Lund is located at the north end of Highway 101, also known as the Pacific Coastal Highway, one of the world’s longest highways known as Pan American Highway. The other end, a mere 9446 miles or 15202 kilometres away, is in the South American town of Quellon, Porto Monte, Chile.
The tiny fishing village of Lund, a 20-minute drive north from Powell River on BC’s Sunshine Coast, has maintained its charm as a peaceful coastal village. Lund was named by brothers Frederick and Charles Thulin when they settled at the harbour in December 1889. It was named after Lund, Sweden from where they came. When they arrived, there were native homes around the harbour. The Thulins built a store and in 1892 a post office was added followed by the first licenced hotel north of Vancouver two years later. Logging and fishing were the source of income in the early years. Transportation was by water. A paved road leading south to Vancouver was completed in 1954 and coastal steamer service ended two years later.
Today, the historic Lund Hotel is at the centre of everything. The hotel has a restaurant and pub with ocean views. It is also home to a Laundromat, general store, post office, shops and other services.
The Sunshine Coast Trail which in found in this area offers great scenic hikes. It begins at Saltery Bay ferry terminal in the south and goes north from there to Sarah Point in the world-famous Desolation Sound in the north.
Outside the north end of the Lund Harbour, the pristine Copeland Islands hug the shoreline heading towards the world-renowned Desolation Sound Provincial Marine Park. Another route to Desolation Sound is up Okeover Inlet past the commercial oyster farms and through Malaspina Inlet. Both popular waterways are shared by sport and commercial fishers, pleasure boaters, and kayakers.
B.C. was voted the number one scuba diving destination in the world by readers of Scuba Diving Magazine and the Lund area plays a major role in that acclaim. Jacques Cousteau once rated this area as second best in the world for abundance of sea life. Boasting the warmest waters north of the Baja, the clarity, especially in the winter (up to 30m), and the absence of predators are only two of the reasons the area is deservedly known as one of the premier diving locales in the world.
The town is the gateway to the world famous Desolation Sound. This Provincial Marine Park is an ocean playground for power boaters, sail boaters and especially kayakers. Desolation Sound and the Discovery Islands have so many coves, inlets, and bays that they haven’t all been named.
This area is often called a vacationers paradise with boundless opportunities, magnificent scenery, clear warm waters and a mild, year round climate.
Now the question that you may be asking yourself is where do you find more information on this subject? Click here for additional information on the Lund? To widen your research to the coast of BC in general go here! Around Vancouver Island