Strangely, Canada has long been my chosen emigration country, should things turn sour here in Belgium (or should I just need to move). And this without me having ever set foot there. I’m glad i finally went and scoped out a tiny part of Canada, to add a touch of reality to that fantasy. It was a great holiday, and I think it’s a great country. Now, if allowed to, could I move there ?
Food
Go ahead, laugh, but nice scenery is once in a while, and food is every day, 3 to 4 times.
- I think all foods we use daily here can be bought there – fresh and good veg and fruit, fish, meat. Some ingredients may ask for a little bit of research, like good bread or the full variety of cheeses, but the impression I got is that they were available.
- good, cheap meals of all nationalities can be found in restaurants, especially in a city like Vancouver
- Sometimes more open-minded and daring than here, where we are sometimes constrained by tradition. For instance, an enlarged concept of breakfast: where here, we’re partial to the continental breakfast, and we know about traditional english breakfast, there they pick and mix, joyously, like for instance a tex-mex breakfast, or a more mediterranean egg broil with garlic and spinach.
- their coffee sucks. Canadians don’t know about coffee. The tap water is all wrong, and they make it much too weak, the kind my grandfather used to call ’sock juice’.
- cakes, cookies, scones, brownies, muffins, bagels, buns. Need i say more ?
Lifestyle
The canadese people I met seemed fairly relaxed, and like the outdoors. They work hard, but seem less work-obsessed than some. There also seems to be an active art and music scene in Vancouver, with live music to be found pretty much every night. They like having a beer, but don’t seem to be going for stone drunk like the brits. Education is not cheap, and most people I met seemed to worry about money somehow – but that may just be the people I met, or the times we live in.
Nature
It’s quite simple, Canada is a very, very large country. Human beings only populate a small percentage of the surface – the road network, for instance, is quite sparse, from my belgian point of view. When you go further north, even more so. This means vast territories of near-untouched nature, something amazing for us, boxed in in our fertile and overpopulated lands.
Local interviews
Of course, I took the opportunity to ask around.
To immigrants, I asked simply “do you like living here ?”. To locals, i was more roundabout, saying things like “you’re lucky to live in this country” and seeing their reaction.
Strangely, the immigrants I talked to (granted, they were not in high-paying power jobs) were mostly homesick. Not homesick enough to go back, apparently, but enough to return for holidays, and speak in melancholy tones about their home country.
The locals were mostly shrugging or saying “yes …” in a doubtful tone.
But maybe that’s to be expected. We humans take for granted what we have, and always crave something more – that’s probably what made us crawl out of the trees and build our first tool. Even if we have fantastic nature next door, we’ll want a nicer house, social acceptance, a loving relationship, more friends, a higher position within the company, more money to go round, a sailing boat, whatever.
Conclusion
So, would I want to move there ? I certainly like what I saw.
But I remind myself again that moving abroad doesn’t necessarily make you happy. I’d be leaving behind my family, my friends, my professional network, to start from scratch. While I’m not old, I’m no spring chicken any more, so would I want to do this (that is, if they want me) ? It would take more than a holiday to find out.


2 days onwards and we finally have our legs back.