**** Vancouver FAQ Thread **** A few updates in main post!

If you are not going to be driving around Vancouver it's totally doable. You could take ground transportation and luggage to the airport and try to check in your bags. If you are unable to check in then there is a luggage storage place both in the domestics and international terminals. It's starts at $8 per item for 24 hours.

Once your luggage is taken care of you can hop on the sky train and head back downtown and spend the day in the city looking around or take in Stanley park or Granville island.
 
Hello
We are going on the Alaska cruise at the end of next month. Once the cruise is over, we have paid for ground transportation to take us to the airport from the cruise terminal. But our plane does not leave until late, late, late that evening. Does anyone know if we can check our luggage in early at the airport and then tour Vancouver before the plane leaves to go home? I would like to do that as our flights do not depart until around 10pm.
Thanks!

I'm sure that there's a luggage storage service at the port - I read about it in a TR on here and on another popular cruise board.
 
Just saw on face book that they have started selling tickets online for the fly over Canada attraction at Canada Place
 

Just saw on face book that they have started selling tickets online for the fly over Canada attraction at Canada Place

this is so great for people to be able to make sure they can ride the attraction when they are in port before or after their cruise :) For us, it's a matter of looking up the cruise ship schedule and going on a day when there is not a ship in port! :)
 
I've been racking my brain on what to do once we leave the ship in Vancouver. Unfortunately our flight does not leave until 10:45 pm, so we have quite a while to hang out. And I do not want to hang out in the airport. We could store our bags at $8.00 a piece (x 6), then pay $30-40or more (x 3) for some tour. This is what I've come up with.........rent a car, throw our luggage in the trunk and do our own sightseeing.:car: What do ya'll think?
 
/
This is what we have planned. National rental ( and Alamo) are right at the cruise terminal. We might tour Stanley park and have a late lunch.
We were able to get a standard car for $56.00.
Dropping it off at the airport for our 6 pm flight.
 
After looking at the prices, I think that might just be what we should do. What site did you book your car through?
 
If you are not going to be driving around Vancouver it's totally doable. You could take ground transportation and luggage to the airport and try to check in your bags. If you are unable to check in then there is a luggage storage place both in the domestics and international terminals. It's starts at $8 per item for 24 hours.

Once your luggage is taken care of you can hop on the sky train and head back downtown and spend the day in the city looking around or take in Stanley park or Granville island.

I'm sure that there's a luggage storage service at the port - I read about it in a TR on here and on another popular cruise board.

Thanks for all the responses and the help! I really do appreciate it. :wave2:
 
I feel as if I should say something regarding Granville Island. It's a cute touristy spot, but apparently they are having an issue with theft there that I thought I should warn you about. On our recent trip, we parked our rental Dodge Grand Caravan right near one of the Information booths in a very busy area. It was broken into and we had a ton of stuff stolen. Before the security officer even saw our vehicle, he asked if it was a Grand Caravan. I guess they have had a lot of them broken into recently. He also said that day that a bike rack that was bolted to the ground was removed and all of the bikes were taken. From what the security guy told us, it sounds like they are having a lot of problems with theft.

Also, just an FYI...trip insurance (or at least, ours) doesn't covered items left in an unattended vehicle regardless of whether or not it is locked.
 
I feel as if I should say something regarding Granville Island. It's a cute touristy spot, but apparently they are having an issue with theft there that I thought I should warn you about. On our recent trip, we parked our rental Dodge Grand Caravan right near one of the Information booths in a very busy area. It was broken into and we had a ton of stuff stolen. Before the security officer even saw our vehicle, he asked if it was a Grand Caravan. I guess they have had a lot of them broken into recently. He also said that day that a bike rack that was bolted to the ground was removed and all of the bikes were taken. From what the security guy told us, it sounds like they are having a lot of problems with theft.

Also, just an FYI...trip insurance (or at least, ours) doesn't covered items left in an unattended vehicle regardless of whether or not it is locked.

Again, so very sorry to hear this happened to you guys!! :furious: Mean people suck however it's nice to warn others as well.

Take care,
Heather
 
Also, just an FYI...trip insurance (or at least, ours) doesn't covered items left in an unattended vehicle regardless of whether or not it is locked.

If you have homeowners or renters insurance, check with them. I used to be an insurance rep in Canada, and our policies covered theft of items away from home --- I think anywhere worldwide, but for sure anywhere in North America.
 
Just got back from Alaska...our original plan for us was to rent a car as sight see in Vancouver while waiting for our flight back. Instead, we placed our luggage in a holding area at the airport (can't think of the name right now, on the second floor in domestic claim area, $32 for 6 pieces). Then took a 15 minute cab ride to Stevenston village. Very pretty little town, there is a really nice park with large playground and water playground for the kids (wish I had known and I would have taken DGD swim suit). McDonalds is across the street along with lots of quaint shops, down the road is the Museum/post office. Here we learned the town is actually the town "Storybrook" from Once upon a time. I've never watched the show, but the postmaster said the village street scenes are filmed there. There is a fish cannery museum nearby and fisherman's wharf, lots of shops and diners on the boardwalk. Be sure to check out Timothy's for great ice cream in a delicious "made while you wait" waffle cone. We had a great time there and didn't cost that much.
 
We returned from the July 1 Alaskan cruise this week, and I wanted to share a bit of what we did in Vancouver, since we had a very enjoyable time in the city both before and after our cruise.

Hotels: We stayed at the Westin Grand before our cruise (booked through Priceline for $146/night). This really was a great hotel for the price. We had a one-bedroom suite with a kitchenette and a fold-out sofa that was more than adequate for the two of us and would have been a great arrangement for a family of up to four. The hotel had a very nice outdoor (!!) pool on the 3rd floor in a well-appointed patio area (they have live music and appetizers out there a couple of times a week - very swanky!). The concierge at the hotel was a humongous help, as well. Overall, a terrific experience and we wouldn't hesitate to stay there again. The hotel is located right on Robson Street (only a few blocks away from the famous downtown shipping district) and is right nextdoor to the Vancouver Public library, which is a pretty well-known landmark downtown.

After our cruise, we stayed for one night at the Sheraton Wall Centre, which we booked on Hotwire for only $97/night. Admittedly, we liked the amenities at the Westin a bit more, but the view from the Sheraton was quite nice and it definitely was nice for the price. Finding the pool here after a long day of walking was quite a chore, though.

Seawall and Stanley Park: It was about a ten-block walk from the Westin Grand out to the seawall - very reasonable. We started out near the floatplane dock and strolled all the way down to Stanley Park, which took us less than an hour. From there we stopped at Spokes (on the corner of Denman St. - you can't miss it!) and rented two bikes. We spent the next two hours biking the entire perimeter of Stanley Park, which took about two hours. The scenery was stunning and this was truly my favorite experience anywhere in Vancouver. Would HIGHLY recommend doing this! For those with small children, tandem bikes and bikes with infant seats were available. The biking was very flat all the way around and many children were biking with their families all day long.

Gastown: Worth a stroll around. Be aware - although this is a touristy area, the homeless are very prevalent here, and if you wander too far east you will stray out of Gastown basically onto skid row. The steam clock is worth stopping at around the top of the hour to see and hear, and there are lots of great restaurants around aside from the Old Spaghetti Factory. We ate at The Flying Pig, which was absolutely delicious and not too expensive. They had some great local brews on tap, and the short ribs I ate were to die for! It was a terrific first dinner in the city, and was recommended to us by the concierge at the hotel.

Capilano Suspension Bridge and Grouse Mountain: Well worth the cost. It is very easy to see these both in the same day, as they are geographically close. There is a free shuttle to Capilano that runs from a number of spots downtown (Canada Place, a hotel on Robson St., to name two) and will get you there in less than a 1/2 hour. The drive is quite pretty and takes you up over the Lions Gate Bridge. There is a similar free shuttle to Grouse Mountain which runs only from Canada Place. Take yoru pick as to which you visit first. To get from Capilano to Grouse, the #236 bus will cost you only a dollar or two and will take you between the two directly. Additionally, the Grouse Shuttle will sometimes drop you off at Capilano on the way back to downtown, if things aren't too busy.

We got an early start up to Capilano and actually wound up way ahead of schedule for the day, so we decided to take the free shuttle back downtown, stroll Robson St., eat lunch at Japadog, and then walk to Canada Place and shuttle up to Grouse again for free. This wound up being a bit of extra walking, but it helped eat up the day.

At Grouse Mountain, you can waive the (pretty expensive) fee to ride the skyride to the top in two ways: 1) You can endure the Grouse Grind (a pretty challenging hike up the mountain that will take about 1 1/2-2 hours), or you can agree to eat an entree at the Observatory Restaurant at the top of the mountain. We went for the latter, which wound up being a nice value. We arrived about three hours before our scheduled 5:30 dinner and saw most everything there was to see up at Grouse (the bird show, the Lumberjack show, the Grizzly bears). Dinner was typical upscale "touristy" fare, but the food was good and the fact that we had somewhat spendy dinners planned for vacation anyway made it a good value, since we didn't have to pay to get up the mountain.

The Grouse shuttle stops running at 5:30, so return trip home involved a very easy ride on the 236 bus and a trip on the Seabus from Lonsdale Quay back downtown. The trip sounds complicated at first, but is in fact very easy. A very worthwhile day!

Granville Island: Would highly recommend walking here if you can over the Burrard Bridge - beautiful views! Otherwise, you can easily walk in general to the False Creek area and hop a small Aquabus (they are so cute!), which will take you all around this part of town and drop you off right at the public market.

The food at the market is plentiful, and it reminded me a lot of Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia. There are no bad options for food here - just eat whatever looks good to you at the time! I would definitely recommend grabbing a pastry form one of the bakeries and/or some fresh fruit for dessert...everything is absolutely mouth-watering. If you have small children, they can wear bathing suits under their clothes and wander over to the park and water play area on the Island if the weather is good!

As adults, we also stopped in at the Granville Island Brewery for a tasting. The beer wasn't particularly special, but it was tasty! Worth the $6 for three samples, for sure.

If we had more time, we would have loved to stop at Kitsilano Beach for a bit or visit the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Garden in Chinatown. Maybe nextime ;)
 
Yes, bell services took my 2 suitcases over to Canada Place.
I loved the hotel. I stayed on their Gold Floor and was blown away by the terrace, the quality and quantity of the food offerings (it was a full breakfast!) and the genuine friendliness of the staff. My room overlooked Canada Place and I could watch the seaplanes taking off, as well as the cruise ships departing. Can't wait to go back next year!

We are staying there in a few weeks as well and glad to hear you enjoyed it! Is there a charge for bringing bags to Canada Place and where do they leave them? We have 6 people and a whole lot of luggage!
 
We returned from the July 1 Alaskan cruise this week, and I wanted to share a bit of what we did in Vancouver, since we had a very enjoyable time in the city both before and after our cruise.

Hotels: We stayed at the Westin Grand before our cruise (booked through Priceline for $146/night). This really was a great hotel for the price. We had a one-bedroom suite with a kitchenette and a fold-out sofa that was more than adequate for the two of us and would have been a great arrangement for a family of up to four. The hotel had a very nice outdoor (!!) pool on the 3rd floor in a well-appointed patio area (they have live music and appetizers out there a couple of times a week - very swanky!). The concierge at the hotel was a humongous help, as well. Overall, a terrific experience and we wouldn't hesitate to stay there again. The hotel is located right on Robson Street (only a few blocks away from the famous downtown shipping district) and is right nextdoor to the Vancouver Public library, which is a pretty well-known landmark downtown.

After our cruise, we stayed for one night at the Sheraton Wall Centre, which we booked on Hotwire for only $97/night. Admittedly, we liked the amenities at the Westin a bit more, but the view from the Sheraton was quite nice and it definitely was nice for the price. Finding the pool here after a long day of walking was quite a chore, though.

Seawall and Stanley Park: It was about a ten-block walk from the Westin Grand out to the seawall - very reasonable. We started out near the floatplane dock and strolled all the way down to Stanley Park, which took us less than an hour. From there we stopped at Spokes (on the corner of Denman St. - you can't miss it!) and rented two bikes. We spent the next two hours biking the entire perimeter of Stanley Park, which took about two hours. The scenery was stunning and this was truly my favorite experience anywhere in Vancouver. Would HIGHLY recommend doing this! For those with small children, tandem bikes and bikes with infant seats were available. The biking was very flat all the way around and many children were biking with their families all day long.

Gastown: Worth a stroll around. Be aware - although this is a touristy area, the homeless are very prevalent here, and if you wander too far east you will stray out of Gastown basically onto skid row. The steam clock is worth stopping at around the top of the hour to see and hear, and there are lots of great restaurants around aside from the Old Spaghetti Factory. We ate at The Flying Pig, which was absolutely delicious and not too expensive. They had some great local brews on tap, and the short ribs I ate were to die for! It was a terrific first dinner in the city, and was recommended to us by the concierge at the hotel.

Capilano Suspension Bridge and Grouse Mountain: Well worth the cost. It is very easy to see these both in the same day, as they are geographically close. There is a free shuttle to Capilano that runs from a number of spots downtown (Canada Place, a hotel on Robson St., to name two) and will get you there in less than a 1/2 hour. The drive is quite pretty and takes you up over the Lions Gate Bridge. There is a similar free shuttle to Grouse Mountain which runs only from Canada Place. Take yoru pick as to which you visit first. To get from Capilano to Grouse, the #236 bus will cost you only a dollar or two and will take you between the two directly. Additionally, the Grouse Shuttle will sometimes drop you off at Capilano on the way back to downtown, if things aren't too busy.

We got an early start up to Capilano and actually wound up way ahead of schedule for the day, so we decided to take the free shuttle back downtown, stroll Robson St., eat lunch at Japadog, and then walk to Canada Place and shuttle up to Grouse again for free. This wound up being a bit of extra walking, but it helped eat up the day.

At Grouse Mountain, you can waive the (pretty expensive) fee to ride the skyride to the top in two ways: 1) You can endure the Grouse Grind (a pretty challenging hike up the mountain that will take about 1 1/2-2 hours), or you can agree to eat an entree at the Observatory Restaurant at the top of the mountain. We went for the latter, which wound up being a nice value. We arrived about three hours before our scheduled 5:30 dinner and saw most everything there was to see up at Grouse (the bird show, the Lumberjack show, the Grizzly bears). Dinner was typical upscale "touristy" fare, but the food was good and the fact that we had somewhat spendy dinners planned for vacation anyway made it a good value, since we didn't have to pay to get up the mountain.

The Grouse shuttle stops running at 5:30, so return trip home involved a very easy ride on the 236 bus and a trip on the Seabus from Lonsdale Quay back downtown. The trip sounds complicated at first, but is in fact very easy. A very worthwhile day!

Granville Island: Would highly recommend walking here if you can over the Burrard Bridge - beautiful views! Otherwise, you can easily walk in general to the False Creek area and hop a small Aquabus (they are so cute!), which will take you all around this part of town and drop you off right at the public market.

The food at the market is plentiful, and it reminded me a lot of Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia. There are no bad options for food here - just eat whatever looks good to you at the time! I would definitely recommend grabbing a pastry form one of the bakeries and/or some fresh fruit for dessert...everything is absolutely mouth-watering. If you have small children, they can wear bathing suits under their clothes and wander over to the park and water play area on the Island if the weather is good!

As adults, we also stopped in at the Granville Island Brewery for a tasting. The beer wasn't particularly special, but it was tasty! Worth the $6 for three samples, for sure.

If we had more time, we would have loved to stop at Kitsilano Beach for a bit or visit the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Garden in Chinatown. Maybe nextime ;)

Thank you so much for this info. We fly into Vancouver on the 25th of this month. We have 3 days to do things before we sail. We were thinking about Grouse, Capilano and Stanley Park too. Did your dinner deal at Grouse include the wind mill? Did you book that when you got to Grouse or did you do it ahead? I am concerned about booking ahead and not knowing about the weather. Was fly over Canada open at the pier when you were there? Do you think we would have enough time to Ferry over to Victoria or skip it on this trip? Granville island you wrote about sounds nice too.
 
Thank you so much for this info. We fly into Vancouver on the 25th of this month. We have 3 days to do things before we sail. We were thinking about Grouse, Capilano and Stanley Park too. Did your dinner deal at Grouse include the wind mill? Did you book that when you got to Grouse or did you do it ahead? I am concerned about booking ahead and not knowing about the weather. Was fly over Canada open at the pier when you were there? Do you think we would have enough time to Ferry over to Victoria or skip it on this trip? Granville island you wrote about sounds nice too.

Would definitely recommend all the things we got done during our three days there. We also purposefully underplanned our time in Vancouver, so you may be able to fit in even more than we did, depending on how "go-go-go" you feel like making your three days. As for Victoria, I would say that going depends on your preferences, but that you should find plenty to occupy you in Vancouver for three days without ferrying over there. My understanding is that the trip takes a solid 3-4 hours each way, so in my opinion if you want to go there you should plan on staying overnight to make the trek worth your while. One family on our cruise did tea at the Empress there one day and said the trip back and forth was definitely a pain to do in one day. That said, if you want to go early one morning, take in tea at the empress and Butchart Gardens, then ferry back the following morning...it will probably be very enjoyable! You could easily see either Stanley Park or Granville Island with the time you'd have left that following afternoon, weather permitting.

I did also completely forget to mention that we did Fly Over Canada on the morning of our cruise! We bought tickets for that ahead of time to save a few bucks, and while it was almost exactly like Soarin' Over California, it was a worthwhile way to kill some time until we were able to embark. We cabbed it to the port that morning with all our stuff, and Fly Over Canada took our luggage for us while we went on the ride. We only needed to lug our baggage down to the end of Canada Place to get on the ride, and then through the convention center (back up the pier) to the cruise ship terminal. Very convenient. I would definitely do this first thing one morning if you can, since the line got very backed up by mid-afternoon and people were waiting for an hour and a half to ride, as reported by the staff there. Again, the morning that you embark is a good time to fit it in ;)

As for Grouse, the only thing we did ahead of time was to make our dinner reservation through OpenTable. There is a policy about canceling in advance (I think it's 24 hours? Just check), but you should be fine since you'll know what the weather will be like by that time. At the Skyride ticket booth, the clerk called up to the restaurant to verify that we had reservations, and then we printed our ticket for us. We could have paid the difference in price and spent a little more to ride the air lift up to the peak of the mountain and/or taken in the view from the windmill (the price difference is about $15/ticket for those two experiences), but I didn't find that necessary. Had we arrived a little earlier, we could have done a 45-minute guided walk with a ranger up there, but that's about all I felt we missed. Don't book anything ahead of time, since it doesn't save you any money and you can choose what you want to do at the ticket booth.

One last ProTip: I think we did the two attractions in that area (Capilano and Grouse) in the right order - we got to Capilano around 9 AM, and by 10:30 or 11 when we left it was PACKED and there was a huge line to get across the bridge. First thing in the morning, we walked right across. So If I had it to do all over again, I would have done things in exactly the same order.
 
Would definitely recommend all the things we got done during our three days there. We also purposefully underplanned our time in Vancouver, so you may be able to fit in even more than we did, depending on how "go-go-go" you feel like making your three days. As for Victoria, I would say that going depends on your preferences, but that you should find plenty to occupy you in Vancouver for three days without ferrying over there. My understanding is that the trip takes a solid 3-4 hours each way, so in my opinion if you want to go there you should plan on staying overnight to make the trek worth your while. One family on our cruise did tea at the Empress there one day and said the trip back and forth was definitely a pain to do in one day. That said, if you want to go early one morning, take in tea at the empress and Butchart Gardens, then ferry back the following morning...it will probably be very enjoyable! You could easily see either Stanley Park or Granville Island with the time you'd have left that following afternoon, weather permitting.

I did also completely forget to mention that we did Fly Over Canada on the morning of our cruise! We bought tickets for that ahead of time to save a few bucks, and while it was almost exactly like Soarin' Over California, it was a worthwhile way to kill some time until we were able to embark. We cabbed it to the port that morning with all our stuff, and Fly Over Canada took our luggage for us while we went on the ride. We only needed to lug our baggage down to the end of Canada Place to get on the ride, and then through the convention center (back up the pier) to the cruise ship terminal. Very convenient. I would definitely do this first thing one morning if you can, since the line got very backed up by mid-afternoon and people were waiting for an hour and a half to ride, as reported by the staff there. Again, the morning that you embark is a good time to fit it in ;)

As for Grouse, the only thing we did ahead of time was to make our dinner reservation through OpenTable. There is a policy about canceling in advance (I think it's 24 hours? Just check), but you should be fine since you'll know what the weather will be like by that time. At the Skyride ticket booth, the clerk called up to the restaurant to verify that we had reservations, and then we printed our ticket for us. We could have paid the difference in price and spent a little more to ride the air lift up to the peak of the mountain and/or taken in the view from the windmill (the price difference is about $15/ticket for those two experiences), but I didn't find that necessary. Had we arrived a little earlier, we could have done a 45-minute guided walk with a ranger up there, but that's about all I felt we missed. Don't book anything ahead of time, since it doesn't save you any money and you can choose what you want to do at the ticket booth.

One last ProTip: I think we did the two attractions in that area (Capilano and Grouse) in the right order - we got to Capilano around 9 AM, and by 10:30 or 11 when we left it was PACKED and there was a huge line to get across the bridge. First thing in the morning, we walked right across. So If I had it to do all over again, I would have done things in exactly the same order.

I will definitely use your pro tips.

I agree with you about Victoria- I have been on the fence about for the past year. I think that should be another trip.
I just want to clarify 2 things

Grouse mountain- open table- did you book at home? Or once you were in Vancouver using a electronic device? If I am understanding you correctly you only booked dinner and then the rest when you got there?

Fly over Canada- do you remember how long the ride lasted? Our port check in time is 11:00. Just trying to figure out what time to try and buy. Did they really go by the ticket time or are you still waiting some?

Just 13 days- I think I will burst with excitement til then.
 

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