Area Rug Carpet Cleaning Port McNeill BC, V0N 0B1
Are your looking for area rug carpet cleaning Port McNeill BC?
Luv-A-Rug serves all of Port McNeill - call call us about our FREE (limited) pickup/delivery service...
...or deliver your area rug to us where we will unload it from your vehicle for you!
We guarantee that whenever you bring in one of your dirty (and/or stinky) area rugs to us, we will give it back to you feeling so soft, fluffy and fresh smelling that you'll fall in love with your rug all over again!
Luv-A-Rug is located only 4 hour 59 min (458 km) away from Port McNeill
Have You Seen All These Other Services Luv-A-Rug Provides?
- Pet stain removal
- Guaranteed pet odor removal
- Custom rug repairs
- Fringe repair & replacement
- Authentic reweaving
- Flea & moth removal
- Sail & boat top cleaning
- Survival suit cleaning
- Wetsuit odor removal
- Firefighter turnout gear cleaning
- Hockey equipment cleaning
- Goalie equipment cleaning
- Lacrosse equipment cleaning
- Stuffed Animals cleaning
- Horse blankets cleaning
- Outdoor furniture cleaning
- Luxury handbags cleaning
- Wool & Silk rug cleaning cleaning
A little History of Port McNeill BC (courtesy of Wikipedia)
Port McNeill is a town in the North Island region of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada with a population of 2,064 (2016). Located on Vancouver Island's north-east shore on Queen Charlotte Strait, it was originally a base camp for loggers.
Port McNeill became a settlement in 1936. The town was named after Captain William Henry McNeill of the Hudson's Bay Company.
Accounting for 25.7% of the labour force, logging remains the primary employer in Port McNeill and contributes approximately 8% of the total BC timber harvest. The main contractors are Western Forest Products and LeMare Lake Logging.
Fun Fact: Port McNeill is home to two of the largest tree burls in the world. Weighing an estimated 30 tons, and measuring just under 20 feet tall and 20 feet in diameter, this giant natural outgrowth claims to be the largest burl in the world. It was removed from a tall Sitka Spruce tree (Picea sitchensis) on Vancouver Island in 2005, and brought to Port McNeill to be put on display in a waterfront park downtown.