In the Parks Canada system of natural region representation, the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, along with the
Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve, represents Pacific Coast Mountains. Geographically, this natural region includes
Vancouver Island,
Haida Gwaii and the
Coast Mountains. Based on its landscape and habitat diversity, Parks Canada characterizes this region as Canada's rocky west coast created by
crustal material moving eastward creating coastal mountains, deep fiords and channels carved by the release of water from retreating glaciers, and experiencing heavy rainfall and mild temperatures resulting in temperate rain forests.
Long Beach The Long Beach Unit, located along
Highway 4 between
Tofino to
Ucluelet, features several beaches, short trails, and a campground. Wickaninnish Bay is bordered by the eponymous Long Beach, as well as Combers Beach, and Wickaninnish Beach, while Florencia Bay to the south includes a more sheltered beach. The two bays are connected by a Nuu-chah-nulth Trail and the KWisitis Visitor Centre (formerly Wickaninnish Interpretive Centre). The Pacific Rim Visitor Centre, located at the park entrance along Highway 4, is the park's primary information centre and meeting area. A separate park administrative and maintenance building is located further down the highway, closer to the campground and airport. The
Tofino-Long Beach Airport, owned and operated by the
Alberni-Clayoquot Regional District, is an
enclave within the park. On the north side of the Long Beach Unit is Grice Bay. Its boat launch can be used for paddling around the bay or to access the
Clayoquot Sound or the Browning Passage around the
Esowista Peninsula to the ocean. The
exclave portion at
Kennedy Lake is a day use area for picnics and swimming but the area is flanked on both sides by the
Kennedy Lake Provincial Park which has a campground and boat launch.
Broken Group Islands backdropped by islands of the
Broken Group The Broken Group Islands unit is a area in the
Barkley Sound with over one hundred small islands. The area is predominantly marine with high-relief rock reefs and kelp beds anchored by a rocky substrate. The island beaches vary from shallow sand terrain to exposed weathered rock. The south side of the outer islands, such as Wouwer, Howell, Cree and Benson Islands, are subject to strong winds and
swells, as are the Crossing Imperial Eagle and Loudon Channels between the group and Vancouver Island. The islands are uninhabited though archaeological sites show there are several abandoned village sites. For recreational purposes, the area is predominantly used for
sea kayaking, as well as related camping and wildlife viewing. Other
marine vessels pass through the area but Parks Canada prohibits
motorboats from landing on islands with campsites. Kayaks are most often launched from Toquart Bay to the north, but sometimes from Ucluelet which is 13 km from the first campsite at Clarke Island or from Bamfield which is 15 km from Gibraltar Island. Other boats can dock at Port Alberni. For multi-day trips,
Parks Canada maintains campgrounds on seven of the islands: Hand, Turret, Gibraltar, Willis, Dodd, Clarke and Gilbert islands. The names of the islands are derived from an 1861 survey map of the area by
George Henry Richards. There was formerly a campground on
Benson Island but ended in 2009 at the request of the
Tseshaht First Nation, though day-trips area are still permitted.
West Coast Trail The West Coast Trail Unit covers and features the
hiking trail between
Port Renfrew and
Bamfield. The corridor was created in 1889 as an extension of a telegraph line from
Victoria to lighthouses along the coast, and eventually to Bamfield, the Canadian terminus of the
All Red Line. After the disaster of the American steamship
SS Valencia, in 1906 with 37 survivors reaching shore along the telegraph line, the federal government upgraded the corridor to act as a trail with several shelters along the way. By 1911, it was classified as a public highway with a 20 m (66 ft) right-of-way known as the Life Saving Trail or the Shipwrecked Mariners Trail. The federal government ended its maintenance program for the trail between Port Renfrew and Carmanah Point in 1954, and the remainder of the trail by 1967. Meanwhile, there were several failed attempts at development, including coal mining,
fish canning, resort development in
Clo-oose, and small-scale logging—the result of which are several abandoned
donkey engines along the trail used to transfer logs down to the foreshore. Eventually the provincial government sold the timber rights but following advocacy by
Sierra Club Canada and locals, the BC Parks branch placed a reserve, in 1964, around the trail which
outdoor enthusiasts had continued using. With a national park being proposed at Long Beach, to which the federal government felt was too small by itself to be a national park, they were amenable to adding this trail. Sympathetic with the logging interests, the provincial government resisted but it was included in the 1970 agreement with its specific boundaries to be determined. Over the next several years, the provincial government, forestry companies, and park advocates negotiated and finalized the boundaries, with conservationists advocating for boundaries to include the entire watersheds and federal government advocating for a visual buffer between the trail and logging areas. While the Nitinat Triangle, northwest of
Nitinat Lake, was added in 1973, the final boundaries were not agreed upon until 1988. In the meantime, there was a lack of trail maintenance since BC Parks viewed it as a national park though the land had yet to be transferred to the federal government, though Parks Canada did invest in repairs and improvements in 1973 and the early 1980s, including bridges and cable cars over creeks and various campsite facilities. The Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, along with the
Gwaii Haanas and
Gulf Islands National Park Reserve, are the three national parks with direct access to the
Pacific Ocean. Located on the west side of the
Vancouver Island, the park is situated on the Estevan Lowlands, a thin strip of coastal land located between the ocean and the West Vancouver Island Fiordlands and
Vancouver Island Ranges of the
Insular Mountains. While the almost all of Vancouver Island is part of the
Wrangellia Terrane, most of the Long Beach Unit is part of the
Pacific Rim Terrane, separated from Wrangellia Terrane by the West Coast Fault. ==Climate==