Kayaking Tours Vancouver Island

Alert Bay accommodation

Johnstone Strait

Tour Duration
Robson Bight 6 Day Orca Tour (28.29) 6 days/5 nights
Robson Bight 3 Day Orca Tour (28.30) 3 days/2 nights
Orca Waters - Kayak Day Trip (25.204) 1 day
Orca Waters - Base Camp (25.114) 4 days/3 nights
Orca Waters Explorer (25.115) 6 days/5 nights
Orca Waters - Famliy Base Camp (25.130) 4 days/3 nights
Orca Waters - Kayak and Zodiac Day Trip 1 day
Bed & Breakfast Kayaking (25.201) 4 days/3 nights
Bed & Breakfast Kayaking and Grizzly Bears 5 days/4 nights

Kayaking in Johnstone Strait

The top of Johnstone Strait and the bottom of Queen Charlotte Strait are the most popular areas for those who want to kayak with whales.

Johnstone Strait is located between the north-eastern end of Vancouver Island and the BC mainland. This 87 kilometer glacier-carved waterway stretches from Chatham Point to Hanson Island, with Vancouver Island on the south and the rugged mainland coast on the north. The area offers diverse opportunities for sea kayaking including intricate and remote island archipelagos, refuge bays and deep fjords. The Strait is the main water route north, and it is not uncommon to see watercraft ranging from cruise ships and freighters to pleasure craft.

A classic whale-watching area is at the top of Johnstone Strait, not far from Telegraph Cove. This area has one of the largest resident Orca (killer whale) populations in the world and is an excellent kayaking area. It encompasses Blackfish Sound, home to countless small islands including Hanson Island, the base for the Robson Bight (Michael Bigg) Ecological Reserve, established to provide a sanctuary for Orcas. Each year the Orcas return to the area to feed on the abundant supply of salmon, and to rub their bellies on the barnacle-encrusted rocks, pebbles and gravel seafloor at Robson Bight. The region is also home to Minke whales, Dall's Porpoise's, seals, mink, sea lions, black bear, deer, cougar and over 150 different types of birds.

Telegraph Cove is one of the most unique developments along Johnstone Strait. Constructed on stilts, this small, brightly painted hamlet was once the terminus for a telegraph line. Yorke Island still offers traces of an old fort built during WWII to protect the northern entrance to the inland waters.


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