Overview
Goletas Views- Fully Serviced Oceanview Properties, Vancouver Island, BC
MLS#:Listing Overview
- Property Value$99,000
- Property AddressGoletas Views- Fully Serviced Oceanview Properties, Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
- TypeOceanview
Port Hardy Address
Goletas Views- Fully Serviced Oceanview Properties, Vancouver Island, BC, Canada
Description
Goletas Views are a rare collection of fully serviced superior unobstructed ocean view properties which range in size from 0.50 of an acre to 2.78 acre properties. Located on the door step to world class salmon fishing
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This upscale development gives you space and privacy right on the door step of world class salmon fishing. Within minutes of the properties you are at the marina and only moments to the fishing grounds where you will have your chance of hooking into the largest salmon and halibut off the coast of British Columbia. |
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| Location : | Port Hardy - Northern Vancouver Island | ||
| Access : |
For travel planning ideas please contact listing broker. |
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| Improvements : |
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| Services : | fully serviced | ||
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Recreation : |
Salmon Fishing Some of BC’s best Salmon fishing is right in front of you. As salmon runs migrate south every season they come right past your door. Halibut are also plentiful in the region. If you’re into seafood there is no need to go buy it at the grocery store here. Whale Watching Whale watching is a must when in Port Hardy, where viewing possibilities include killer whales, Grey Whales, Humpback whales, and Minke whales. Other marine life viewed on whale watching trips might include sea lions and harbour seals. There are several companies offering whale watching trips from late June through early October. Outdoor Recreation An active recreational centre, Port Hardy is a year-round gateway for wilderness explorers seeking adventure in the vast wonders of North Vancouver Island. Diving: The waters off North Vancouver Island are amongst the finest in the world for diving, thanks to the profusion of invertebrate life, curious wolf eels, walls studded with colonies of pink soft coral, colourful anemones, and a variety of sponges and starfish. Sighting killer whales from the surface in Johnstone Strait and Queen Charlotte Strait is also a common occurrence. Kayaking Good Sea kayaking is found in the protected waters of the east coast of the island. There are several staging areas, including Beaver Harbour south of Port Hardy, allowing you to kayak or canoe to spectacular locations - canoe and kayaks can be rented by the day or week. Many parts of the Discovery Coast to the north of Port Hardy are relatively unknown to kayakers. This region will appeal to resourceful paddlers who seek a sense of pioneering, which includes laying some groundwork, discovering new fishing spots, wildlife watching, dealing with unknown tidal currents, and finding new campsites. Guided and self-guided day tours and two to seven day trips are available, with or without mother ships. Hiking A network of publicly accessible logging roads opens up wilderness areas on the west coast of Vancouver Island, providing access to Winter Harbour, Cape Scott and Raft Cove Provincial Parks. Hiking routes vary from short trails leading to spectacular beaches at San Jose Bay and Raft Cove, to an 8-hour trek to the tip of Cape Scott, to the North Coast Trail in Cape Scott Provincial Park, a 61-km hike when starting at the Cape Scott Trailhead and ending in Sushartie Bay on the north coast. The Tex Lyon Trail is a rugged 7-km, 5-hour trek along the rocky coastline from the north end of Storeys Beach to Dillon Point. |
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| Area Data : | Port Hardy Population: 4,585 Much of Vancouver Island once looked as the north still does today. Thanks to recent government protection, some of the remaining wilderness has been preserved. Other places, such as the most northerly tip of the island, are sheltered from the preying eye of industry by the elements. Cape Scott Provincial Park is one of the wildest, windiest, most woebegone locales in the province for human habitation. Journeying to either Brooks Peninsula or Cape Scott is only for those whose mettle has been tested by repeated exposure to the bellows and blast-furnace of nature in the raw. Gentler conditions prevail in the sheltered waters of Queen Charlotte Strait and Johnstone Strait, where the Kwakwaka'wakw First Nations are the traditional gatekeepers. To experience a tranquillity that passes all description, paddle these waters where whales rub and salmon run in summer months. Port Hardy is the largest community of the North Island, with many facilities. Visitors can enjoy a wide variety of outdoor activities, as well as shopping and exploring the local arts and culture scene. The top half of 280-mile-long Vancouver Island is served by a maze of logging roads and Highway 19, which links Campbell River with Port McNeil and Port Hardy. |
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| History : | Port Hardy was named after Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy, former captain of H.M.S. Victory. With a population exceeding 5000, this turn-of-the-century townsite is now the largest community in the region and the bustling terminal for B.C. Ferries' service to Prince Rupert and Haida Gwaii (Queen Charlotte Islands) via the Inside and Discovery Coast Passage sailing routes. | ||
| Boundaries : | see maps CLICK HERE to see the Subdivision Plan in pdf format (1.07 MB) |
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| Listing # : | 11284 |
- Jamie & Jason Zroback
- Mobile: 1-(604) 483-1605
- Office Phone: 604-694-7626
- Toll-free: 1-866-558-5263
- Fax: 1-(604) 485-4046
- Email: sales@bclandpro.com
- LandQuest Realty Corp
- # 101 - 313 Sixth Street
- New Westminster, BC
- V3l 3A7