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This North Island Map contains many links to our pages
on Towns, Lakes, Parks and Campgrounds. Each green triangle
is a link to a Park. Click on a live area of the map
to link to the desired page.
As 97 percent of the population lives on the southern
half of Vancouver Island, outdoor recreationists in
search of solitude come north. Much of Vancouver Island
once looked as the north still does today.
Thanks to recent government protection, some of the
remaining wilderness, such as Brooks
Peninsula, a stubby 14 km long projection on the
northwest coast of the island, has been preserved. Other
places, such as the most northerly tip of the island,
are sheltered by the elements from the preying eye of
industry.
Cape
Scott Provincial Park is one of the wildest, windiest,
most woebegone locales in the province for human habitation.
Journeying to Brooks Peninsula or Cape Scott is only
for those whose mettle has been tested by the repeated
exposure to the bellows and blast-furnace of nature
in the raw.
You do have to travel farther afield here in order to
penetrate the cloud-laced valleys, coastal rain forest
and the open ocean waters of the sounds like Nootka
and Kyuquot. Some of this landscape's mysteries lie
tucked away inside the vaulted domes of underground
caverns. Afloat in a sea kayak on an open sound, or
deep inside the Quatsino cave system, be prepared to
experience a blend of connectedness and jubilation,
isolation and terror, when adventuring here. One thing
is guaranteed: at the end of the day, you'll sleep well.
Gentler conditions prevail in the sheltered waters of
Johnstone Strait, where the kwakwaka'wakw First Nations
are the traditional gatekeepers. To experience a tranquility
that passes all description, paddle these waters where
whales rub and salmon run in summer months.
Getting There
The top half of 450-km long Vancouver Island is
served by a maze of logging roads and Highway 19 (North
Island Highway), which links Campbell
River with Port
Hardy, the southern terminus of BC
Ferries' Inside Passage and Discovery Coast Routes.
BC Ferries links the north and central coasts (Prince
Rupert and Bella Coola respectively) with Vancouver
Island at Port Hardy.
Travel to ports in Nootka
Sound and neighbouring Kyuquot Sound to the north
is via MV
Uchuck lll, a working freighter based in Gold
River that provides a year-round passenger and freight
service.
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