Countdown to the Winter Olympics
Vancouver and Whistler are primed to host the games- all they need now is snow!
Photo by Jim Farber
Tick. Tick. Tick.
In the heart of downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, the brightly illuminated Olympic clock is counting down, marking the seconds, minutes and hours before the start of the XXI Winter Olympics, Feb. 12, 2010.
It’s a somewhat humorous scene on a sunny day in mid-August, as tourists (including a wedding couple in full attire) pose for their portraits before the clock as a gaggle of itinerant summer backpackers and scruffy homeless people look on.
The weather may be warm and balmy, but anticipation for the arrival of the games is growing with every tick of the clock. Olympic banners wave in the breeze, shop windows sport cuddly Olympic mascots, and everywhere you run into displays of Olympic pins (an ever-popular collectible and trading item).
This will be the third time Canada has hosted the Olympics; the summer games were held in Montreal in 1976, and in 1988 Calgary was home to the winter games.
The upcoming competition (which runs through Feb. 28) will be spread out over three locations. The opening and closing ceremonies, as well as the “ice sports” (including for the first time, women’s hockey) will be held in Vancouver.
The Nordic events will showcase cross-country skiers and high-flying ski jumpers competing in the Callaghan Valley (to the west of Whistler, a 90-minute drive north from Vancouver).
The Alpine and “Sliding” events will propel their way down the slopes and ultra-fast track of the new Sliding Centre that surround the picturesque mountain resort of Whistler.
Ride the chair lift to the very top of Whistler Mountain and you’ll encounter “Ilanaaq,” the Olympic symbol— a traditional stone figure known as an Inukshuk. These figures are just one way in which the games are paying respect to Canada’s “First Nations.” And in the Inukitut language, “Ilanaaq” means “friend.” Like the Olympic clock, Ilanaaq has become a favorite of tourists who love to pose beneath his great out-stretched stony arms.
The town of Whistler has been hoping to host a Winter Olympics for a long time. And the town is ideally suited. It’s ski slopes are challenging, its accommodations are plentiful, the village offers a wide variety of eateries and watering holes, and the town is readily accessible by both road and rail.
The only thing that has locals concerned is whether February will find Whistler’s mountains covered with a sufficient quantity of snow. Climate change has affected the region, and plans are already in the works to truck snow in if necessary.
Snowfall, however, will not be an issue for the new Sliding Centre. This elegant concrete masterpiece of gracefully descending curves will provide a perfect setting for the heart stopping bobsleigh, skeleton and luge events.
On the day I toured the facility, the August sun had turned the infield into a dusky brown patch of weeds. But come February (I was assured by my enthusiastic guide) the weeds will be replaced by a capacity crowd of cheering onlookers and daredevil competitors.
The Whistler Sliding Centre is one of two major venues created specifically for the games. The other is the Richmond Olympic Oval located on a 32-acre site just south of Vancouver. This ultra-modern structure, which received the Award of Excellence for Architectural Innovation from the Royal Architecture Institute of Canada, will be home to the long track speed skating events.
The arena is also a remarkable example of how to make sweet lemon aid from the sourest of lemons. Its great wooden ceiling is entirely constructed from trees that were destroyed as a result of Canada’s bark beetle infestation!
The structure, which officially opened Dec. 12, 2008, will provide seating for 8000 spectators, and according to Olympic Oval spokesman, Aran Kay, is large enough to fit four jetliners— wingtip-to-wingtip— on its main floor!
More than 8o nations are expected to take part in the games. And by the time the torch arrives, Vancouver and Whistler will be decked out and ready to receive the onslaught of tourists, Olympic organizers, corporate sponsors, officials, coaches and athletes.
If you are thinking of going, the best source for information is www.vancouver2010.com. Here you will find an abundance of information concerning everything from where to stay to how to buy event tickets. And if your budget allows, the luxurious Four Seasons Resort in Whistler still has rooms available for $1000 per night!
Let the games begin!
For Information and Winter Olympics Tickets:
(800) 842-5287
Hours: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday.
www.vancouver2010.com.
More Articles by Jim Farber
El Eden's Zip Lines Send You Soaring Over the Jungle
Once the realm of the Predator now welcomes thrill seeking eco-friendly tourists
Two Bunch Palms is a desert escape with mob connections.
Cross-country skiing from Yosemite's Badger Pass to Glacier Point.
Experience the thrill of heli-hiking in the mountains of Western Canada
All aboard for a tour of the Canadian Rockies
Riding the Rocky Mountaineer from Vancouver to Banff is train travel supreme.
Much that was old is new again in the Mexican city’s historic district.
Los Cabos: Land of a Thousand Faces
From extreme partying to meditative relaxation, from the desert to the sea, think Los Cabos
Michigan: It's a state with a lot of different faces and a lot to offer.
Yosemite's High Sierra Camps offer the wilderness with creature comforts.
Riding on the Bi-Polar Express
A Christmas Eve AMTRAK fantasy turns into a real-life rail disaster.
More British Columbia Articles
by cherie thiessen
by Steven Skelley & Thomas Routzong
A Visit to Ruckle Park, Salt Spring Island
by Leanne Brunelle
An Intimate Getaway to One of Canada’s Gulf Islands
by Kari Huhtala
Countdown to the Winter Olympics
by Jim Farber
by Jim Farber
by Cherie thiessen
by cherie thiessen
by Cherie Thiessen
by Cherie thiessen
© 2012 Marco Polo Publications, Inc. | Contact Us | Login |