Victoria Classics shine Labour Day weekend

Victoria Classic Boat Show

Aug 8, 2019

Photo credit: James Holkko

The Maritime Museum of BC is proud to host the annual Victoria Classic Boat Festival in Victoria’s beautiful inner harbour, Friday, August 30 – Sunday, September 1 2019!

For over 40 years, the Victoria Classic Boat Festival has showcased classic boats from all over the Pacific Northwest each Labour Day Weekend. Each year, approximately 10,000 visitors tour the docks and the boats on display. In 2017, the Maritime Museum of BC took over operations of the Festival, incorporating marine-related exhibitions and family-friendly programs into the weekend’s activities.

Since 1977 the Victoria Classic Boat Festival, initially a “one-time happening”, has become one of Victoria’s most popular annual events. Admirers from all over the world flock to the Inner Harbour’s floats in front of the Empress Hotel each Labour Day weekend to admire as many as 130 of yesteryear’s most beautiful boats.

In addition to serving as a celebratory gathering, the festival serves the development of the classic boat community by offering an optional judging service. Festival’s judges, each an expert in their field, stand by to Victoria Boatsmeticulously inspect participant’s vessels, offering guidance and suggestions to those owners dedicated to the correct restoration of their vessels. Many boats return improved each year until they reach the pinnacle of their restoration and are recognized at the awards dinner that caps each year’s festival. In this way the festival contributes in a very tangible way to the health of the classic boat community.

The Festival is run by Museum staff, Board members, and dedicated volunteers. Community, corporate, and business sponsors provide enormous support to the Museum and it’s mission to promote and preserve BC’s maritime experience and heritage and to engage people with this ongoing story.

The Honorary Commodore for the 2019 classic is Howard White

Howard WhiteBC author Howard White

No publisher has trumpeted the romance of Canada’s western coast more than Howard White,” wrote the Globe and Mail in 1988. He started a coastal newspaper in 1970, began publishing the west coast journal Raincoast Chronicles in 1972, and founded Harbour Publishing in 1974. To date his company has been for publishing some 1000 books about British Columbia, including such well-known titles as Westcoasters: Boats That Built BC by Tom Henry, The Encyclopedia of West Coast Place Names by Andrew Scott, Keepers of the Light by Donald Graham, Fishing With John by Edith Iglauer, From the Wheelhouse by Doreen Armitage, Dangerous Waters by Keith Keller, Ships of Steel by T.A. McLaren, Legacy in Wood by Ryan Wahl and Boats in My Blood by Barrie Farrell.

Victoria Classic Boat FestivalHoward has been equally active as a writer, with poetry, articles, and fiction to his credit. His thirteen books to date include Raincoast Chronicles First Five, Raincoast Chronicles Six Ten, Spilsbury’s Coast (with Jim Spilsbury), The Accidental Airline (With Jim Spilsbury), Writing In The Rain, The Ghost In The Gears, Raincoast Chronicles Eleven Up (editor/contributor), The As a publisher, his major project to date has been The Encyclopedia of British Columbia (2000). Howard has won numerous awards including the Canadian Historical Society Career Award, the Roderick Haig-Brown Award for BC History, the Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour, the Order of British Columbia, an honorary doctorate of laws from the University of Victoria and the Order of Canada. He has twice been president of the Association of Book Publishers of BC and was the first winner of the James Douglas Publisher of the Year Award.

Having grown up on the water, first on Nelson Island then in Pender Harbour (where he still lives), Howard has been around boats all his life. Cruising this coast of endless wonders in his 37 Farrell is his favourite pastime, one he never gets enough of. He is a firm believer that when one’s allotted time on earth is being counted up, all days spent out on the water are deducted from the total. 
Classic Boat Festival Poster

Related Articles


New Boats: Beneteau Oceanis 34.1 – A Sleek, Good -Looking Delight To Sail

By Katherine Stone

There is nothing more that I enjoy than being with friends and messing about in boats. Messing about in brand-new boats on a champagne sailing day on Lake Ontario at the beginning of the summer doesn’t get any better. To have the new owner, Helmuth Strobel and Anchor Yachts dealer Pancho Jimenez aboard made it even more special, as they can also speak to what they truly enjoy about the boat. We keep our own boat in a harbour that has a long waiting list for boats over 35 feet, so this little gem would definitely fit the bill and feels like a much bigger boat. True to the spirit of the 7th generation Oceanis line, the 34.1 is built in Poland and replaces the 35.1. It is 1,000 lbs lighter, 14 cm narrower and has 29% more sail area.

Read More


Destinations

Peter Island Resort in the British Virgin Islands has Reopened

Peter Island Resort in the British Virgin Islands has opened its rebuilt and re-envisioned luxury private island in 2024 after the property closures from the Virgin Islands’ 2017 hurricane season. Peter Island Resort has been undergoing its transformation for over six years. Its evolution includes brand new and upgraded accommodations and new state-of-the-art facilities and five stellar beaches amid hundreds of acres of unspoiled tropical island.

Peter Island Yacht Club

The new Yacht Club will be a must on the itineraries of sailors, boaters and yachtsmen with a marina that can accommodate a range of vessels from power boats, sailboats and catamarans, to super yachts of up to 200 feet. Located in Sprat Bay harbor, the Yacht Club will be its own destination with a dedicated swimming pool for Yacht Club guests, Drunken Pelican restaurant and bar, a commissary, Sea Chest Boutique and a sports recreation area with pickleball, basketball and bocce ball courts and a lawn-games area. To protect the coral reef and marine life surrounding the island, moorings will be located in White Bay, Sprat Bay, Deadman’s Bay…

Read More