I arrived in Calgary late that night and four nights, three days of not very much ensued: a replica, more or less, of my time there prior to Whistler and extremely pleasant. Mum and Dad were there and while the Garden Squad worked hard on Andrew's forthcoming patio, I mooched around avoiding garden centres as far as possible, cooked, ate a lot and marvelled at how much stuff I'd managed to accumulate in six short months.
Saturday 28th and I caught an early morning flight to Vancouver, armed with my new orange and pink wellingtons (for the rain in Tofino, I've justified) and a new laptop: my Acer Travelmate. The cheapest laptop available, and apparently designed with the traveller in mind (titanium frame etc etc). Its specs are all I need and I'm back in action as goes writing and photo storage – hurrah!
From Vancouver I took the Islandlink bus to Horseshoe Bay where I transferred to the BC Ferry service to Nanaimo. Having not been on a car ferry for some time I enjoyed marching around excitedly, making sure I didn't miss a thing and failing to resist over-priced fast food. It's an hour and a half crossing, which surprised me: Vancouver have some nerve calling it 'their' island. From Nanaimo add one four-hour bus journey, some of the largest trees I've ever seen in my life and a friendly Victorian (as in from Victoria, not some sort of ghost...) named Heather, who gave me lots of tips about life in Tofino, and I made it back to Rob, which was very welcome indeed. Five days apart felt like a lot longer; something to do with seeing each other almost every day all winter. I think.
Tofino is a small village, sitting remotely on a headland looking out onto the Clayquot Sound on one side, with random towering islands of thick green rainforest, and the open Pacific Ocean on the other side. It's all about surfing, fishing and whale watching here. Beaches stretch down the Pacific side, from Mackenzie beach nearest the village to the surfers' Long Beach nearer Ucluelet (39km from Tofino. I suggested cycling it the first day: Rob suggested this may be more Iron-Man Challenge than afternoon entertainment).

Our hostel is in the village centre, half an hour plus walk from the nearest beach, an hour walk from the nearest surfable beach (Chesterman). It's a cool set-up: basically somebody's house with two double rooms (ours is really cute, with lots of driftwood features and an en suite bathroom nicer than in some of the flats I've rented) and a bunkbed dorm room. There is a big kitchen, two lounge rooms, computer facilities and an extremely-friendly-but-slightly-smelly dog. Lots of people mill around but it has a really cosy feel.
We knew it already, but it became clear very early on that accommodation is desperate here. Almost every surf school, store, coffee house and restaurant is looking for staff, but none will hire without you having already secured accommodation. Tofino is fairly tiny and spare rooms just don't exist. We made posters selling ourselves as a 'clean, friendly couple', offering a generous sum, sticking them up on notice-boards around town, and have advertised in the Westerly News for a week. Staff housing seems to be the only way to go, but all the beach-front resorts ever seem to want are housekeeping staff: something we'll do if we have to. We embark on a cycle tour of all the resorts, enthusiastically handing in resumes and talking to the hirers, where possible.
The local gas station is hiring, also offering staff housing and we were given consecutive interviews with Linda the delightfully cute (in a farmer's wife sort of a way) manager. Linda confessed this was her first job as a manager, having been Assistant Manager for twelve years and that the education on our CVs was a little daunting. She seemed to like us though, and I think my ticket office experience was right up her street because she's taken us on. We have a good arrangement: I work full time (though less hours are available until the holiday season kicks off a couple of weeks from now) and Rob remains on-call to cover sickness and absence, leaving him free to work wherever else he chooses. We both get to live in the adjacent fixed trailer with the 17-year old nephew of the owner and his cat. Believe me, in Tofino terms, we're really lucky.
We'd both been in contact with the manager of one of the surf schools here, who seemed to value our initiative and experience at Whistler Blackcomb, and has offered us both jobs. While I'm tied to the gas station, Rob can work at the surf school – dealing with rentals and possibly as a lesson assistant (which won't require him to impossibly quickly obtain all the expensive certificates needed to teach). There is the possibility that if we manage to find private accommodation (I won't hold my breath) I can work at the surf school too. Who knows though – I may love the gas station...
I start training tonight. I ought to perm my hair and tumble-dry my jeans in anticipation.
All that we need now is our own surf gear and bikes (to be with added surfboard racks... an exciting contraption that makes transportation of gear a whole lot easier). We've been offered free mid-week rentals from the friendly surf school manager so tomorrow we plan to hit the beach early. Rob reckons he's going to teach me.
There are still thoughts of buying a car/van, which would free us up to seek better beaches and see a bit more of the Island.
We like wandering around the village and the beaches. Hours in the coffee shop. Crosswords and Cooking. Something of a change from Whistler.
Life in Tofino is looking good.
1 comment:
Well hello there.
Just read through your blogs and looked at all your amazing pictures.
Really looks like things are working out swimmingly for you, knew they would like, is amazing how everything just comes together when your away. So unlike life in this country.
Though having said that things are pretty sweet at the moment.
Now in a new flat with my woman, living in Stockbridge and loving it, only been there a few days mind but i can tell its a positive move.
J.o.b is going really well too, now a trainee valuer, so should be making big bucks presently, well thats the plan anyway.
Sorry for being so crappy at getting in touch, have added this page to my favourites now and rest assured il be pestering you big style.
Have a ball pal, big love.
Davey boy xxx
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