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Next tab will go to the map. Use this link to skip the station map.Bookstores, Food, and Nature: It’s Time to Book a Trip to Sidney
Growing up in Victoria in the 1980’s, Sidney-by-the-Sea, as it is endearingly nicknamed, was just the place where my family occasionally drove to buy kippers – smoked herring for British-style breakfasts. If this small, coastal Vancouver Island town had an image, it consisted of somnolent seniors sitting solemnly by the seaside.
How times have changed. To this day, Sidney has retained its original quaint charm, but the 1967-incorporated town of 12,000 has come alive with intriguing bookstores, bustling restaurants, and exciting opportunities to explore nature.
Sidney is well-placed for either a romantic overnight getaway or a fun family day trip. One of 13 municipalities within British Columbia’s provincial capital, it sits half an hour north of downtown Victoria. It’s just a short drive from both the Swartz Bay ferry terminal and the Victoria airport.
To be clear, Sidney didn’t host the 2000 Summer Olympics. That was Sydney, Australia. Now that we’ve cleared that up, let’s find out how you can write your own consummately Canadian chapter in Sidney’s history.
Bountiful Bookstores
Since 1996, Sidney has proudly billed itself as “Canada’s only booktown.” Beacon Avenue, the central shopping street, validates that claim. Six independent bookstores within easy walking distance lure readers with new and used books. It’s a far cry from the old days when Sidney centred on sawmills, salmon canneries, and farms producing fruit, grain and cattle.
The spacious, 1982-founded Tanner’s Books showcases B.C. titles like Stephen Hui’s 105 Hikes in and Around Southwestern British Columbia and Eden Robinson’s Son of a Trickster. It also sponsors the annual Sidney LitFest with award-winning Canadian authors like Esi Edugyan (Washington Black) and Timothy Taylor (Stanley Park). Don’t miss the adjoining Children’s Bookshop.
If you dig vintage volumes, like a 1925 edition of the complete works of Joseph Conrad, Beacon Books is an ideal destination with its nostalgic musty scent and flickering fireplace. The Haunted Bookshop is the oldest antiquarian bookstore on Vancouver Island, and features an excellent selection of children’s classics.
If you know (or are) a crotchety middle-aged man who lives for Tom Clancy and the History Channel, Galleon Books and Antiques and The Military and History Bookshop both deliver the goods.
Fabulous Food and Drink
Sidney’s oceanfront promenade offers amazing views of the Salish Sea, the San Juan Islands, and Mount Baker, which enhance any dining experience.
At Haro’s Restaurant, inside the upscale Sidney Pier Hotel, you can feast on Cowichan Valley chicken breast and Salt Spring Island mussels and frites. The cozy, marina-facing Surly Mermaid participates in the Vancouver Aquarium’s Ocean Wise program, promoting sustainable seafood. Enjoy a sockeye salmon burger or fried Fanny Bay oysters in this brick-walled, candle-lit restaurant.
For a taste of Europe, head to Bistro Suisse on Beacon Avenue, where the specialties include Wiener Schnitzel, bratwurst with rosti, and fondue with Emmental and Gruyere cheese.
The nearby Five and Dime Diner offers a fun retro atmosphere. It serves all-day breakfast and lunch dishes, from Belgian waffles and eggs benedict to pulled pork burritos and “Brain Power Salad” with goat cheese and dried cranberries. A puckish sign warns: “Unattended Children Will Be Given Espresso and a Free Kitten.”
The Sidney Bakery displays an even better sign: “I Don’t Want Buns of Steel, I Want Buns of Cinnamon.” The pink-shirted bakers at this homey establishment magnificently live up to that philosophy. They also make delicious jelly doughnuts and apple fritters.
Meanwhile, spirits connoisseurs will gravitate to Victoria Distillers, featuring a waterfront cocktail lounge. This artisan distillery recently created Empress 1908, a gorgeous indigo-coloured gin incorporating eight botanicals, for Victoria’s Fairmont Empress Hotel. Take a guided tour of the premises and check out the gleaming copper pot stills.
Natural Wonders
For a different kind of liquid immersion, the Shaw Centre for the Salish Sea’s exhibits unveil the mysteries of this 110,000-square-kilometre body of water, which includes the Strait of Georgia, Strait of Juan de Fuca, and Puget Sound.
The centre showcases some 160 aquatic species. Jellyfish undulate hypnotically in a backlit tank, while yellowtail rockfish swim in a kelp forest. Kids marvel at the killer whale skeleton and enjoy painting their own marine-themed T-shirts. In the gift shop, you can purchase coffee mugs with Indigenous orca motifs or bags of handcrafted sea salt.
Want another way to explore these coastal waters? Head out on a kayak tour with A Paddle in the Park Kayaking. Keep your eyes peeled for seals, cormorants, and eagles as you paddle along sheltered channels between local islands.
Two other nature-themed attractions lie less than 20 minutes from Sidney. The Victoria Butterfly Gardens is home to some 70 species of butterflies, plus frogs, turtles, and flamingos. The Butchart Gardens, Victoria’s most legendary attraction, features the Sunken Garden, a converted limestone quarry with more than 150 flower beds and the lyrical Ross Fountain. Stroll over the Japanese Garden’s compact bridges and rub the snout of the bronze boar statue at this National Historic Site of Canada.
Year-round, there’s something infinitely soothing about visiting Sidney. For books, food, and nature, this little town is tough to top.
Header image: Pier Hotel Cafe in Sidney, BC, Canada. (Photo by Deddeda Stemler for Tourism Victoria)
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