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Things To Do At Harrison Hot Springs Community

By Harriett Crosby


Visit Harrison Hot Springs Community to enjoy a weekend getaway, or a week long vacation. It's a small but busy resort community located just five hours from Vancouver, three hours from Seattle. Enjoy resort amenities, stay at a B&B, rent a condo or cottage, or bring a tent and your own boat too. Explore the outdoors, peruse art galleries and souvenir shops, dine at specialty restaurants or coffee shops.

Harrison Lake is a great place for all kinds of water fun including the Floating Water Park and Bridal Falls Water Park for family fun. Enjoy bumper boat fights and banana tube rides. Rent paddle boats or power boats. There's water skiing, white water rafting and ocean kayaking.

Eco tourists can join guided hiking tours or boating tours. Hell's Gate Air Tram is an exciting adventure taking sightseers through 7 mountain tunnels. Canada is known for its wonderful fishing and Harrison Lake is no exception. Join a charter or rent a power boat to fish for salmon, sturgeon, or steelhead trout.

Visit a living museum of an early 1900's general store at the Kilby Historic Site. Several local farms offer products and tours to the public. Stop at a hazelnut orchard, a dairy farm, or a poultry farm. The Back Porch is an antiques store and pottery studio. The Public Art Gallery hosts monthly showings by local artists. Twice a year the dedicated Multicultural Choir hosts a music concert. And just to say you did a little bit of everything, take in a stock car race at the Agassiz Speedway.

The festival season starts with the Tulips of the Valley Festival in April. June is Sasquatch Days. The local First Nation band returns to the area for war canoe races, a salmon barbecue, and Sasquatch storytelling. July is busy with Canada Day, the Harrison Art Festival, the Dragon Boat Regatta, and the Slow Food Cycle Tour. The Art Festival is 10 days of international music at the Hall and on the Beach, and a fabulous art market. Enjoy Bands at the Beach over Labor Day weekend. October is the Harrison Beer Festival and November the Bald Eagle Watch Festival. And of course December is Christmas in the Village.

The First Nations revered the hot springs for their supernatural healing properties. Visit the spa and resort for a dip in the healing waters, a massage, a body wrap, facial, pedicure, or manicure. Or just visit the public pool for a relaxing dip in the healing waters of the hot springs.

The snow covered mountains of this area provide a wealth of winter activities. There's downhill skiing, cross country skiing, back country skiing. There's dog sledding, snowshoeing, and snowmobiling. Warm up at the end of the day with a visit to the hot springs.

Harrison Hot Springs community is located on a lake, next to the hot springs, and surrounded by mountains. Find brochures and maps at the Visitors Centre. Explore Provincial Parks. Enjoy water activities, hiking, and biking. Come back in winter for fun in the snow activities. Don't neglect the art community with its music concerts and art galleries.




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