Victoria
VICTORIA
has a lot to live up to. Leading US travel magazine Condé
Nast Traveler has voted it one of the world's top-ten cities to
visit, and world number one for ambience and environment. And it's
not named after a queen and an era for nothing. Victoria has gone
to town in serving up lashings of fake Victoriana and chintzy
commercialism - tearooms, Union Jacks, bagpipers, pubs and ersatz
echoes of empire confront you at every turn. Much of the waterfront
area has an undeniably quaint and likeable English feel - "Brighton
Pavilion with the Himalayas for a backdrop", as Kipling remarked -
and Victoria has more British-born residents than anywhere in
Canada, but its tourist potential is exploited chiefly for American
visitors who make the short sea journey from across the border.
Despite the seasonal influx, and the sometimes atrociously tacky
attractions designed to part tourists from their money, it's a
small, relaxed and pleasantly sophisticated place, worth lingering
in if only for its inspirational museum. It's also rather genteel
in parts, something underlined by the number of gardens around the
place and some nine hundred hanging baskets that adorn much of the
downtown area during the summer. Though often damp, the weather
here is extremely mild: Victoria's meteorological station has the
distinction of being the only one in Canada to record a winter in
which the temperature never fell below freezing.
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