your jacket sounds very posh tho



Perhaps you could translate that into something I can understand, as I'm not a native of Vancouver Island?can we get a picture of False Creek from the north side looking south ? where there is a little inlet , right at the end.
or from the actual place , looks like it has all been landscaped ?
it used to be a dockyard / loading/unloading bay.

but wasnt that far across
Nope - none the wiser...False Creek , south of the Queen Elisabeth stadium ? ( just west of the Omnimax ? cinema )

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- and the second deck seems surprisingly small...
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Fabulous!!!12th June 2026
I sleep really well, and eventually get out of bed around 07:30 to shower and get dressed.
I'm approaching the end of my fortnight in Canada alarmingly quickly.
Having had a 100% tourist day yesterday, I decide to extend that for another few hours.
I have some fruit for breakfast whilst I write up the second part of yesterday's journal, then set off in the Audi, heading north to...
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...the British Columbia Aviation Museum.
If you're not interested in aeroplanes, you may wish to find some other distraction (time to put the kettle on, Jane)
Situated at Victoria's International Airport, it has one unique selling point, to a flying-boat enthusiast like me...
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Namely, this enormous Martin "Hawaii Mars" flying boat...
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I arrive at almost exactly midday, which happily coincides with one of the guided tours being conducted by one of the curators/guides, Ken...
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Built at the end of WWII, it was originally intended as a troop and cargo transport, but more recently was converted to becoming a water-bomber, fighting forest fires. It is a pure flying boat, not an amphibian - the wheels are part of a beaching dolly which allows it to be drawn out of the water onto dry land for maintenance purposes...
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The silver coloured ducts you can see are, when lowered, how it scoops 10 tons of water into an internal tank from the water source it is using - this takes about 30 seconds.
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The rectangular hatches surrounding the scoops are opened when the aircraft is over the fire, to release the water.
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It had a flight crew of four: two pilots and two engineers; with one engineer being responsible for the four huge radial engines, and the other wholly dealing with the water collection and delivery systems.
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Ken (right) takes us inside, where we can see the large oblong tank, that holds the 10 tons of water it has scooped up...
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...and the agricultural solenoids and actuators fitted upon its conversion to its water-bombing role...
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There's a spare scoop displayed near the tank. Although this had a flight crew of four, it had a huge maintenance crew, and - being designed and built in the 1940s, was extremely maintenance intensive...
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You can see virtually every internal aspect of the aircraft's construction - including the hydraulic rams (in this pic) which allowed the crew to move the massive rudder...
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It's a triple-deck aircraft- and the second deck seems surprisingly small...
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There are pics showing it as a troop transport, and as a medevac aircraft - it was used to ferry wounded troops home during the Korean War...
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You can look forward, to the space beneath the cockpit (which is on the top deck)...
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...and into the wings. To allow the carriage of 10 tons of water, some of the wing fuel tanks were removed, but it still had an endurance of four hours when fire-fighting...
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Unfortunately, there's no access to the cockpit. It's reached by a door on the outside of the aircraft - which would be accessed by boat when it was operational. This museum is funded by donations, and - among their priorities - is a set of ramps to allow access to the flight deck. Next time, maybe...
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The Cessna displayed alongside the Mars...
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...is the one used to scout out routes for the tanker to take, and guide the tanker crew in. In an odd mirror of history, the same model of Cessna was used by the USAF in Vietnam by airborne Forward Air Controllers (FACs) to mark targets for bombers...
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Ken tells us that the method used by the Mars (ie dropping water directly onto fires) is now outdated, and leads us to the Convair CV580 parked next door...
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It is "armed" with a belly tank loaded with a fire-suppressant - a sort of slurry that is pumped into the tank on the ground and then - critically - dropped around the fire, rather than on to it, to prevent the fire spreading further and letting firefighters on the ground tackle the blaze...
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Next in line is an A26 Invader - a very capable light bomber which - remarkably - served that role in WWII, Korea and Vietnam, before being relegated to firebombing duties in the autumn of its life...
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Grumman Tracker cold-war anti-submarine aircraft, from Canada's last carrier, HMCS Bonaventure...
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Finally, in this line-up, is this oddity. Starting life as a Beech 18 Expeditor - a twin tailed, radial engined tail dragger...
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(Library pic)
...it was converted to a twin-turbo, tricycle undercarriage twin with an extended nose and a single tail fin, and renamed the PAC Arrow Westwind Four...
I thank Ken for his time and an excellent guided tour, then make my way into the two hangars that house the rest of the exhibits...
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There are some great aircraft here, like this beautiful 70-year-old Stinson 9E...
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...the nose of a DH Vampire undergoing restoration...
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CF104 Starfighter - always a crowd pleaser...
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The platform they have put up to allow you to view the cockpit...
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...also allows you a glimpse into the Lancaster alongside it...
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The entire aircraft is being restored, with the fuselage and wings currently residing in the restoration hangar next door - which is off limits to visitors...
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CT-33 Silver Star - a licence-built Lockheed T-33 advanced trainer...
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They have a Bristol Blenheim...
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...and a Harvard - one of my happiest aviation memories is of spending an hour in none of these, doing aerobatics over Stonehenge on a glorious summer's day when I was a 16-year-old air cadet - the canopies were pulled back - magical...
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This is quite interesting (well, it is to me, and if you're still reading, possibly to you)...
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At first glance, I thought this little amphibian was a Republic Seabee, but it turns out to be Trident TR-1 Trigull, an aircraft meant to improve on the Seabee's design. Alas, it never went into production, and only three were built...
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It's time to go back to the hotel. I buy some things from the gift shop - I like to support these endeavours.
After a farewell to the Anson on the way out...
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...I get Hey, Audi to lay in a course for the hotel...
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Just before my exit, it seems someone has had an incident of some sort...
I drop into the wholefoods store I used yesterday and get a horribly healthy salad to eat, then get to the hotel and start uploading pics.
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Good day...
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Memorial to Lt Robert Hampton Gray VC...