Handyman Connection in Penticton, BC
Handyman Connection in Penticton, BC Call 1-800-88- HANDY
Handyman Connection is in Penticton, BC and surrounding
areas. We can help you to do all your fix-ups and renos. This includes
kitchen and bathroom, fences and decks, drywall and painting, plumbing
and electrical, flooring including wood, laminate and tile, fine
carpentry and just about everything else. One number works all over the
Okanagan. Call 1-800-88 HANDY (1-800-884-2639)
The name Penticton is derived from a word in the Okanagan language.
It is conventionally translated by the city's tourism promoters as "a
place to stay forever" but is actually a reference to the year-round
flow of the Okanagan River where it enters Skaha Lake. Differing
accounts of the meaning are given in the British Columbia Geographical
Names Information System entry for the city:
"Place where water passes beyond." (information from Isaac Harris,
published in Vernon News, 18 July 1918); compare with: "Derived from the
Okanagan dialect of the Salish tribe, the word Pen-tak-tin meaning 'a
place of permanent abode where waters pass by'." (50th Anniversary
booklet of Penticton, 1958) From the Indian name Pente-hik-ton, "ever"
or "forever" referring to the constant steady flow of the Okanagan River
out of the lake.... applied by the Indians to the locality at the
outlet of the lake, meaning that the stream ran on ever, or forever, in
contrast to other streams which dried up during the summer (6th Report
of the Okanagan Historical Society); compare with: "Derives from the
Okanagan word Sin-peen-tick-tin, loosely translatable as 'permanent
place'." (c1980 advice from Randy Bouchard, BC Indian Language Project).
Events
Penticton hosts many events annually, among them the Canadian Ironman
Triathlon, the Okanagan Wine Festival, the Okanagan Children's
Festival, Fest-of-Ale BC, the Penticton Peach Festival, the Pentastic
Hot Jazz Festival, and the "Elvis Festival" which was featured in the
Summer 2006 issue of British Columbia Magazine.
Recreation
Penticton is home to recreational opportunities such as skiing at the
Apex Mountain Resort ski area, boating and fishing on Skaha Lake and
Okanagan Lake. Both lakes have beautiful beaches. There is golfing on
the area's many courses, as well as hiking or biking the Kettle Valley
Railway Trail, and rock climbing at Skaha Bluffs. Penticton is home to
KIJHL team the Penticton Lakers, the BCHL hockey team Penticton Vees who
play throughout the winter months, as well as the PCSL soccer team
Penticton Pinnacles, who play from May until July.
In September 2006, residents voted 80.3% in favour of the
construction of the South Okanagan Events Centre. The $73 million arena,
sports complex and convention centre could possibly serve as a summer
or early fall training facility for the Vancouver Canucks as well as the
home of the BCHL's Penticton Vees, so named in honour of the senior
hockey team that in 1955 won the Ice Hockey World Championships against
Russia. The Centre has boosted the city's convention market and is a
popular stop on concert tours and for other special events.
The Penticton Vees now play in the South Okanagan Events Center which opened in September 2008.
Penticton is the hub of wine tourism in the Okanagan Valley with
access to 88 wineries within an hour's drive. Nearby Naramata now has 22
wineries, by the beginning of the 2009 Fall Wine Festival.
The Kettle Valley Railroad(KVR) Trail Network — with trail heads
leading to more than 160 km of flat, railbed trails for hiking and
biking adventures—can be accessed from Penticton. This trail is part of
the Trans Canada Trail.
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