Accommodation and Experience Providers

Providing travel services throughout British Columbia, including discovering places to stay such as hotels, B&Bs, campgrounds, and more.

Strathcona Provincial Park
Strathcona Provincial Park, designated in 1911, is the oldest provincial park in British Columbia. Located almost in the centre of Vancouver Island, Strathcona park is a rugged mountain wilderness comprising more than 250,000 hectares. Mountain peaks some perpetually mantled with snow dominate the park. Lakes and alpine tarns dot a landscape laced with rivers, creeks and streams. To see and enjoy much of the scenic splendour means lacing up your hiking boots to backpack through the dense forests, stunning sub-alpine and alpine regions. While the high mountain peaks and deep shaded valleys of Strathcona Park are dramatic, it is easy to forget that beneath your feet lays a history stretching back 380 million years. Two areas Buttle Lake and vicinity and Forbidden Plateau offer a variety of visitor-oriented developments. The rest of the park is largely undeveloped and appeals primarily to people seeking wilderness surroundings.
Williams Lake Golf & Tennis Club
Set against the backdrop of the Chilcotin Hills and surrounded by evergreens, our par 71 golf course features gently rolling fairways and undulating greens, catering to golfers of all abilities. Players can enjoy breathtaking views of Williams Lake, the valley, and the city as they navigate the course's natural contours. Williams Lake, home to 12,000 residents, blends rural charm from its ranching and gold rush roots with a lively mix of services and industries. Located in a sheltered valley in central British Columbia, it’s 552 km north of Vancouver and 240 km south of Prince George. The area, with its forested hills and extensive trails, is a gateway to various outdoor activities, including whitewater rafting, mountain biking, and the famous Williams Lake Stampede. At the Williams Lake Golf & Tennis Club, you’ll experience warm hospitality, outstanding golf, and tasty pub-style meals in a picturesque environment.
Dickinson Family Farm
We have a small RV campsite in the middle of our orchard. 30 Amp or 15 Amp power available at most sites. Picnic table, fire pit at each site. Drinking water also at each site. Pay showers and clean outhouse. No Wifi.....want this to be a relaxing stay! Lots of places with Wifi not far from campsite. Very quiet but is a working farm.
Yellowhead Campground & RV Park
Beautiful campground bordering Swift Creek on the edge of Valemount, B.C., Close enough to walk into the town of Valemount. We have 42 service sites with power, water, picnic tables, fire pits and 30 tent sites with picnic tables and fire pits. Washrooms newly renovated in 2013, free hot showers, laundry facilities, sani dump in campground, free WiFi, sell bundled wood and have a small store in office. The Chinook salmon spawn in the creek in early August to mid August and it is a sight to see!
Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Visitor Information Centre
Operated by the Agassiz-Harrison Historical Society, the Agassiz-Harrison Museum & Visitor Information Centre preserves and promotes Agassiz-Harrison Valley history, heritage and culture of Agassiz, Harrison Hot Springs, and Harrison Mills. Amenities include our wheelchair accessible, family friendly 1893 heritage CPR station, which houses two museum galleries, archives, gift shop, and a full service visitor information booth. There is plenty of free parking and a picnic/play area in adjacent Pioneer Park. We are located off Highway 7 in downtown Agassiz, south of the railway tracks and within walking distance to local businesses and restaurants. We are open year round. Summer hours are 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM daily. Winter hours are 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM Wednesday - Saturday.
Blasted Church Vineyards
While everyone enjoys the wine and the view when they come to visit, the most asked question would have to be about our name...On a cool spring morning in 1929, a small crew from Okanagan Falls set off to a deserted mining camp some 16 miles away from home. Their mission: to dismantle an old wooden church and bring it back to Okanagan Falls.The plan called for a controlled blast of four dynamite sticks inside the church in order to "loosen the nails". Odd as it may seem, the explosion spared the wood from damage during dismantling.Save for losing the steeple, the plan succeeded. Now the 103 year old wooden church stands proudly in its second home of Okanagan Falls and is still an operating United Church. In keeping with its rather remarkable history, the church has since withstood the threat of two major floods, including the disastrous burst of the Okanagan Falls Dam in the early 1950's.In naming our VQA wines "Blasted Church" we celebrate the ingenuity of the initiative to move the church and honor those pioneers for their vision.
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