Saturday, January 31, 2026
ADVT 
National

Reservations For Some Popular Parks Canada Sites In B.C. Open In Early January

The Canadian Press, 28 Dec, 2017 10:38 AM
    VANCOUVER — As British Columbia's south coast is buffeted by the latest snow storm, Parks Canada is giving outdoor enthusiasts a reason to think about summer.
     
    The Parks Canada reservation system for certain B.C. parks opens early in the new year.
     
     
    A news release from Parks Canada spokesman Dennis Wasylenko says reservations open at 8 a.m., on Jan. 3 for sites within the Gulf Islands National Park Reserve, as well as at the Fort Rodd Hill, Fisgard Lighthouse and Fort Langley National Historic Sites.
     
     
    In past years, campsites or so-called oTENTiks, cabin-like structures maintained by Parks Canada, have been snatched up very quickly.
     
     
    Another round of reservations opens on Jan. 8 for three overwhelmingly popular locations within the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve on the west coast of Vancouver Island.
     
     
    Along with reservations for travel on the West Coast Trail or for sites overlooking Long Beach, near Tofino, the release says campers can reserve spaces across the Broken Group of Islands, in Barkley Sound, north of Bamfield, for the first time.
     
     
    Parks Canada also says it is extending the season for its Tofino-area Green Point campground to take advantage of a unique natural event.
     
     
    "Instead of opening in May, the popular forested campground overlooking Long Beach will open March 8, just in time to take part in the annual Pacific Rim Whale Festival and see grey whales migrate past the national park reserve," the release says.
     
     
    Reservations can be made by visiting reservation.pc.gc.ca or by calling 1-877-RESERVE (1-877-737-3783).

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fate Of Toronto Man Accused Of Imprisoning Couple, Taking Baby Now Rests With Judge

    Fate Of Toronto Man Accused Of Imprisoning Couple, Taking Baby Now Rests With Judge
    The fate of a Toronto man accused of imprisoning a struggling couple in his home, participating in their abuse and forcing them to give up their baby so he could raise it as his own now rests with an Ontario judge.

    Fate Of Toronto Man Accused Of Imprisoning Couple, Taking Baby Now Rests With Judge

    Murder, Conspiracy Charges Stayed Against Gangster Jamie Bacon In 'Surrey Six' Killings

    Murder, Conspiracy Charges Stayed Against Gangster Jamie Bacon In 'Surrey Six' Killings
    Jamie Bacon was accused of the first-degree murder of Corey Lal, one of six people murdered in a highrise apartment in October 2007.

    Murder, Conspiracy Charges Stayed Against Gangster Jamie Bacon In 'Surrey Six' Killings

    Reena Virk Murder: Kelly Ellard Gets Conditional Day Parole While Serving Sentence

    Kelly Ellard, 35, wiped away tears on Thursday as a two-member panel granted her day parole for six months. She'll first have to complete a residential treatment program for substance abuse during that term.

    Reena Virk Murder: Kelly Ellard Gets Conditional Day Parole While Serving Sentence

    9-Yr-Old Girl Dies After Being Hit By Bus In Abbotsford Friday Morning

    9-Yr-Old Girl Dies After Being Hit By Bus In Abbotsford Friday Morning
    A nine-year-old Abbotsford girl has died from her injuries after being struck by a city bus at a crosswalk at the intersection of South Fraser Way and Hill-Tout Street around 8:20 a.m.

    9-Yr-Old Girl Dies After Being Hit By Bus In Abbotsford Friday Morning

    Time to end debate and build Trans Mountain, pipeline president says

    Time to end debate and build Trans Mountain, pipeline president says
    Ian Anderson of Kinder Morgan Canada says the company's Trans Mountain pipeline has undergone the most rigorous environmental review process in the country's history.

    Time to end debate and build Trans Mountain, pipeline president says

    Small businesses in B.C. in line for $18,500 relief for losses in wildfires

    Small businesses in B.C. in line for $18,500 relief for losses in wildfires
    Donaldson said funding is also available to not-for-profit organizations and Indigenous communities.

    Small businesses in B.C. in line for $18,500 relief for losses in wildfires