Two friends and I put our feet up at the sunny sidewalk cafe and set down our souvenirs near steaming coffee and gourmet sweets. And what souvenirs: bright, beautiful murals -- a little abstract, a little nature-inspired -- painted on large canvas banners.
My travel companions, art lovers on modest budgets, had gotten them at an eclectic gallery as I wandered nearby admiring the work of a Canadian artist I had never heard of and will not soon forget. Before that, we had visited an evocative museum in this beautiful Vancouver Island town, watched boats on its indigo harbor, stumbled into a First Nations celebration -- not a tourist event -- where we, tourists to our toes, were treated with great graciousness.
Urban treats, art, history, culture, a lovely harbor, a walkable city, friendly folks: You might think we were in Victoria.
It was Nanaimo.
Odds are, unless you're Canadian, you've never heard of Nanaimo. With a population of almost 84,000, it's the second largest town on sprawling, diverse Vancouver Island, 70 miles north of Victoria, far easier than that city to navigate, more affordable, and best of all, closer to the less-traveled areas of the island we most wanted to see.
A few days earlier, on a mid-June evening last year, my friends and I had taken a ferry from Vancouver west across the Strait of Georgia to Nanaimo. We'd been amazed to see smoke rising from Vancouver's gleaming downtown, the result of rioters trashing the lovely city after the Boston Bruins beat the Vancouver Canucks to win hockey's Stanley Cup. By the time we went back days later, it had been tidied up by mortified citizens and was again at its best. And yes, we also spent time in Victoria. But neither city was our true destination.
This trip, with friends of my youth, was aimed at exploring places on Vancouver Island where fewer people go than Vancouver (which is not on Vancouver Island) and Victoria (which is).
You could spend months visiting Vancouver Island's mountains, beaches, forests, towns and fringe islands and not see half of it. We explored energetically for 10 days, yet took in only slivers.