcona Park, Vancouver Island's largest and
British Columbia's oldest, provincial park and Seal Bay Regional Nature
Park to name just two.
The Comox Valley comes alive in winter with world-class skiing
at Mt. Washington Alpine Resort, located 19 miles (31 km) west of
Hwy 19 at Courtenay. Mount Washington (elevation 5,216 feet/1590 m) has
long been known for having good snow conditions from early in winter to
well past Easter. The snow here is often deeper than anywhere else in British
Columbia, and occasionally anywhere else in the world! In 1995, Mt. Washington
had more snow than any other ski resort in the world. This accounts, in
part, for Mt. Washington being the second-busiest winter recreation destination
in British Columbia, behind Whistler/Blackcomb. Mt Washington also provides
excellent hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding in summer, or you
can simply make the 40-minute trip to Mt. Washington to ride the chair
lift and enjoy the wonderful views of the surrounding area.
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...on beautiful Vancouver Island, British
Columbia...
Your West Coast Canadian Beachfront Holiday Retreat
Copes` Islander Oceanfront Bed & Breakfast
and Vacation Rental Accommodation
Comox, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada
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