Things To Do At Harrison Hot Springs Community

By Harriett Crosby


Harrison Hot Springs Community is a small but bustling resort community. Just 3 hours north of Seattle and 5 hours east of Vancouver, it's a great choice for a weekend getaway or a vacation. Stay at a campsite, a B&B, or a resort hotel. Rent a cottage or a condo. Bring your boat and use the public boat launch. Enjoy the warm mineral waters and resort amenities, outdoor activities, art and shopping, restaurants and cafes.

Sitting on the south end of Harrison lake, this village is a starting point for all kinds of water fun; skiing, white water rafting, ocean kayaking, paddle boating, and power boating, and of course swimming. Two water parks provide family entertainment, Bridal Falls Water Park, and the Harrison Floating Water Park. Enjoy water slides, banana tube rides, and bumper boats.

Get on a boat for a scenic eco tour, or join a guided shoreline tour. Hell's Gate Air Tram takes siteseers through 7 mountain tunnels through the historic heart of British Columbia. Fishing charters take fishermen to the best spots for reeling in salmon, steelhead trout, or sturgeon.

Visit local farms and orchards open to the public. There's a chicken and turkey farm, a dairy farm, a hazelnut orchard. Visit a 1906 general store museum at Kilby Historic Site. Stop at The Back Porch, a local pottery studio and collectibles store. Attend monthly art shows featuring area artists at the Ranger Station Public Art Gallery. The local choir performs twice a year. There's even stock car racing at Agassiz Speedway.

Enjoy local festivals from April's Tulips of the Valley festival, to December's Christmas in the Village. The First Nation Sts'ailes participate in war canoe races and Sasquatch story telling during Sasquatch days in June. For 10 days in July, art and music are featured with an arts and crafts market. International musicians perform at Memorial Hall and on the beach. Also in July, come to this bustling little village to celebrate Canada Day, a Dragon Boat Regatta, and a Slow Food Cycle Tour of farm country. Enjoy music on the beach while enjoying the final days of summer on Labor Day weekend. Oktoberfest is the theme of the Harrison Beer Festival. Eco-tourists should return in November for the Bald Eagle Watch Festival.

Soak in the hot mineral waters at a resort or at the public pool. The hot springs were recognized as a spiritual and medicinal healing place by the First Nations. Since the mid 1800's Europeans have flocked to the hot mineral waters for healing and relaxation. Today's spas offer relaxing stone massages, nurturing body wraps, facials and pedicures.

If you love winter sports, Harrison Hot Springs is a perfect destination. Surrounded by mountains, winter sport enthusiasts enjoy skiing, back country skiing, cross-country skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing, snowmobiling, dog sledding. And what better way to end a day in the snow than a stop at 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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