Tourist in Your Town: Bowen Island - Action News
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British Columbia

Tourist in Your Town: Bowen Island

Bowen Island resident Lorraine Ashdown shares some of the flavours, sights and experiences that make Bowen Island an urban oasis.

Kayaking, labyrinth, 1,000-year-old Douglas fir among Bowen highlights

Bowen Island is just a short ferry ride from the Horseshoe Bay ferry terminal (Bridgette Watson/CBC)

Tourist in Your Town isOn The Coast'ssummer series. We visitcommunities in the Lower Mainland to explore hidden gems to check out for a summer visit.

This week ProducerBridgetteWatsoncaught aquick ferry ride from Horseshoe Bay to Bowen Island. That's where she metresident LorraineAshdownwho moved toBowen 15 years ago.

"I was attracted to the people, to the sense of calm, to the very obvious respect for the environment, to the absence of commotion ... there is still not a single streetlight here," Ashdown said."I also fell in love here."

LorraineshowedCBCsome Bowen Islandhighlights, starting on the boardwalk that leads to the Union Steamship Company.

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Union Steamship Company

The historic landmark is a launching point for many visits toBowen.

"This is a favourite destination to come and moor your boat and stay a few days," Ashdown says about the resort.

The historic Union Steamship Company Marina is a launching point for many Bowen Island visits. (Bridgette Watson/CBC)

Bowen Island Sea Kayaking

Ashdownsuggests visitingtheSnug Cafe nearby to start your day with a hearty breakfast.

"And then I would come down to Bowen Island Sea Kayaking," she said.

"Do that for a couple of hours, then you might want to eat again."

For that post-paddlingmealAshton suggests theDeli at the Ruddy Potato,in Village Square, or the Village Baker which is also in the square.

"After you're all charged up I'd go see Jamie Woodallat Zoom Zoom Scooters," Ashdown said about the carbon-positive scooter rental company.

"I would hop on a scooter and I would most likely go over to see 'Opa'which is the big thousand-year-old Douglas fir tree."

'Deeply spiritual place'

'Opa' the 1,000-year-old Douglas fir towers over the surrounding second-growth timber. (Bridgette Watson/CBC)

It is so tall you can't see the top of the tree from the base.

The tree is located at the XeniaCreative Development Centre. "It's a very deeply spiritual place."

At the base of the tree are offerings:sage,sweetgrass, and twigs tied in bundles.

"Bowen belongs to theSquamishpeople," she said. "You understand that when you see the tree."

The labyrinth at the Xenia Creative "gives you a lot of time to think," Ashdown says. (Bridgette Watson/CBC)

Labyrinth

Up adustytrailis the XeniaCentre's 11-circuit labyrinth, created in a spiral shape from 500 rocks.

Many labyrinths are seven or ninecircuits, Ashdown said.

"An 11-circuit labyrinth gives you a lot of time to think, she said. "When you get to the middle, I bet you $500 you'll feel different."

KillarneyLake

After the labyrinthshe recommends a scooter ride to Killarney Lake.

Awalk around the lake takes about 50 minutes, she said, "if you're relatively fit."

"But nobody has to be in a hurry."