WORLDNORTH AMERICACANADACAMPBELL RIVER
Campbell River is situated on the east coast of Vancouver Island and is renowned for being the "Salmon Capital of the world". The town has little to appeal to the average tourist, but is heaven for Hikers, Kayakers, Fishers and Naturists. Here you will find a slow, quiet island lifestyle and beautiful scenery.

Get in


By plane

Campbell River is accessible by air from Vancouver and has regular flights to other destinations on the mainland.

By bus
You can get to Campbell River by several bus routes too. Island Coach Lines (Laidlaw) serves Victoria to Port Hardy, and points in between, including Campbell River. Connect to Island Coach Lines from Vancouver aboard Greyhound or Pacific Coach Lines.

By car
Travelling north on Highway 19 takes approximately 2 hours (153 kilometres / 95 miles) from Nanaimo or 3.5 hours (264 kilometres / 165 miles) from Victoria. You can also take the Inland Highway, which will reduce time by an hour, but is a dull and pointless drive. Highway 19 is well worth the drive for the beautiful ocean views.

Get around


Campbell River does run a limited service local bus route, but a car would be an ideal form of transport to allow you to take advantage of the environment.

See


Campbell River hosts a busy arts and culture scene. There is a art museum and the Campbell River and Kwagiulth museums which display the local First nations History and importance to the area.

Do

  • Elk Falls Provincial Park - Situated just outside C.R, this park has wonderful trails for Hikers or Bikers. As for the falls, they are surrounded by old growth trees and are 80ft high.

  • Go on a Whale Watching or Grizzly Bear tour.

  • Quadra and Cortez Island - Quadra Island is located right beside Campbell River and just a twenty minutes ferry ride away. It's main communities are Quathiaski Cove and Heriot Bay, which connects to Cortez with a ferry accessible by car.





  • Campbell River is a city in British Columbia on the east coast of Vancouver Island at the south end of Discovery Passage. Campbell River claims a population (2006 census) of 29,572 and has long been known as the salmon capital of the world.

    The first settlers were members of the Kwakiutl First Nations and Weewaikai (Cape Mudge) and Wewaykum (Campbell River) tribe members of the Laich-kwil-tach First Nations.

    The town is served by Campbell River Airport, a seaplane base called YHH at Campbell River Harbour, a BC Ferries route to Quadra Island, and highways which connect it to neighbouring towns such as Courtenay, The Village of Sayward, Gold River and Port Hardy.

    Economy

    The people of Campbell River rely on the forestry industry, the mining industry (Campbell River has been home to many famous miners such as Curtis Davidsen), the fishing industry, and the tourism industry. It is arguably the salmon capital of the world, sharing a healthy rivalry with nearby Port Alberni, the other contender. It is known for its sport fishing and many tourists come to fish. It is also a major centre for salmon farming with several head offices located in the community serving nearby salmon farms.

    The 1948 construction of the BC Power Corporation's Elk Falls hydroelectric dam — later named the John Hart Generating Station — allowed Crown Zellerbach to establish the Elk Falls Pulp and Paper Mill in 1952, which greatly improved the town's economy.The mill is currently owned by Catalyst Paper Corporation and is still the city's single
    largest employer.

    NVI Mining operates the Myra Falls zinc, gold and silver mine in nearby Strathcona Provincial Park.
    Quinsam Coal operates an underground coal mine southwest of town. The mines employ hundreds of people, many of who live in Campbell River.

    The city is also a growing market for retirees. The construction is booming in Campbell River and more and more retirees are choosing to move from elsewhere in Canada to purchase a home and retire there.

    There is a cruise ship dock now working. Cruise ships go by Campbell River daily, but have never made stops, so a dock would provide large amounts of tourism and revenue provided the ships dock. The dock will provide an expected 150 full-time jobs, and an extra $8.4 million for the region annually (reported in the Campbell River Mirror newspaper in December 2003.) The dock has been completed and several cruise ships will visit in 2007 (reported in the Campbell River Mirror newspaper in January 2007).
    History

    Captain George Vancouver reached Campbell River with the ships HMS Discovery and HMS Chatham in 1792. The captain and his botanist, Mr Archibald Menzies, discovered a small tribe of 350 natives who spoke the Salish language. A Lekwiltok or Laich-wil-tach (Kwakiutl or Kwaguilth Native Indian Band) war party, heavily armed with European rifles, paddled south from Johnstone Strait in the middle of the 19th Century and were in control of the area when the HMS Plumper came through on a cartography mission under Captain George Henry Richards around 1859. Dr Samuel Campbell was the ship surgeon, and historians believe his name was given to the river by Richards. The community took the name of "Campbell River" when its post office was constructed in 1907 Likewise, the name of the ship's Lieutenant Zachary Mudge is preserved in the nearby Cape Mudge.

    Sports fishermen travelled to the area as early as the 1880s, especially after the tales from noted anglers such as Sir Richard Musgrave and Sir John Rogers. The formation of the Campbell River Tyee Club in 1924, over concern regarding over-fishing of the salmon stocks, actually served to increase the popularity of the area. E.P. Painter, for instance, moved to Campbell River the following year and opened his Painter's Lodge in 1929. Commercial fishing was a large industry for many
    years. The town's magister Roderick Haig-Brown purchased a fishing cabin on Campbell River and wrote some books on flyfishing that are influential and well-loved around the world.

    Industrial logging took off in the 1920's with Merrill Ring and Company, Bloedel, Stewart and Welch
    and Comox Logging. A large forest fire started near Buttle Lake and burned much of the valley in 1938.
    Rock Bay, Menzies Bay, and Englewood all were big logging camps.

    Campbell River prospered after 1912 and it became a supply point for northern Vancouver Island, Quadra Island
    and Cortes Island. The E and N Railway was surveyed to Campbell River, yet it only reached Courtenay, forty miles
    south. After the Second World War, Campbell River became a boom town and industrial centre with the building
    of the Elk River pulp mill, and nearby mills in Tahsis and Gold River. Logging and mining in the area prospered.
    There is a lead zinc mine nearby, and coal mines, while a large copper mine operated to the north.

    Climate

    Campbell River enjoys a mild climate, with temperatures usually between 0°C (32°F) and 32°C (90°F) year-round. The most precipitation is measured in November, at 218.0 millimeters (8.6 in) on average. While January sees the most average snow, 152 millimeters (6 in), only 10 millimeters (3/8 in) will be seen actually accumulating. In the winter months occasional Arctic bursts from the interior of British Columbia can make their way onto the coast bringing temperatures below zero. If a Pacific low reaches the coast a large snowfall can occur. Snowfalls in excess of 45 centimetres (16 in) have been recorded in a 24 hour period and the greatest snowfall was 53.3 centimetres (1 ft, 9 in) in 1978.
  • Climate statistics are from the Campbell River Airport weather station.


  • Sister cities
  • Ishikari, Japan (other sister cities in Japan)


  • Education

    Public schools are administered by School District 72 Campbell River.

    Other facts

    Campbell River is located near Seymour Narrows, the site of the largest man-made non-nuclear explosions. In 1958 Campbell River miners tunneled for 28 months to plant explosives and demolish a navigational hazard called Ripple Rock, a submerged peak which made the narrows so treacherous that Captain George Vancouver claimed it was "one of the vilest stretches of water in the world" upon sailing it in 1792. Adjoining Seymour Narrows is Menzies Bay, British Columbia.

    Movies filmed in Campbell River:
  • The 13th Warrior
  • Are We There Yet?
  • Final Destination 2
  • Fisherman's Fall
  • Going the Distance
  • Seven Years in Tibet
  • The Scarlet Letter


  • People From Campbell River Include:
  • Barry Pepper the actor
  • Iris Graham the actress
  • Rod Brind'Amour the hockey player (born in Ottawa but grew up in Campbell River)
  • John Davison (born in Campbell River but grew up in Australia)
  • Alden Penner of The Unicorns
  • Nicholas Thorburn of Islands and The Unicorns


  • External links
  • The City of Campbell River
  • Campbell River Mirror newspaper
  • CR Community Network
  • Campbell River Chamber of Commerce
  • The technology of Pacific fishing, with museum pictures
  • A short history of Campbell River
  • The taming of Ripple Rock
  • A short history of Campbell River (tourist edition)



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