FlyOver Canada Need a little vacation? There’s a flight that leaves Canada Place every half hour, and it will take you from west to east and back.
Renew Gallery Since landmark destination Vancouver Architectural Antiques on Main and 8th Avenue shuttered its doors last winter, it may be a popular belief that treasure hunter extraordinaire Eric Cohen has retired. This is not true. Enter Renew Gallery.
Utrecht, the Netherlands Up until the Dutch Golden Age, Utrecht functioned as the heart of the Netherlands, a religious centre and an integral railway hub. Today, the stately medieval architecture is a backdrop for a large range of cultural activities and events.
Negril and Montego Bay, Jamaica Jamaica is a country of vivid colours—endless blue skies, transparent turquoise waters, dazzling white sand, lush green foliage.
Vancouver Tool Library Everyone knows someone with a well-equipped garage. But when asked to lend the one tool needed for this-or-that, they will emit a nervous sound and shrug uncomfortably. Not so at the Vancouver Tool Library.
Bibliophile Gregory Robert Freeman Over the last four years or so, 27-year-old bibliophile, autodidact, and historian Gregory Robert Freeman has assembled a collection of nearly 300 carefully chosen books, manuscripts, and legal documents dating back to circa 1270—plus about 130 modern books.
King Pacific Lodge King Pacific Lodge provides the ultimate in luxury adventure travel and ecotourism from its location in the heart of the Great Bear Rainforest on the West Coast of British Columbia.
The Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup The Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup is a conservation initiative begun by the Vancouver Aquarium in 1994 and now jointly led by WWF. Last year, an astounding 143,737 kilograms of trash were removed from 3,144 kilometres of shoreline in Canada.
Icebreaker Merino Wool in the summer? It sounds counterintuitive, but ask any Icebreaker devotee and they’ll be quick to teach you the ways of the wool—New Zealand merino, to be exact.
Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun grew up immersed in the political and cultural struggles of First Nations people. These concerns of his formative years continue to influence his work as an artist, and he is deeply unapologetic about his trenchant views.