Day 5 Granville Island
Granville Island was on the itinerary for Day 5. I walked from my hotel to the Aquatic Center where I boarded a water taxi to Granville Island. There are two main water taxi providers who ferry passengers over to Granville Island: Aquabus and False Creek Ferries. The aquabus is recognizable by its rainbow colored exterior. I took the False Creek Ferry. They were both cute water taxis. The ride is only 3 minutes long! I bought a round trip ticket that only cost 7 CAD, which is not too expensive. I could have also taken a bus to Granville Island, but I felt that a water taxi would be more picturesque and take me directly to the Public Market.
Basically, Granville Island is like a huge Ferry Building (a San Francisco reference) where one can buy artisanal food, farm fresh local produce and handmade arts and crafts. I had a cafe au lait at Blue Parrot Cafe, which wasn't that tasty, some wontons, which didn't even have shrimp, and a lox bagel. There wasn't enough lox, but the everything bagel was pretty good.
After taking the False Creek Ferry back to the other side of Vancouver, I walked along the waterfront around Yaletown. Yaletown used to be a warehouse district, but now it's a hip and happening neighbor according to the guidebooks. Here are some pictures from Granville Island.
For dinner, I went to a Chinese restaurant on Robson Street called Dinesty (sic). I ordered seafood stir fried noodles and pan-fried pork buns to share. The cook was too heavy handed with the oil in the noodles. For a total price of $22 USD, it was a decent meal. Food pics below.
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