I am escaping the city this weekend for one of my favourite place to relax – Salt Spring Island. A hop across Georgia Straight, it takes me back to my island roots (I grew up in Nanaimo).
Every time I go, which is about six or seven times a year, I pop in on the Saturday Market in Ganges, the epicentre of Salt Spring Island. Lined with booths selling locally-made products ranging from soaps and fudge to jewellery and fresh herbs, the market is a great place to wander through the crowds, meet locals, listen to great tunes and lounge in the nearby park. I never fail to stock up on drool-worthy soaps, goat cheese and olive tapenade. Of course, the soaps only smell good enough to eat.
Having endured hundreds of ferry rides over the years, I am a bit jaded by the irritatingly inconvenient ferry schedule to get to and fro, but the beauty of the Straight, Active Pass, the lighthouse at the northern tip of Mayne Island, the possibility of spotting whales, eagles and seals, all make the trip worthwhile.
If you can afford it, hop on a floatplane from downtown Vancouver and arrive at the foot of the market in style. The quick trip only takes about 35 minutes from take-off to landing compared to the two to three hours by ferry. On a sunny day, there really is nothing more breathtaking than the west coast from high above the land and sea.
A few great places to stay include the Salt Spring Inn or Hastings House or find a rental accommodation or campsite around St. Mary’s Lake. There are also fistfuls of B&B’s to choose from. Gracious and laid back, the island folk are lovely hosts, although they do complain behind your back at the sheer number of tourists that unleash their vacationing fury upon the island each summer. Its one of those can’t live with ‘em, can’t live without ‘em situations.
Here are a couple of photos I took last year from a Salt Spring Air floatplane trip from Coal Harbour, Vancouver to Ganges Harbour.



























