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B.C.'s 'best road trip': Thompson-Okanagan featured in new National Geographic article

The article and accompanying video highlights Nat Geo filmmaker Bryan Smith and his wife Lise-Anne Beyries' seven-day trip through the Interior
National Geographic filmmaker Bryan Smith BC winery NatGeo screen_shot_2020-10-18_at_1.10.23_pm_p3486210
National Geographic filmmaker Bryan Smith and his wife Lise-Anne Beyries enjoy a stroll through the sloping vineyards of Nk?Mip Cellars in Osoyoos. Photo: Dan Westergren / National Geographic

The beauty of the Thompson-Okanagan region is being shared with a global audience, after National Geographic recently called the Okanagan one of British Columbia's “best road trips.”

The article and accompanying video, published earlier this month, highlights Nat Geo filmmaker Bryan Smith and his wife Lise-Anne Beyries' seven-day trip through the Okanagan.

The couple's winery-focused trip begins in the south, in Osoyoos, before they make their way up through Naramata, Kelowna, Vernon and through to Kamloops, finishing with a trip to Wells Gray Provincial Park.

Wineries highlighted in the story include Osoyoos' Nk’Mip Cellars, Oliver's Fairview Cellars, OK Falls' Maverick Estate, Penticton's Painted Rock, Naramata's Bench 1775, MOCOJO, Moraine and Poplar Grove, West Kelowna's Indigenous World Winery and Kamloops' Harper’s Trail, Privato, Monte Creek Ranch and Sagewood.

Smith and Beyries also eat at Oliver's Backyard Farm, hike the Skaha Bluffs, bike the Three Blind Mice trail network, and the Kettle Valley Rail Trail through Kelowna's Myra-Bellevue Provincial Park.

They continue on apple picking through Kamloops, before ending up at the majestic Helmcken Falls in Wells Gray Provincial Park.

The Okanagan never looked so good.

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