According to Destination Vancouver, periodic cold plunges can relieve joint pain and inflammation, as well as improve one’s mood and stress levels over time.
One of Vancouver's favourite New Year's Day traditions — the annual Polar Bear Swim — was celebrated by thousands again on Wednesday, in an event that has now spread across the world.
If the beach itself doesn't draw you, perhaps its events will. Vancouver's annual Polar Bear Swim takes place on English Bay each New Year's Day. The event features music and food trucks ...
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A Polar Bear plunge in the icy waters of English Bay has been a community tradition ... Someone missed the fine print in the City of Vancouver’s Polar Bear Swim messaging, which said the event ...
The largest Polar Bear swim around town is in Vancouver’s English Bay, but there’s several others going on around Metro Vancouver, so you don’t have to go far to prove your mettle.
The inaugural swim was led by Peter Pantages in 1920, when he and nine fellow members of what came to be known as the Vancouver Polar Bear Club jumped into English Bay on New Year's Day ...