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Alaska
Highway Rogers
Pass Columbia
Valley Railway
Adventures Marine
Highways |
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Come out O
Little Moccasins, and frolic on the snow! Elk
Island National Park: Alberta:
Onions, Easter Eggs and Wild
Roses:
Yes Virginia, there
is a Lloydminster, Sask, and also a Lloydminster,
Alberta. That causes a kaffuffle when daylight
saving time rolls around. The town's Antique Museum
honors England's Barr Colonists, and when later on,
you see an onion-shaped dome or giant Easter egg on
the horizon, you know you're in Little Ukraine.
Vegreville
is home of the Ukrainian Pysanka Festival, with its
fly-in breakfast and 3 solid days of food and fun.
Edmonton:
City of Big Shoulders Even the location is cocky
-- perched regally on the North Saskatchewan
cliffs; its Upper Level bridge reaching from
Alberta's Legislature to the University area. And
who else has the audacity to build a shopping Mecca
that rates seven mentions in the Guinness Book of
World Records? Speaking of highs and lows,
Edmonton's river valley, from Old Fort Edmonton to
the Conservatory and beyond, is a tourist
destination all by itself; golf courses and picnic
spots. Get out and stretch your
legs; this is the largest greenbelt of any major
Canadian city. Edmonton as a boomtown? -- its
archives tell of fur traders, riverboats, a
Klondike boom, a railway boom, a land rush, and
black gold that blew things sky high in '47.
Legendary bush pilots, who opened up the North live
again at Canada's Aviation Hall of Fame.
By the way, if you love to
shop, or hanker for genuine Alberta Prime Rib --
there's no provincial tax. And if I recall the
jingle, "Your credit is fine with Irving Kline."
Beyond the outskirts is Lake Wabamun (try saying
that with your mouth full), a popular camping spot.
Edson and Hinton are major stops en route to Jasper
National Park. Rocky
Mountain House National Historic Park (side
trip) Our first lodging was a war
surplus tent; the most recent was at Jasper Park
Lodge, where the waiter brought dinner by bicycle.
Near the mouth of Rocky River, a cairn marks Jasper
House National Historic Site, where a supply post
was built by the Northwest Company in 1813. The
park is a wildlife sanctuary, where deer and
antelope play, bighorn guard the peaks, and bears
are everywhere.
Allow at
least an extra day in the Jasper area , and enjoy a
Rocky Mountain high you'll never forget. British
Columbia
Prince
George is a gateway to
paradise for wilderness adventurers. Former Mayor
John Backhouse beamed with pride when I mentioned
The University of Northern BC., the city's newest
newest prize. While tourism is booming, PG's
economy is forest industry-based. Centrally
located, it's a key junction for BC Rail's Cariboo
Line and Via's Skeena Run. At Vanderhoof, a side trip
leads to Fort St. James, founded by Simon Fraser,
the explorer in 1806. At Fort
St. James National
Historic Site, B.C.'s oldest inhabited community
salutes its fur trading past. History lives on at
this authentic Hudson's Bay Trading Post, with
furs, trade goods, and staff in 1890s attire. One
of the west's oldest fur warehouses, a clerk's
residence and a fish cache remain. From Vanderhoof to beyond
Smithers,
it's lake country -- Fraser, Burns , Babine,
Rose, Bulkley, Kathlyn and Tyhee Lake to name a
few. Smithers, in the heart of the fertile Bulkley
Valley has taken on an Alpine theme, and
Hazelton
on the Upper Skeena is "Totem Pole Capital of the
World." At K'san Village, tribal houses feature
paintings, screens and carved interior poles, and
dancers perform Indian rituals. Historic sites dot
this heartland of the Tsmishian, Kitsumkalum and
Gitskan, where Emily Carr made many of her
sketches. Beyond Terrace, the Skeena, called River
of Mists by the Gitskan, widens into a broad lake,
meeting the Pacific at Port Edwards, site of the
1889 North Pacific
Cannery I first saw
Prince
Rupert from the deck of
The Princess Louise, a CPR ship that plied the
Inside Passage to Alaska, just 64 km upcoast. The
harbor was alive with canneries, fishing fleets,
coastal ferries, deep-sea ships, and a huge grain
elevator. Today, you can take the world's second
steepest gondola ride, enjoy an archeological boat
tour, or board BC Ferries' Queen of the North for a
15-hour cruise to Port Hardy on Vancouver Island.
The Museum of Northern BC has totem pole carving on
site, and 10,000 year old works of art. Outdoor
activity abounds in some of the wildest country on
the continent. Seabirds abound, and near
Cape St.
James, sea lions romp
and play. Isolation from the mainland has given
rise to a unique subspecies of wildlife. Gwa'ii
Haanas National Park Preserve is also called South
Moresby. Since the park has no roads or facilities,
visitors must be self sufficient. Anthony Island's
abandoned village, Ninstints, is a UN World
Heritage site. There are over 500 archeological and
historical Haida sites. Now you've
earned bragging rights:
We hope your pictures turn out great,
especially the wildlife scenes (nudge, nudge). As
the sun sets on the Haida Gwa'ii, and your kayak
rocks gently on the tide, we'll turn off today's
movie and bid good-bye. If you take the trip, send
us a postcard. We're sure you'll savor every moment
-- and are likely
to plan many happy returns! Check our
Air Highway Supermap: Why not consider a ferry trip
to Port
Hardy on
Vancouver Island and back to the mainland via
Victoria or Nanaimo?
Contact
Yellowhead Highway Association, Edmonton: 403 426
5078, or the Canoe Network (705)-647-207 Click
to
continue:
Yellowhead
Highway: Manitoba-
Saskatchewan Section Visit
the Yellowhead Web Site: http://www.transcanadayellowhead.com/main.htm Adventure
Roads- East
Kootenays to Jasper |
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