Vancouver - Whistler
Vancouver is ranked as one of the most beautiful
cities in the world, serving as an excellent place to start or end a self-guided
tour. Visitors enjoy the city's spectacular setting, First Nation’s cultural flavor,
diversity of attractions, and fabulous cuisine. This
region is home to both Vancouver, British Columbia's largest city and Whistler,
a world-renowned year-round ski resort. Greater Vancouver straddles the lowlands
of the Fraser River and the Coast Mountains of southwest B.C. This is the most
populated region of the province, with stunning geography ranging from oceans
to mountains, and includes temperate rainforests, alpine peaks, lakes, fjords
and fertile valley delta lands.
The
First Nations traditions and culture remain strong, rich and diverse in the Vancouver
and Whistler parts and have been shaped by the land, oceans, climate and creatures
within. Visitors can watch native artists carve a totem pole, explore traditional
lands and waters with an Aboriginal guide and experience a traditional First Nations
healing and purification sweat lodge with a native elder. There is a chance to
view some of the most exquisite Pacific Northwest native art available in art
galleries, cultural centers and museums, sample traditional foods and golf or
relax in native-owned, campgrounds. The Coast
Salish, one of the largest First Nations in the province, inhabits the entire
Vancouver and Whistler region. Amongst the Coast Salish are the Squamish, Lil'wat,
Sto:lo and Tseil-Waututh Nations. Throughout the region you are invited to share
their culture through interpretive centers, performance spaces, gift and art shops,
guided interpretive tours on water and land, ceremonies, and festivals. A
rare chance to see: - largest gathering of Bald Headed Eagles
- largest
red cedar tree in the world
- the longest suspension bridge in the world
- the world's second largest granite monolith
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