Nanaimo
August 24, 2024
After our favorite oatmeal and tea for breakfast we dinghied back to shore and caught the 9:15 free passenger ferry over to the big city of Nanaimo.

We spent a good bit of the day exploring Nanaimo since we’ve never been here before.
First sighting was this statue. Is he a pirate or a conductor or ???

Turns out this scupture is of Frank James Ney (1918-1992) in his pirate costume. Ney was mayor of Nanaimo from 1967-1984 and 1986-1990 serving 21 years overall. Mayor Frank Ney is immortalized in bronze, standing atop a rock, dressed in the gaudy pirate costume he would wear during the town’s annual bathtub races.
Another interesting landmark was the Bastion. Originally built in 1853 by the Hudson’s Bay Company, the Bastion served a very practical purpose: It was designed to defend coal mining operations in Nanaimo.

The construction of this structure is very interesting as it can be taken apart, moved and put back together again in a new place which it did three times here on the Nanaimo waterfront.

And here’s a shot of the inside of the third floor, most all of the timbers are original!

Here’s a view looking back across the bay to the Provincial Park and our anchorage in the distance to the left.

Here is the Courthouse. It looks so much like the SPI (Superintendent of Public Instruction) building in Olympia.

The architect, Francis Rattenbury, was the architect of the Provincial Parliament buildings in Victoria. The sandstone came from Protection Island where we are moored.
Here is the Palace Hotel.

By mid-afternoon we took the passenger ferry back to the island and after a quick shower we hopped into our dinghy and rowed over to the Dinghy Dock Pub on the island next door for a great dinner.

And now I will leave you with this “Thought for the Day”.









































