On the first day of our West Coast adventure, we chose the Vancouver Aquarium as the ideal place to retake some of our iconic photos from our only other BC coast visit back in 1981 when we were a family of three...Nelson, Me, and 2 1/2 year old Crystal. The summer of 2025 would give us a chance to update the photos to include Jessie, Nick, and JJ, who missed it the first time around.
The Vancouver Aquarium is located in Stanley Park, a 1,000-plus acre public park on the northern part of Vancouver's peninsula between English Bay and Burrard Bay. The Aquarium had changed in the forty-four years since we'd been there, but it seemed more amazing than ever. The 65,000 animals within the walls and waters of Canada's largest aquarium includes species from Canada's Arctic and Pacific coasts, the Tropics, the Amazon rain forest, and more. A profuse amount of shapes and colours everywhere you look.
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Nelson holding Crystal and watching a Beluga whale, 1981, Vancouver Aquarium
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The beluga whale that captivated Crystal and Nelson back in 1981 is long gone. In its place, sea otters are shown in the B.C. Wild Coast Exhibit where they entertain the crowds while swimming on their backs and using their nimble forepaws to eat. All of the sea otters at the aquarium are either rescued orphans or too severely injured to be released back into the wild. They have been deemed non-releasable by Fisheries and Oceans Canada and now form part of the
Vancouver Aquarium Marine Rescue Team. They are also available for
symbolic adoption.
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| Nelson with Crystal in front, and Jessie and JJ behind him, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
Our 2025 retake photo shows Crystal standing in front of Nelson, with Jessie and JJ beside and behind him, in the tunnel of the outdoor portion of the B.C. Wild Coast exhibit. As usual, the sea otter is using its forepaws to eat and although in a somewhat sheltered exhibit, must still keep a wary eye out for seagulls who like snatching the food in a swift flyby.
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| Crystal found JJ, Anita, and Nick watching a Sea Lion, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
Along the glass in the lover level of the B.C. Wild Coast gallery, we stopped to watch the antics of rescued California sea lions. The Marine Mammal Rescue Centre at the Vancouver Aquarium is "...the only facility of its kind in Canada and one of the largest rescue facilities in the world..."
Here are some of the images I found when I went through all of our photographs that show the array of colour and shapes we discovered:
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Jessie found a unique Pig-nosed Turtle and some Tropical Fish, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium
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| Nick showed the size of Jellyfish, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
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| JJ and Nick were caught watching Linneaus's Two-toed Sloth. 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
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| JJ found some Golden Poison Frogs, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
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| Jessie and Nelson attended 4-D Theatre, The Great Salmon Run, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
Meanwhile, during a coffee break, I was checking out the vegetation. I was surprised to find holly with blue berries instead of the red ones like the Christmas holly that I've seen growing in Vancouver. On the prairies, you can't find holly growing outside at all so just seeing it in its natural state was special.
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| Mahonia aquifolium, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
With a bit of searching, I matched my holly image to Mahonia aquifolium, a member of the Barberry Family also called Oregon Grape Holly and Holly-leaved barberry. It appears the main difference in the leaves is that the barberry type leaf is more tapered at the end whereas Christmas holly seems to stay the same width for most of its entire length.
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| Fern, 2025, Vancouver Aquarium |
A grouping of this fern was growing beside the Holly-leaved barberry. I suspect it's a sword fern, but I know nothing about fern types. What I do know is that each frond contains small capsules called sporangia that are filled with thousands of dust-like spores that will scatter in the wind when ripe. It's the artful display of the sporangia that fascinates me, especially when seen with the sun behind the fronds.
There is so much beauty connected to the Vancouver Aquarium and too much to see in one afternoon. After several hours of exploration, we headed back to our Sooke Airbnb to do some whale watching and card playing. Join us for the next post as we let you know what we saw.
Note: For those with a calendar, this post connects with the images shown for January 2026.