
Image: Courtesy David Gluns/Kootenay Rockies Tourism

Population: 10,600
Location: Southeastern British Columbia
Drive Time from Seattle: 7 hours 30 minutes
Average High Temperature in July: 84°
Average Low Temperature in july: 55°
Calling Card
With a downtown tilted down to the shores of Kootenay Lake, the small city of Nelson becomes a kind of amphitheater—with the eastern British Columbia outdoors as the stage. Summer goes hard on hiking, biking, and boating. There are railway routes converted into forest bike paths that spread like spokes from town, and boat tours and a free ferry on the lake.
Historical Record
Nelson was founded in 1887 by two Washington gold miners looking for a new strike, but it was during the Vietnam War that expats from the south arrived in droves. So many American draft dodgers settled in the area that in 2004 a monument to the “war resisters” was considered (and then scrapped).

New Directions
Though much of Nelson’s waterfront is devoted to industry, recent housing developments have altered the shoreline, and the Hall Street Pier was redesigned as a public use space in 2024. A modern wood and steel structure serves as a pedestrian canopy, and a swimming dock reaches into the water.
Finer Things
There are few resorts in the Nelson area, with downtown’s historic Hume Hotel and Spa offering one of the only high-end overnight options. The signature Library Lounge is ornately styled—a whirl of Greek-style sculpture, fireplace, and fabric-draped ceilings.

Dance Magic
Canada sheds its buttoned-up reputation every summer at July’s Shambhala Music Festival in Salmo, about half an hour south of Nelson. The four days of electronic dance music along the banks of the Salmo River combine rave and summer camp vibes.
International Geographic
Despite Nelson’s being so Canadian it’s practically a flannel shirt in town form (mountain views, clean streets), downtown’s best cuisine is international;Cantina del Centro mixes street tacos with weekly music nights, and Yum Son blends French and Vietnamese traditions with signature bone broths in its pho.

Image: Courtesy Phil Best/Kootenay Rockies Tourism
Spelunk Tub
Even in summer, the Kootenay Rockies keep the air crisp enough for hot soaks. Ainsworth Hot Springs Resort fills a normal swimming pool as well as its famous natural cave tunnels, where lights illuminate hip-deep water and limestone walls.
Style Card
The town has long cultivated an artistic reputation, best represented under one roof at downtown’s Craft Connection co-op selling works from more than 150 creators. Even the architecture is artsy; High Victorian–style stone buildings include decorative flourishes and a few round turrets.




