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Surfing Tofino: Yes it’s Byron 20 years ago but in Canada

The world’s best surf town isn’t in Hawaii, Australia, Tahiti or America – it’s in Canada, and it’s wilder than all of them put together; grab your board and catch a wave with Craig Tansley in Tofino.

“Dude, the waves this morning were sick… overhead, just sick, man."

The surfer with the oh-so-cliched surfer vernacular sipping at his green matcha tea latte is no teenager.

Nor he is blond, and his nose isn’t peeling right off his face, exposing another mess of life-long freckles.

And nor am I in southern California, the north shore of Oahu or Queensland’s Gold Coast.

No way – sooo far from it, dude. This bloke’s not a day under 70, and I’m in Canada. Yep, you heard me.

I’m in one of the surf world’s hippest surf towns – though it’s a hip surf town that everyone forgot to tell the rest of the surfing world about.

Here, folk still call each other ‘dude’ without a hint of irony, the radio DJ tells us we’re ‘surfing the radio waves with Long Beach Radio’, surfers scream at me in the line-up – not to scare me off their waves, but to invite me to share – and a singer at a bar one night tells the crowd not to applaud, that he’s happy anyway, because “I got some good waves today".

In a country more famed for its skiing merits, Tofino – on Vancouver Island’s rugged west coast – shouldn’t belong.

Only when I paddle out for my first surf and feel the chill creep into every nerve ending in my body, do I remember where I am (oh, and the baby sea lion that plays with me between waves isn’t something I’m used to at home either – or the tales of the occasional cougar on the beach).

Tofino is, hands down, the prettiest surf town on this planet.

I grew up in Byron Bay, but for sheer viewing pleasure, Tofino tops even Australia’s most iconic surf mecca.

There is, however, something about Tofino that reminds me of the Byron of my childhood, long before the hour-long traffic jams into town.

Tofino is spread across one of Canada’s wildest national parks, on Canada’s wildest coastline.

A couple of decades ago, the town was only connected to the rest of Canada by a dirt and gravel road that only the brave dared cross in winter.

Perhaps that’s why the town feels like it’s caught in a time warp, calling from a far more innocent era.

There’s hippies here who still think it’s 1973, cafes in town only serve organic fare and there’s folk still hiding out in the forest around town from the Vietnam war draft.

“I call this place Never-Never Land," my septuagenarian surfer pal tells me.

“Maybe it’s the water, I don’t know, but everyone around here carries on like they’re still 18."

There’s so much more to this surf town than its surf, too. On the opposite edge of town, the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve protected Clayoquot Sound runs beside Tofino.

Yachts and fishing boats travel back and forth across it, and most days the air above buzzes with seaplanes.

I’m intrigued as to where they take you, so on a perfectly still summer morning, I climb aboard one of them.

We fly across the sound, circling low to watch grey whales in the shallows, then land on the water beside an old-growth forest where I walk for 30 minutes amongst centuries-old cedars till I reach volcanic hot springs at the inventively named Hot Springs Cove.

I sit with a handful of travellers, switching hot pools looking for the temperature I prefer (they range from 50 to 100 degrees Celsius). There’s no sulfur smell at all, instead I sit breathing in the smell of damp forest beside me.

On the other side, I look out to the sea where a pod of grey whales swim past.

Next day I take a boat tour to watch black bears in the forest beside Clayoquot Sound, while on another afternoon I kayak along the calm water beside sea otters chewing on floating logs, and beside harbour seals that duck and weave around me.

When they first surface I’m stricken with panic, confusing them for orcas which occasionally come into the sound.

In the 1990s, Tofino was the setting for the largest environmental protests in Canada’s history. Together, the community banded together to stop the logging industry felling the old-growth forests beside town.

As I settle into the rhythm of Tofino, I swear I still feel the pride in that victory.

It’s obvious how precious these forests are to everyone who lives here – each day they’re picnicking by the sound, or fishing from their sturdy little boats as bald eagles circle in the sky, or watching the sun set across the water from the back decks of their timber homes.

It’s in these moments that I dread leaving Tofino the most. I hate the idea of checking out of the world’s best surf town – because it’s the surf town that barely a surfer on the planet knows a thing about.

Tofino travel information

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12 grand journeys throughout North America

    Discover North America’s epic adventures — from Route 66 and Alaska cruises to Hawai‘i road trips, NYC culture, Mexico trails and more.

    1. Route 66, the Main Street of America

    Travelling with: Ricky French

    Sunset on Route 66 in the California Mojave Desert.
    Hit the open road and trace America’s legendary highway. (Image: Getty/Der_Thomasa)

    Dubbed the Main Street of America, Route 66 radiates serious main character energy, cemented into popular culture through everything from John Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath to the Disney Pixar film Cars. Spanning nearly 4000 kilometres from Chicago to Los Angeles, the historic highway celebrates its centenary next year, a timely invitation to take the mother of all road trips along the Mother Road. Allow two to three weeks to tackle the full length, or bite off a smaller chunk at either end, cruising the dramatic deserts of California or the more pastoral landscapes of Illinois, lined with neon-lit diners, retro gas stations and quirky roadside attractions.

    2. Mexico’s Día de los Muertos

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    emblematic catrina of mexico with flowers and necklace with sempasuchil flowers
    Celebrate life and honour loved ones in vibrant style. (Image: Getty/Fabian Pacheco)

    You might know Oaxaca as the birthplace of mole and mezcal. But the state in southern Mexico is also where the Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) began. Time your visit to coincide with the colourful holiday, on 1–2 November, which honours and celebrates loved ones who have passed away. Oaxaca is also Mexico’s Michelin-starred culinary capital, with 18 restaurants and a humble taco stand listed in the 2025 guide.

    3. Museum-hop in New York City

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    The Guggenheim Museum’s iconic spiralling exterior, a highlight of North America Epic Adventures.
    Step inside and marvel at bold, world-class art. (Image: Damiano Fiore)

    Your map app will look like it’s been scattered with confetti after you’ve dropped pins on all the museums you want to visit in New York City. Must-sees are the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art aka the Met, and the Museum of Modern Art. The American Museum of Natural History is also a draw. It’s also worth venturing into the boroughs to browse institutions such as the Brooklyn Museum, which has a huge permanent collection categorised by culture.

    4. The USA’s music scene

    Travelling with: Elizabeth Whitehead

    The Seattle skyline at night, aglow with city lights on North America Epic Adventures.
    Soak up skyline views and dive into the city’s coffee culture. (Image: Abigail Boone)

    If you’re a muso, chances are you’ve wanted to make a pilgrimage to the United States, the epicentre of so many beloved genres. Whether you’re head-banging your way around the Grunge Circuit in Seattle, chasing the twang of the pedal steel through Tennessee or bouncing between blues bars in the Mississippi Delta, the USA’s rich music culture has something that’ll strike a chord.

    5. Road-tripping Hawai‘i

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    A woman surfing in Hawaii, gliding across turquoise waves on North America Epic Adventures.
    Catch the waves and ride Hawaii’s iconic swells. (Image: Ben Ono)

    Hawai‘i is one of the most diverse US states to road trip around. Of the six major islands to visit, the Island of Hawai‘i packs in everything from the snowy summits of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa to black-sand beaches and lava fields frozen in the act of flowing forward. Change down a few gears on the island of O‘ahu, too, where you can find your own patch of sand on Waimanalo Beach. Visit poi and pineapple plantations. And hang ten on beginner-friendly waves on the North Shore.

    6. Cruising Alaska

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    Explora Journeys ship cruising in Alaska.
    Sail past glaciers and spot whales in pristine waters.

    Seeing Alaska from the sea allows you to cover a lot of distance quickly. This immersive frontier now beckons more than ever before with Explora Journeys adding the American state to its global destination portfolio. Best of all are the pre-and post-journey immersions that connect the luxury of a cruise onboard Explora III with the rugged grandeur of the Alaskan interior. UnCruise Adventures also weaves in access to remote national parks, legendary wildlife corridors and authentic cultural experiences on its Alaskan itineraries.

    7. The Wixárika Route in Mexico

    Travelling with: Elizabeth Whitehead

    People journeying through the Wixarika Route.
    Journey deep into sacred Huichol traditions and art.

    For generations, the Indigenous Wixárika People of Mexico have walked a sacred path known as Tatehuarí Huajuyé, or ‘The Path of Our Grandfather Fire’. The annual pilgrimage route spans 500 kilometres, taking in significant sites in Wixárika spirituality and cosmology. The route passes through the deserts, mountains and forests of northern Mexico before reaching Wirikuta, believed to be the place the sun first emerged. The route is a living cultural landscape of Indigenous culture pre-Columbian influence and, in July this year, was formally inscribed into UNESCO’s World Heritage List.

    8. Drive the Iceberg Coast in Canada

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    Iceberg off the east coast of Canada
    Chase icebergs along Expedition 51 on Canada’s east coast. (Image: Canadian Tourism Commission/ Chris Hendrickson)

    Download the icebergfinder.com map to better plan your road trip along Canada’s Iceberg Coast. The new highway, which has been nearly 25 years and CAD$1.1 billion in the making, threads through the country’s pleated coastlines around Quebec, Newfoundland, Labrador, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick before looping in the French islands of St Pierre and Miquelon. As well as chasing icebergs along Expedition 51, travellers will have the opportunity to engage with cultures that have thrived in the pristine provinces for thousands of years.

    9. A foodie tour of Nova Scotia

    Travelling with: Katie Carlin

    Lunenberg Nova Scotia
    Try lobster rolls in Lunenburg on the east coast of Canada in Nova Scotia. (Image: Natalia Kvitovska/ Unsplash)

    World-famous for its lobster, Nova Scotia is a Canadian province best savoured through its culinary clout shaped by sea and terroir. Bite into lobster rolls at historic Lunenburg’s Salt Shaker Deli & Inn and sip maple rum at Ironworks Distillery. Winery-hop around Wolfville’s rising vineyards (don’t miss Lightfoot & Wolfville). Take a maple syrup tour at Sugar Moon Farm near Earltown. And pull up a seat at waterfront Bar Sofia in Halifax, where Nova Scotia oysters aguachile arrive bright with cucumber, lime and pickled onion.

    10. Soak up the sun in the Caribbean

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    Overwater bungalows off a beach in the Caribbean
    Experience the white-sand beaches and cerulean seas of the Caribbean on board a cruise.

    The Caribbean is on the radar for seasoned cruisers. And it’s easy to see why, with white-sand beaches, cerulean seas and swaying palms so picture-perfect they look AI-generated. Cruise with Windstar, Royal Caribbean, and Celebrity on its inaugural Xcel season to the Caribbean to enjoy action-packed excursions such as snorkelling coral reefs and shopping for local trinkets. And those sea days? Spectacular.

    11. Red Chair Hikes of Canada

    Travelling with: Kassia Byrnes

    Red Adirondack chairs overlooking Lake Minnewanka in Canada
    Take a seat at Lake Minnewanka, one of more than 400 red Adirondack chairs scattered across Canada’s hiking routes. (Image: Getty Images/ Autumn Sky Photography)

    No one appreciates the great outdoors more than Canadians, emerging from snow-covered winters to tread glacial rivers and snowshoe through forests, or to hike mighty mountains and wildflower-strewn valleys come spring. Along popular hikes around the country, more than 400 red Adirondack chairs have been placed in peaceful, breathtaking locations. What started as a social media contest now sees hikers soaking in classic Canadian lake and mountain vistas, overlooking historic sites or gazing down on the mountainous path they just travelled.

    12. Ride the Rocky Mountaineer from Denver to Moab, USA

    Travelling with: Carla Grossetti

    Sweeping views from the Rocky Mountaineer.
    The Rocky Mountaineer will continue as the Canyon Spirit in 2026, seen here carving through Ruby Canyon.

    Sighting wild animals is one of many incredible thrills along the two-day luxury Rockies to the Red Rocks route onboard the Rocky Mountaineer across America’s Southwest between mid-April and mid-October. In addition to the lone bear, we spot bighorn sheep, elk, beavers, pronghorn antelope, bald eagles and ospreys. Riding the rails onboard the luxury train, which was founded in Canada in 1990 and has been awarded the prestigious World’s Leading Travel Experience by Train several times, has never been about just getting from A to B. Ride the train from Denver to Moab and you will see the scenery change from snow-capped peaks to meadows, red-rock canyons and soaring cliffs that resemble ornate Gaudí-esque cathedrals. But it’s not until you get off the train that you can produce the ultimate Venn diagram, with nature and adventure in the intersecting spheres.

    Surfing Tofino: Yes it's Byron 20 years ago but in Canada - International Traveller