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The Capilano Suspension Bridge is Vancouver’s oldest tourist
attraction, having been built in 1889. Not only is it the oldest
attraction, the Capilano Vancouver
tourist attraction remains one of the most popular. So what is it that
has continued to bring visitors here for so many years? Well, let’s
just say that standing on a shaky bridge 226 feet above the canyon
floor, attached only by small cables, still delivers the same thrills
that it did over a century ago. The beautiful woodsy setting also
helps. The Capilano Bridge Canada is set in the picturesque 20-acre
Capilano River Park, an easy trip across the Lion’s Gate Bridge from
downtown Vancouver. The Capilano Suspension Bridge website claims that
it only takes 10 minutes, but realistically it takes around 25 minutes
from downtown Vancouver.
The Capilano Suspension Bridge itself is 135
meters (443 feet) long, a footbridge made of long cedar plank and steel
cable. Below the bridge is the Capilano River, where visitors can
sometimes see kayakers or salmon in the waters below, as they tediously
cross the shaky bridge. A new attraction in Capilano River Park is the
“Treetops Adventure”, similar to the Capilano bridge Canada, but
bouncier and attached to giant tree trunks 80 feet above the forest
floor.
Besides the Treetops Adventure, many other
attractions have been added to make the Capilano Vancouver tourist
attraction all the more interesting. At the carving center, you can
watch Native wood carving demonstrations. There are also a number of
totem poles on display in Totem Park that show off the Native
handiwork. Other attractions include a lesson in the region’s natural
history, two nice restaurants, and guides in frontier costume, telling
stories of Vancouver’s olden days. There are guided nature tours, the
Kid’s Rainforest Explorer program, and the Living Forest exhibit. All
of these are included in the entrance fee (save your meal at one of the
restaurants) which is a bit steep if you are only going just to cross
the bridge.
If you want to save on the entrance fee and
just have the experience of the Capilano Suspension Bridge, try the
Lynn Canyon Suspension Bridge. This bridge is in equally as beautiful
a location as the Capilano Suspension Bridge, but has no entrance fee.
Just upstream of the Capilano Bridge Canada is
a salmon hatchery, which is free and very interesting. The hatchery is
usually open daily, hours differ in summer and winter. The salmon
hatchery is a provincial operation created to help salmon spawn, around
two million fish a year.
To get to the Capilano Suspension bridge from
Vancouver, take the Trans-Canada Highway west, exiting at #14, the
Capilano Road exit. If you are taking public transit, ride the Seabus
from downtown Vancouver and take the #236 bus to Capilano Suspension
Bridge.
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