What is a Vancouver Foodie Tour?



Vancouver Foodie Tours offers food tasting and educational walking tours, introducing locals and visitors to one-of-a-kind dishes that define Vancouver’s culinary scene. Guests indulge in a feast for their eyes, belly and mind, tasting signature dishes at award-winning Vancouver gourmet restaurants, food shops and food trucks. Participants learn about the origin of ingredients, how dishes are prepared, as well as the history, culture and architecture of Vancouver. This is the best way to see and taste Vancouver!

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Vancouver Tours on the Brill Trolleybus No. 2416 – Day 1



On the weekend of August 15th and 16th of 2015, I went on two amazing tours on the Canadian Car-Brill T48A No. 2416 Trolleybus. Built in 1954, this bus used to run on the various routes in Vancouver until 1984. Our tours went all over city, including Stanley Park and UBC, and was driven by the renown and retired bus operator Angus McIntyre, who drove buses in Vancouver for 41 years.

This is the video for the first tour on August 15th. We started at 7pm at Marpole Loop, and then went on the following itinerary (click the times to jump ahead to that part of the video):

0:39 – Departing Marpole Loop
5:34 – Arriving at Marine Drive Station
6:57 – Marine Drive Station
7:03 – Departing Marine Drive Station
8:03 – Northbound on Main Street
10:58 – Angus makes an introductory speech about the tour (sound is a bit low here, be sure to turn your volume up)
Not shown – We have a photo stop at a turnaround on 10th Avenue, just south of Broadway, Main, and Kingsway.
15:18 – Turning right from Main onto Broadway, then Kingsway
16:35 – They were passing around a picture of Angus McIntyre driving the GM New Look “Fishbowl” bus at the recent Vancouver Pride Parade.
16:50 – Continuing southeast-bound on Kingsway
18:21 – Angus introduces Don Ackman (not 100% sure of his name), a well-known Vancouver historian who runs tours in the city. Some comments are made about the possibility of running tours of various neon-light fixtures around the city, but many of those fixtures have gradually disappeared over the years.
21:45 – Passing the 2400 Motel near Kingsway and Nanaimo, which sports one of the few neon signs left in the city.
23:12 – Entering a turnaround at Kingsway at Slocan
24:54 – Northbound on Slocan Street (today’s trolleybus routes no longer run along this stretch, but the wires are still here to allow buses from Nanaimo to access Kingsway)
27:54 – Westbound on 22nd Avenue
29:37 – Arriving at Nanaimo Station
30:08 – Nanaimo Station
30:18 – Northbound on Nanaimo Street
31:01 – Angus makes a comment about the overhead advertisements on the bus.
31:47 – The Brill trolleybus crosses the new Powell Street Overpass for the first time ever. Before the overpass was built earlier this year, vehicle traffic had to go through a railway crossing.
33:09 – Turning left from Powell onto Main
33:33 – We spot some Transit Security Personnel conversing on the street.
33:58 – Due to water main construction on Pender Street, the #4 and #7 buses have been re-routed onto Hastings Street. To accommodate the detour, a new trolley wire switch was installed to allow for buses to turn right southbound from Main Street onto Hastings. Angus drives the Brill for the first time ever on this switch.
Not Shown – We drive down Hastings, then back on to Pender, then all the way down Georgia to the Stanley Park Loop.
35:15 – Stanley Park Loop
35:38 – Boarding the bus at Stanley Park Loop and taking a look at the interior and the advertisements.
Not shown – We take a 30 minute rest stop at the corner of Denman and Pendrell, in the heart of the West End.
37:16 – Southbound on the Granville Street Bridge with the interior lights off.
38:50 – Westbound on 4th Avenue
42:09 – Arriving at Blanca Loop. Angus announces that he’ll be doing a few loops here in an attempt to produce sparks on the overhead trolley wires.
42:37 – Angus begins his run around Blanca Loop.
44:10 – A large electrical arc is produced as the Brill traverses a switch.
46:26 – Angus comes out to explain what happened with that arc.
46:49 – Changing the destination signs at Blanca Loop, from a #4 Fourth to #17 Oak
48:16 – Suddenly, some random wandering troubadours (?) enter the bus to play a number for us just as we were leaving Blanca Loop. The things you see in this city…
50:08 – All passengers disembarking at the Marpole Loop, which is the end of our tour for today. However, there’s another tour happening tomorrow. You can view the video for the Day 2 tour here:

Thanks to TRAMS and Angus McIntyre for hosting these tours. For more information, click the following links:

TRAMS website:

A description of the Brill trolleybus we rode on on the TRAMS website:

An article about Angus celebrating 40 years a transit operator in Vancouver:

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Amazing Seaplane Flight Around Vancouver!



My family and I board a DeHavilland DHC-III Turbine Otter Seaplane operated by Harbor Air of Vancouver B.C. for a spectacular sightseeing tour of Vancouver and the surrounding mountains. We start off in the airport terminal which is modern and very well maintained. All the food and beverages in the terminal was complementary to Harbor Air passengers! We then were led to our awaiting DHC-III by our friendly pilot “Caleb”. He then took us past Canada Place where we then took off. We flew over the Lions-Gate Bridge and into the Burrard Inlet and then English Bay which was well occupied with oil tankers. We then flew over Kittsalano Beach and pool. At this point we were given a great view of YVR Airport before banking left again and flying over False Creek. We were given a stunning view of Mt. Baker and a nice ariel view of downtown Vancouver. We then proceeded over Second Beach and Stanley Park and then towards the mountains. For about 15 minutes we circled the mountains near Vancouver getting a little too close for comfort at times. All in all it was absolutely breathtaking! We then flew over North Vancouver and the pilot put our DHC-III in to a bit of a dramatic invert to quickly lose altitude. We then skimmed over the water of Coal Harbor and gently kissed the water. Not at all what I was expecting. I was expecting that our plane was going to grab onto the water like many commercial aircraft grab onto the runway and bring us to a hard stop, but I was pleasantly surprised! After the pilot pulled our DHC up to the dock and shut down the engines, we stood together for a photo op before my family and I proceeded to the terminal. The trip was absolutely amazing! I highly recommend Harbor Air to anyone needing to travel to Victoria or who want to take a sightseeing tour of Vancouver like My family!

Flight Info:
Airline: Harbor Air
Aircraft: DeHavilland DHC-III Turbine Otter (Seaplane)
Reg: C-FHAJ
Manufactured: 2001
Seat: Somewhere in the back of the plane
Date: 7/31/14
Flight: N/A

Thanks for watching!

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From Vancouver to Banff Aboard the Rocky Mountaineer



Insider Mike Siegel celebrated the Rocky Mountaineer’s 25th anniversary by setting off on the train’s “First Passage to the West” route, a two-day trip from Vancouver, British Columbia, to Banff, Alberta.

Mike’s journey began with a day spent in Vancouver, where he took a Sea Safari zodiac boat tour with Sewell’s Marina in picturesque Horseshoe Bay. Next, it was time to hop aboard the Rocky Mountaineer and admire the stunning Canadian countryside from the train’s two-level, glass-domed coach (available to GoldLeaf class passengers). Mike’s trip ended in Banff, where he headed straight for the Sunshine Village Ski Resort for a day on the slopes.

Get the full story of Mike’s throwback train travel experience at:

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Vancouver House by BIG: Future Project of the Year 2015



In this exclusive movie, architect Kai-Uwe Bergmann explains how BIG’s proposed skyscraper in Vancouver is designed to transform a site dominated by a motorway flyover into an attractive neighbourhood.

The Danish architecture firm’s Vancouver House, which was named Future Project of the Year 2015 at World Architecture Festival earlier this month, will be situated adjacent to an overpass at the base of Vancouver’s Granville Street Bridge.

“The site is similar to a lot of cities,” says BIG partner Bergmann in the movie, which was filmed in Singapore by Dezeen for World Architecture Festival.

“The prime locations of the cities are built, so architects now deal with a lot of the residual spaces.”

The 49-storey residential tower’s distinctive twisted form was a direct response to the limitations of the site.

In order to create a 30-metre setback from the busy road, the tower will be much narrower at the base, before widening out at higher levels.

“We’ve tried to make the most of the site with all of its challenges,” Bergmann says. “So we started out small and then moved up to a larger top.”

Read more on Dezeen:

Subscribe to our YouTube channel for the latest architecture and design movies:

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Rocky Mountaineer Gold Leaf from Jasper to Vancouver overnighting at Kamloops.



Just a short upload of our journey through the Rocky Mountains on the way to catch a cruise from Vancouver up to the Ice-fields of Alaska. For us it was the holiday of a lifetime and included attending a family wedding in Calgary a visits to Banff and Jasper a weeks Cruise up the inside passage to Alaska and another week spent with family on Vancouver Island.
This is a combination of footage from my little Panasonic TZ20 camera and my Samsung Galaxy 3 smartphone. A little difficult to cobble together and even more complicated to render in one file for upload. In the end I settled for 720p.

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