Victoria's southern shoreline offers one of the most scenic urban walks in western Canada. On this self-guided audio tour, you'll follow the Dallas Road waterfront into Beacon Hill Park, tracing stories of Indigenous land, ocean wildlife, and the remarkable Canadians who shaped this city's identity. The tour starts at the Ogden Point Sundial, near the cruise ship terminal, where you become the timekeeping device yourself. From there, you'll walk along the Strait of Juan de Fuca – keeping an eye out for humpback whales, harbour seals, and orcas – before crossing into Beacon Hill Park. Inside the park, you'll encounter formal rose gardens, camas fields that fed Indigenous communities for centuries, a colony of 80–100 Great Blue Heron nests, and the quietly sleeping Moss Lady. The tour ends at the Beacon Drive In, a walk-up snack institution that has barely changed since opening in 1958.
This tour starts at Ogden Point Sundial. Before arrival, please install the mobile app and use the code provided on your confirmation ticket. Detailed starting point instructions are available after downloading.
This tour ends at Beacon Drive In Restaurant.
Begin your tour at this clever interactive sundial near the cruise ship terminal, where you become the timekeeping instrument yourself — stepping onto the correct month marker and casting your own shadow to read the hour. Look out from the breakwater across the Strait of Juan de Fuca toward the Olympic Mountains and start scanning the water, because humpback whales, harbour seals, and orcas have all been spotted from this exact spot.
Stand at the western terminus of the Trans-Canada Highway, where a modest stone marker carries the full emotional weight of a country 7,500 kilometres wide. Hear the stories of Terry Fox and Steve Fonyo, two young cancer fundraisers who each set out from near this spot to run the breadth of Canada under their own power, in journeys that became part of the national imagination.
Walk the breezy clifftop path above the Strait of Juan de Fuca, where the views across open water to the snow-capped Olympic Peninsula have been drawing Victorians out for a Sunday stroll since the city was young. Learn how swimmer Marilyn Bell crossed this same cold, treacherous stretch of water in 1956, guided to shore in the darkness by two bonfires lit on the beach below your feet.
Cross into one of western Canada's most fiercely protected green spaces, a 190-acre landscape of meadows, ponds, garry oaks, and camas fields that has been shielded from commercial development by a Supreme Court ruling since 1884. Wander paths that have changed little in over a century and appreciate how unusual it is to find a park this large, this wild, and this central in any city of Victoria's size.
Pause at this much-loved corner of the park where peacocks roam freely and children feed goats, rabbits, and highland cattle in a setting that feels genuinely timeless. Enjoy a moment that connects directly to the park's long role as a place where Victoria's families have been coming to breathe, play, and slow down for well over a hundred years.
Step onto the large floral sun clock set into the park's manicured grounds, its face planted with seasonal colour and its mechanism precise enough to keep reliable time through a Victoria summer. Look up from the clock toward the 127-foot Beacon Hill Totem Pole nearby, carved by master carver Mungo Martin and funded by 10,000 individual community donations in one of the city's most collective acts of cultural celebration.
Cross the graceful 1910 stone bridge designed by Francis Rattenbury, the architect responsible for both the Empress Hotel and the BC Parliament Buildings, whose elegant touch is visible in even this modest park structure. Pause on the bridge to look down at Goodacre Lake below, watching for Red-eared Slider turtles basking on exposed logs in the shallows.
Discover this enchanting figure emerging from the earth in a quiet corner of the park, her sleeping form crafted from a steel armature and covered entirely in living moss, sedums, and low-growing plants. Sit with her for a moment and absorb the particular quality of stillness she brings to a park already full of natural beauty and layered human story.
End your tour at this walk-up institution that has been serving soft ice cream, burgers, and milkshakes from the same spot since 1958, its menu and cheerful signage barely altered in nearly seven decades. Join the queue, order something cold, and settle onto a bench to watch the park life drift by — a thoroughly satisfying final note to one of Victoria's finest walks.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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