Archive

Archive for March, 2010

Riding Mountain National Park

http://www.canada-photos.com/data/media/6/lake-audy-bison-enclosure_4632.jpg

Riding Mountain National Park

For one of Manitoba’s natural gems and practically a sure bet to see elk, moose, beaver, bear or even lynx, invite yourself to Riding Mountain National Park (204-848-7275; www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/mb/riding; Hwy 10). Topographically modeled as an escarpment rising above the plains and draped in brown fields, green forests and blue lakes, activities and nature can be found everywhere; heck Lake Audy even has bison.

// ’270′){
jQuery(“#sidebar #mpu”).css({‘height’ : containerHeight});
}
});
// ]]>Most of the park is wilderness; Wasagaming, on the south shore of Clear Lake, is an inconspicuously and sensitively designed resort town.

Just outside the park’s northern border off Hwy 10, summer fests dictate the scene. Country Fest (204-622-3700, 800-361-7300; www.countryfest.ca; late Jul) uses a gorgeous forested amphitheatre for four days of music, drinking, camping and a whole lotta yeehaw in Canada’s longest-running, arguably best, country music festival. Canada’s National Ukrainian Festival (877-747-2683; www.cnuf.ca; early Aug) features folk dancing, drinking, traditional costumes, cultural displays and the chance to stuff your face with pierogi, cabbage rolls and kielbasa.

more ditail : www.hostebook.com

Revelstoke National Park

http://www.oxfded.com/monashee/images/photos/mount_rev_park.jpg

Revelstoke National Park

Grand in beauty if not in size (only 260 sq km), this national park just northeast of its namesake town is a vision of peaks and valleys – many all-but-untrod.

From the 2223m summit of Mt Revelstoke, the views of the mountains and the Columbia River valley are excellent. To ascend here, take the 26km Meadows in the Sky Parkway, 1.5km east of Revelstoke off the Trans-Canada Hwy. Open after the thaw (usually June to September), this paved road winds through lush cedar forests and alpine meadows and ends at Balsam Lake, within 2km of the peak. From here walk to the top or take the free shuttle, which runs from 10am to 4pm daily.

Easily accessible, Skunk Cabbage Trail, 28km east of Revelstoke on Hwy 1, is a 1.2km boardwalk along the Illecillewaet River. Another 4km east, the Giant Cedars Boardwalk winds a 500m course around a grove of huge old-growth cedars.

There are several good hiking trails from the summit. You can camp only in designated backcountry campsites, and you must have a $10 Wilderness Pass camping permit (in addition to your park pass), which, along with lots of useful information, is available from Parks Canada in Revelstoke or from the Rogers Pass Centre inside Glacier National Park. Admission to both Mt Revelstoke and Glacier national parks (the two are administered jointly) is adult/child $7/3.50 per day.

more ditail : www.hostebook.com

Introducing Prince Edward Island

http://cache.virtualtourist.com/2321973-Travel_Picture-Prince_Edward_Island.jpg

Prince Edward Island

Prince Edward Island (PEI) is Canada’s well-tended and inviting back garden. The weeds and wilderness have been tamed to create a pastoral green patchwork of rolling potato fields, tidy gabled farmhouses and seaside villages. The whole of it is rimmed with miles of vivid red cliffs, sand dunes and fabulous beaches. Click here to find out more! Advertisement As you wind along country roads, there is little chance that your eyes will alight on any ugliness or mess. Every turn brings a fresh and soothingly bucolic vista of bays, rivers and fields running down to the water’s edge. Just as you’re thinking ‘wouldn’t some beer and fish-and-chips be nice about now, ’ – oh, look! There is a quaint café with an open door. The people are friendly, life is slowed to a civilized pace and the down-home hospitality and country charm are genuine. About the only thing lacking authenticity are the orange nylon braids of the current Anne of Green Gables. Look at a map of the island when you’re hungry and you’ll see a croissant cut into three equal parts. Central PEI is where the Confederation Bridge comes ashore, binding the island to the mainland. This is the most visited part of the province, holding both the capital city Charlottetown and the major tourist areas along the seashore around Prince Edward Island National Park. Eastern PEI boasts secluded beaches and fishing villages; its wealth of stunning routes has earned it an international reputation as a cycling destination. Western PEI offers the opportunity to explore the cultures and history of the French Acadians and Mi’kmaq Aboriginal peoples. The peak tourism season is short, with most services shut between mid-September and mid-June. The margins of this season are great times to visit, when the weather is still warm and the crowds of July and August are missing. History Its Aboriginal inhabitants, the Mi’kmaq, knew the island as ‘Abegeit’ – Land Cradled on the Waves. Although Jacques Cartier of France first recorded PEI’s existence in 1534, settlement didn’t begin until 1603. Initially small, the French colony grew only after Britain’s expulsion of the Acadians from Nova Scotia in the 1750s. In 1758 the British took the island, known then as Île St Jean, and expelled the 3000 Acadians. Britain was officially granted the island in the Treaty of Paris of 1763. To encourage settlement, the British divided the island into 67 lots and held a lottery to give away the land. Unfortunately most of the ‘Great Giveaway’ winners were speculators and did nothing to settle or develop the island. The questionable actions of these absentee landlords hindered population growth and caused incredible unrest among islanders. One of the major reasons PEI did not become part of Canada in 1867 was because union did not offer a solution to the land problem. In 1873 the Compulsory Land Purchase Act forced the sale of absentee landlords’ land and cleared the way for PEI to join Canada later that year. But foreign land ownership is still a sensitive issue in the province. The population has remained stable, at around 140, 000, since the 1930s. In 1997, after much debate, PEI was linked to New Brunswick and the mainland by the Confederation Bridge – at almost 13km, it’s the world’s longest artificial bridge over ice-covered waters.

more ditail : www.hostebook.com

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.