Ottawa

3 tips to achieve tulip bliss — without the stress — this long weekend

Don't forget the O-Train, consider Ottawa's downtown or maybe even a trip to the country.

Don't forget the O-Train, consider Ottawa's downtown or maybe even a trip to the country

A person smells a tulip on the final day of the Canadian Tulip Festival in Ottawa, on Victoria Day, Monday, May 20, 2024.
A visitor to Commissioners Park stops to smell the tulips during the Canadian Tulip Festival in May 2024. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Tulip admirers, assemble! But maybe not all at the same time, OK?

This long weekend caps off the annual Canadian Tulip Festival at Commissioners Park in Ottawa. It's a beautiful space, resplendent in the bloom of variously coloured tulips — and a symbol of the enduring friendship between Canada and the Netherlands.

The 2025 edition has some cool new features like the Big Bug Boardwalk along Dows Lake. Over 2,000 tulips are lit up with UV lights and surrounded by giant bugs. 

"You feel like you're shrunk down and you can see the pollen glow the way bees and butterflies see them," said the festival's executive director Jo Riding. 

But the festival area can get crowded, and this weekend is a holiday. 

People use their phones to take photos of the tulips at the Canadian Tulip Festival at Commissioner's Park in Ottawa, on Saturday, May 10, 2025.
Don't forget your camera! (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

To make the most of the occasion, without the stress, go to the park early if you can. 

If that's not possible, consider the following three tips. 

Patti May works on an oil painting of the scene at the Canadian Tulip Festival at Commissioner's Park in Ottawa, on Saturday, May 10, 2025.
Patti May works on an oil painting at the festival on May 10. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Take the O-Train

Parking near Commissioners Park is "very limited," according to the festival's website. 

While Carleton University's P7 lot offers spots at a daily flat rate of $12 and is only an eight-minute walk to the park, you might consider hopping aboard OC Transpo's Line 2 instead. It practically deposits you right at the park.

Dow's Lake O-Train Line 2 station, May 3, 2025
Line 2 of Ottawa's O-Train drops people off just north of Commissioners Park, home of the festival. Get off at is Dow's Lake station, pictured here. (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

Dow's Lake station is the second stop after departing Line 2's northern terminus at Bayview. Dow's Lake station is located just north of Carling Avenue, a straight diagonal line to the park.

Just ascend the steps at Dow's Lake station, cross Carling and then Preston Street, and you're in tulip heaven — two minutes faster than if you'd walked from Carleton, according to Google Maps. 

Yellow and orange tulips are reflected in the sunglasses of a visitor as they take photos with the phone at the Canadian Tulip Festival at Commissioner's Park in Ottawa, on Saturday, May 10, 2025.
Yellow and orange tulips are reflected in the sunglasses of one recent festivalgoer. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

You can always go downtown

This tip might sound counter-intuitive. After all, Commissioners Park is where it's at, right? 

But if the park is too crowded, you could do worse than hopping back on the LRT. Transfer to Line 1 Bayview, head east to Lyon station and explore the many other tulip patches along Wellington Street. 

The bright flowers abound between Library and Archives Canada and the Supreme Court, to name but one spot. 

Economists are expecting inflation slowed slightly last month, which would be another good sign for the Bank of Canada as they publish their consumer price index report for the month of May this morning. Tulips bloom as people make their way along Wellington Street and past the Bank of Canada in Ottawa on Monday, May 6, 2024.
The park two crowded? Head downtown to Wellington Street. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

You could walk the pathway behind Parliament and picnic at Major's Hill Park, which boasts its own healthy helping of tulips (and is a good people- and dog-watching spot to boot). 

Sure, there's no interactive walking tour like at Commissioners Park. But your step-counting app will thank you. 

The Peace tower is framed between tulips, in Ottawa, Wednesday, May 7, 2025.
The Peace tower is framed between tulips on May 7. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Escape to the country 

Feeling adventurous? Hit the road. 

An Ottawa couple whose "u-pick" tulip crop was badly damaged by a fungal growth has relocated this year to their nephew's farm. 

U-pick-it tulip farm east of Ottawa finds new fields after devastating fungus

3 days ago
Duration 2:03
Last year, Green Corners farm lost its crop to a fungus called tulip fire. Now they’ve rebuilt in a new location and are excited to welcome customers.

Manja Bastian and Allan Groen of Green Corners Farm have planted 300,000 tulips at 640 North Russell Rd. in Russell, Ont., about 35 kilometres southeast of downtown Ottawa.

Losing half a million flowers last year was "emotionally wrenching," Groen recently told In Town and Out host Giacomo Panico. 

Seeing people stream back this year has hit a different note. 

"It's something that makes it all worthwhile for us," he said. 

child at tulip farm
A recent visitor to Green Corners Farm's new digs in Russell, Ont. (Giacomo Panico/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Guy Quenneville

Reporter at CBC Ottawa

Guy was born and raised in Cornwall, Ont. He can be reached at guy.quenneville@cbc.ca

With files from Natalia Goodwin and Giacomo Panico