(Image Credit: kelownasummer.com)
Summer adventures

Think Kelowna is just wine tours? The locals would like a word.

Jun 15, 2026 | 10:17 AM

Ask someone from Calgary or Vancouver what you do in Kelowna and you’ll get the same answer: wine tours. Fair enough. The Okanagan earned that reputation. But spend a summer day here with one of the region’s local guides and you’ll come home with a different story.

You might spend a morning rappelling down a canyon wall and sliding into a natural rock pool, on a trip the guides at Okanagan Canyoning run for total beginners and families. You might find yourself in an East Kelowna orchard, suited up beside a working beehive, learning why this valley grows the way it does. Or bouncing along tight mountain trails in an off-road buggy with views most visitors never see.

These aren’t big-brand excursions. They’re run by local operators, including Lakeside Eco Sports, Sip and Anchor, A Taste of Kelowna, Meadow Vista, Full Cycle Adventure and West Canyon, people who live here, know the back roads and the quiet beaches, and have built their summers around showing them off.

The wine is still here, of course. But even that looks different through local eyes. You can pedal an e-bike between wineries with lunch and tastings built in, or take the Sip and Anchor signature day, which pairs tastings at three venues with a two-hour cruise on Okanagan Lake. The lake anchors almost everything, right up to private pontoon charters with a certified captain, a cooler, and nowhere you need to be.

kelownasummer.com
kelownasummer.com (Image Credit: kelownasummer.com)

Most of these experiences fit into a half day, and many cost less than a nice dinner out. A guided hike up Knox Mountain runs $75. The orchard bee experience is $59. A three-hour cultural food tour through downtown, led by guides who know the chefs by name, is $120.

This summer, a group of these operators have pulled their best tours together under one banner at kelownasummer.com, where you can browse the season’s lineup in one spot and book directly with each guide. It’s a simple idea: the people who know Kelowna best, making it easier to find them.

Whatever you choose, the takeaway from the locals is the same. There’s a lot more to a Kelowna summer than a tasting room. Come see what they mean.

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*This article was submitted by the content creation division of Pattison Media.

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