Here is a neat little video about the popular Circle Farm Tour in the Chilliwack area. Circle Farm destinations are carefully picked and the best part is you can pick out what you want to see.
Recently, our family visited Honeyview Farms in Rosedale where the kids (and adults) had a lot of fun watching the bee wall and tasting some unique honey. Maple honey was new to us and quite tasty. We took home some lemon infused honey too. The sweet and sour combination of lemon and creamed honey turns out to be great on toast.
Honeyview is featured in this video as part of the Circle Farm Tour. They have easy RV parking and a pull through driveway. 10609 McGrath Road, Rosedale, BC V0X 1X0 (604) 794-3315
For a nice casual lunch, great produce, and interesting local food products, consider stopping at Hofstede’s Country Barn Their food is exceptional quality and homemade style. Over 20 years ago Hofstede’s started selling produce at local markets, but today they operate from a storefront opposite Superstore that includes sale of local fruits and vegetables, a grocery section, deli, bakery and coffee shop.
If you want more information look for the Circle Farm Tour brochures at any of the featured businesses, at Chilliwack Tourism, or in tourism literature racks in the Fraser Valley. You might also check out the website for the project.
One of the best resources in Chilliwack is the multi-use facilities of Heritage Park. Located in the Southeast corner of the Lickman Rd interchange, it offers easy freeway access.
Heritage Park is a versatile facility. The main building is divided in to 4 sections, with easy access between them. There are 2 rooms with concrete floors that measure 34,800 square feet each. A 3rd room offers a 48,000 square foot dirt floor and the fourth room has a 30,000 square feet dirt floor. Many events, especially equestrian events, use the entire facility. Crowds easily circulate between the 4 large rooms.
Other features at Heritage Park include a flexible public address system, box office and show offices. Concession services are available. The washroom facilities include showers.
Portable features include a stage, tables and chairs. Agricultural or equestrian events at Heritage Park in Chilliwack benefit from box stalls for the animals, rodeo penning and animal washing facilities.
There is a grandstand, dirt track, rodeo area, and plenty of room for outdoor displays.
The large parking lot can be staffed with volunteers who will collect donations toward a local charity.
Heritage Park is just 2 minutes away from Progress Storage’s Chilliwack storage yard.
Heritage Park maintains a pretty busy calender of events from the annual Chilliwack Fair, to dog shows, trade shows, horse oriented events, and many other interesting events.
Chilliwack BC is turning into an extension of Hollywood North, and we could not be happier. This friendly community of 85,000 just 100 km from downtown Vancouver welcomes film projects with easy approvals, accommodating residents, and diverse locations that can stand in for nearly anywhere. Check out this short video about film in Chilliwack:
As a smaller community with diverse architecture, Chilliwack can stand in for locations as diverse as the Hamptons or Nevada.
Chilliwack is close enough to the Zone to be practical, yet in an area where substantial tax credits are available for stepping outside the Zone. Lower permit costs, lower cost of goods and labor than in the big city, and the lack of a “hassle factor”” combine to make Chilliwack a very cost effective place to do film projects.
You’ve seen Chilliwack on TV and the big screen already, because all these projects have been filmed in Chilliwack.
Commercials:A & W Restaurant – Cialis – Source Vodka – Heineken Beer – Johnny Walker Whiskey – Kohl’s Department Store – Molson Canadian Beer – NHL Relauncher – Tim Horton’s – Walmart – Chevrolet Uplander – Ford Mustang – Honda – Kia – Land Rover – Subaru – Volkswagon
Feature Films: Dark Storm – Dungeon Siege – Little Man – Partition – Snakehead Terror – The Last Mimzy – The Mangler 2 – The Much Music Movie* – The Pledge – The Stick Up – White Chicks*
T.V. Series: Eureka Seasons I, II, III, IV, V – Heads Up – Smallville
T.V. Pilot: Clean Fight
Reality T.V.: Canadian Pickers – Crash Test Mommy – Consumed
Movie of the Week: The Void
Documentaries: Forensic Factor Season 6 – Piper James
Miscellaneous: RCMP Training Videos, Various Music Videos*
The starred films and projects are ones that Progress Storage management provided space and locations for.
If you are planning to film in Chilliwack, or willing to consider the advantages of filming in Chilliwack, call Cameron Rogers at Progress Storage 604 835 3888 or 604 824 4081 for assistance with locations, storage, parking or anything else film related. If we can’t provide it, we will connect you with someone who can.
The Chilliwack Film Commission is a great resource too. Just let them know what you need and they will help make it happen.
Stories of large Big Foot beasts who walk upright continue to pop up around North America, with the Pacific Northwest and BC having more than their fair share of tales. No one has ever shot a Big Foot or found a dead one, but sightings, foot castings and the occasional videos continue to surface.
Here is a pretty compelling video relating a sighting of a possible Sasquatch in the Chilliwack River Valley in 1985 by a visiting couple from Kansas City. At the time, Chilliwack Valley Road was a gravel road, but the campground existed and there are plenty of details related by a local who spoke with the American campers.
Not from the Chilliwack area, but a story by TV’s Survivor Man (and Canadian) Les Stroud relates a story of an encounter in Alaska. He relates reluctantly that he heard what sounded like “an ape” laughing and grunting and crashing through the woods.
And here Les is in another interview about the same experience.
Then we have this report from the Chilliwack Progress in 2008:
“”A seven-foot Sasquatch has been spotted near Chilliwack, a witness says.
And two local Sasquatch hunters are convinced the sighting, reported last month on Mount Cheam, is the real deal.
“This was a legitimate sighting, not a bear, not a deer or anything else,” said Bill Miller, a full-time Sasquatch hunter who lives in Harrison Hot Springs.
The Sasquatch was sighted on June 19 at 2 a.m. when a husband and wife were travelling down the mountain after watching the city lights from a lookout point. The wife was busy fiddling with CDs when the creature crossed in front of them.
“He grabbed his wife’s arm and said ‘did you see that guy cross the road?,’” said Tom Steenburg, a Sasquatch hunter and Big Foot author, who interviewed the couple two days after the sighting.
“His wife started asking him questions, like what was he wearing. He said that he wasn’t wearing anything, he was just really hairy. She asked how tall he was. He just said that he was really big. Finally she asked, was it the Sasquatch? No, he replied. It couldn’t have been, there’s no such thing as the Sasquatch.”
The man who saw the figure described it as having “long arms, down to his knees,” a “very heavy, big upper body,” a “thin waist,” a “flat stomach,” and no neck, “just kind of a head.”
He compared it to being “big like a wrestler, flexing its back and chest.” He also said it was about seven feet tall, covered in black hair, and walked on two legs.”
Than there is a report by an off duty bus driver who claims he saw a Sasquatch on Vedder Mountain Road one night in 1966. This was reported before the release of the Patterson-Gimlin Film, with a description of the large ape like creature very much like that in the film. If you want to dive deeper into the mystery of the Sasquatch, check out In Search of Giants: Bigfoot Sasquatch Encountersby Chilliwack based writer/researcher Thomas Steenburg.
Is Sasquatch real? If he is, than the forests around Chilliwack are as good a place as any for him to hang out.