Category Archives: Travel

Day on the water

Day 1 of our B.C. road trip summer holiday was all about water. We started the morning teaching Piper how to swim in the Elk River (with many opportunities for the kids to wade), and then carried on with the water theme at Surveyor’s Lake in Kikomun Creek Provincial Park, home of the western painted turtle. There we swam, kayaked and looked for crayfish under logs near the shore.

Bennett and Avery get wet while teaching Piper how to swim and fetch floating sticks.

Bennett and Avery get wet while teaching Piper how to swim in Fernie, B.C.

High: Avery finds and captures the first of many crayfish.

Low: Bennett refuses to go kayaking to look for turtles, but makes up for it by jumping off the dock and swimming until his lips turn blue.

Outcome: Fun! We love Surveyor’s Lake. With no motorized watercraft allowed, it’s perfect for families. It’s also usually five degrees warmer than Fernie.

B.C. road trip

It’s official — our family is on the road. We’ve loaded up the SUV and pointed it southwest to Fernie, B.C. We’ll stay there a couple days, then drive west to Osoyoos, on to Vancouver, and end our holiday in Vernon.

I love the journey when the scenery is gorgeous! Pictured here: hay bales, canola fields and the Rocky Mountains in the distance en route from Calgary to Fernie, B.C.

I love the journey when the scenery is gorgeous! Pictured here: hay bales, canola fields and the Rocky Mountains in the distance en route to Fernie, B.C. from Calgary.

Leading up to our summer vacation I kept coming across stories with headlines like, How to survive family road trip hell. I read stories urging parents to involve children in the trip planning and others suggesting a ban on electronic devices (a return to the good old days of license plate alphabet). Curiously, all of these advice-y columns include the word “survive,” as if the act of driving from one place to the next with tots in tow is something to suffer through and hopefully come out of intact (or, at least, sane).

We’ve been driving to Fernie regularly with the kids for four years now and while at times I just want the drive to end, there’s a certain comfort in the familiarity of it all: turning west at Nanton, the hills and cows along Highway 22, the huge windmill after turning on to Highway 3, and of course, the World’s Largest Truck in Sparwood. But what I love about a driving holiday somewhere different are all the new sights to see and places to discover along the way. We’ll be breaking new road trip trails driving through Kokanee and Sasquatch country near Creston, and on through Castlegar and Grand Forks. Will the kids get car sick? Will the dog?  Will we, ahem, survive?

Of course, we bring tons of snacks and all the electronic devices to stem off boredom: DVDs, LeapPads, iPhone music and iPad games, but the kids spend a lot of time looking out the window like I did on the annual summer trip from Colorado to Kansas when I was little. Plus, our puppy Piper is a passenger with us this summer and that helps entertain the kids in the back seat.

We did a version of this trip two years ago, when the kids were six and three and it went surprisingly well. I am curious to see how we’ll fare this time. I will, literally, keep you posted. My aim is to upload at least one photo a day that encapsulates our adventures, with a couple of graphs describing the day and its high and low. Will we survive the family road trip? You be the judge.

5 reasons to rediscover Heritage Park

It had been a of couple years since we visited Heritage Park Historical Village during summer with the kids in tow. While it was fun back then, I recalled a lot of walking, and some weird rule about not being able to take strollers on the steam engine train. So it was nice to return with now-older children who could walk everywhere without complaint and last for hours while running on a diet of hot dogs and ice cream for energy. (For those readers not from Calgary, Heritage Park is an “old-time village” from 1910, complete with a main street, old-fashioned midway rides, farm animals and pastures, a settlement fort and an aboriginal encampment. The idea is you get off the train and it’s like you’ve travelled back in time 100 years.)

What’s more, we visited during the Calgary Stampede, on Stampede Family Day, so you can imagine the crowds at Heritage Park = non-existent. How refreshing to just walk on to rides, watch live street theatre with a front-row view and stand in line for ice cream for exactly two minutes. (Not that I don’t like the Stampede, but you gotta love how empty other Calgary attractions are during these 10 days.)

What I liked most about this outing was the leisurely pace. We just wandered from place to place as the mood suited. Here are our Top 5 stops:

1. The Ferris wheel

That's Blake and Avery waving from the very top car on the Heritage Park antique Ferris wheel.

That’s Blake and Avery waving from the very top car!

Yes, it’s old-school. All it does is spin around in a circle and take you up and down, up and down, but it’s fun. As a bonus (possibly because the lineup was so short), Blake and Avery got to go up and down for about 25 revolutions. Nice!

2. Street theatre

We loved watching the live street theatre next door to Alberta Bakery at Heritage Park.

We loved watching the live street theatre next door to Alberta Bakery.

Don’t worry, I haven’t gone all cultured on you. The street theatre that randomly takes place at Heritage Park ain’t high-brow, but it’s a lot of fun. We got to watch a boxing match between a cheer-worthy challenger and a boo-worthy title defender, plus all the drama on the sidelines. Avery loved seeing the story unfold (while she munched on a fresh chocolate chunk cookie from Alberta Bakery), and for once Bennett didn’t pull my hand to go somewhere else.

3. I scream, you scream…

Three cheers for chilly cones from Vulcan Ice Cream Parlour at Heritage Park.

Three cheers for chilly cones from Vulcan Ice Cream Parlour.

We all scream for ice cream! Eating a generous scoop of ice cream from the Vulcan Ice Cream Parlour was a particular treat for Bennett, who is dairy- and gluten-free. The ice cream shop offers a dairy-free version and we made sure he didn’t eat the cone!

4. The animals

By "the animals" I mean farm critters, not my children...

By “the animals” I mean the farm critters, not my children… Here they are on a fence, a better vantage from which to watch a calf frolicking in the distance.

Two years later and a park highlight was still looking at all the animals, especially the horses and lambs. The only drawback? Petting must be done through the fence. Plan a visit during Rural Roots, Aug. 24 and 25, 2013, when there will be a petting zoo set up for kiddos.

5. Wide open spaces

Home, home on the range...

Home, home on the range…

Maybe it’s just me, but I loved how open and uncrowded Heritage Park felt on Sunday. It was beautiful July day and there weren’t any lineups or rude people, just families and history buffs having some good, clean fun. After the flooding in Calgary in June, a dose of the “good ‘ole days” home on the range nostalgia is much needed (and appreciated!).