B.C. man takes public transit all the way to Mexico
William Hui did not cheat.
He set his own rules and then planned his route carefully, determined to make it all the way to Tijuana without flying or using Greyhound and Amtrak.
At the end of June, he did exactly that, travelling from Vancouver to Mexico using only public transit.
“People who know me, they already know I'm nuts,” said Hui. “There's a lot of surprise. There's a lot of, ‘What did you do?’"
A TransLink employee, Hui admits he loves transit.
So for nine days, and nearly 3,000 kilometres, he transferred between buses and trains, making his way to the southern tip of California and beyond.
“One of the things I enjoyed doing was just purely looking out the window, looking at the scenery that was passing by,” he told CTV News.
“Whether that's the Oregon Coast, whether that was the giant redwoods that were in northern California.”
His trip wasn’t about saving money. In fact, he figured the transit fares totalled about US$200.
Hui also stayed nightly in hotels, and admitted this kind of travel is not for everyone.
“Absolutely not,” he said, smiling. “Not everybody relishes taking public transit on its own, even for maybe half an hour.”
“It’s right up my alley, and I really enjoyed just exploring new places, exploring places that I thought I could never get to without a car.”
It’s possible he could have travelled beyond Tijuana, but Hui said his Spanish is limited, and decided it was wise to bring his public transit trip to an end.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Bloc Quebecois ready to extract gains for Quebec in exchange for supporting Liberals
The Bloc Québécois says its ready to wheel and deal with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's party for support during confidence votes now that the Liberal government's confidence and supply agreement with the NDP has ended.
Dog mauled to death in B.C. yard after 3 pit bulls jump fence: police
A 12-year-old collie was killed by three pit bulls in the B.C. Interior Sunday morning, according to authorities.
'It's morally wrong': A rural Alberta town reacts to homeless shelter closure
At the end of a side street in Slave Lake, Alta., Lynn Bowes looks at a grey job-site trailer with boarded-up windows and doors that once operated as her town's only homeless shelter.
Trump threatens to jail adversaries in escalating rhetoric ahead of pivotal debate
With just days to go before his first and likely only debate against U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris, former U.S. president Donald Trump posted a warning on his social media site threatening to jail those “involved in unscrupulous behavior” this election, which he said would be under intense scrutiny.
Over 200 firearms seized in weapons investigation: Waterloo Regional Police
According to police, during a traffic stop in Waterloo, officers noticed firearms and ammunition inside the vehicle.
Military surplus store in Calgary, destination of celebrity shoppers, closing doors
Cher, Anthony Hopkins, Heath Ledger, Alec Baldwin and Tom Hardy are just a few of the celebrities John Cumming met while growing up in his family's military surplus store.
video ‘Not checking out yet’: Woman with incurable cancer vows to keep fighting
Heather Appleton just renewed her passport for another ten years. “I’m not checking out yet,” said Appleton, 61, who has the incurable cancer, Multiple Myeloma.
Slide over salsa: K-pop takes socialist Cuba by storm
Socialist Cuba, the birthplace of salsa and other rhythms that have conquered the world, is now surrendering to the invasion of South Korean pop music.
The controversial plan to turn a desert green
Ties van der Hoeven's ambitions are nothing if not grand. The Dutch engineer wants to transform a huge stretch of inhospitable desert into green, fertile land teeming with wildlife.