Canada (Eyewitness Travel Guides) - PDF Free Download (2024)

EYEWITNESS TRAVEL

CANADA

NATIONAL PARKS HOTELS SHOPPING • WILDL RESTA TAUR RANTS • MOUNTAINS MUSEUMS • HISTORIC TOW THE GUIDES THAT SHOW YOU WHAT OTHERS ONLY TELL YOU

EYEWITNESS TRAVEL

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EYEWITNESS TRAVEL

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Introducing Canada

DISCOVERING CANADA 8–11 PUTTING CANADA ON THE MAP 12–15 A PORTRAIT OF CANADA 16–37 CANADA THROUGH THE YEAR 38–41 THE HISTORY OF CANADA 42–55

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DISCOVERING CANADA anada – the world’s seco largest country after Russia is a vast land comprisi ten provinces and three territorie This young nation, founded 1867, stretches from the Atlantic to the Pacific to the Arctic Ocean. From rural coastal villages to flat prairies

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teeming metropolises, this vast mmonwealth country offers dless fascinating experiences. is guide divides Canada into regions that will most appeal to travelers. Here you will find a brief overview of each unique region to help you Cape Sprear, get the most out of your visit. Newfoundland

NEW BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA, AND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND • Charming seaside villages

brightly painted lobster boats abound, particularly on the Acadian Peninsula (see p78) and Wolfville (see p85). Fresh seafood is a delicacy throughout the area.

and towns

• Fortress Louisbourg • Unique blend of English and French Acadian roots • Great seafood

A deep fjord in Gros Morne National Park, Newfoundland

NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR • • • •

Striking geography Gros Morne National Park Viking and Irish heritage Seafaring lifestyle

Canadians love their newest province (established in 1949) not only for its rugged landscape of rocky shores, fjords, and sweeping island vistas, but for its people who have inherited the humorous, indomitable spirit of their Irish forbears. St. John’s (see pp66–7), the capital city, is a good place to begin your “Newfie” journey, which will probably also lead you to beautiful

These three provinces are renowned for their magnificent coastlines. The Bay of Fundy, between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, has the highest tides in the world, which can be seen at Fundy National Park (see p76). Whale watching in Nova Scotia is a big attraction, but if historical sites beckon, ensure a visit to the amazing reconstruction of Fortress Louisbourg (see pp96–7) on Cape Breton Island. Children’s story book heroine Anne of Green Gables has a whole town devoted to her on Prince Edward Island (see pp80–83). Throughout the three Maritime Provinces, charming Acadian fishing villages complete with

MONTREAL • Cosmopolitan flair • Fine museums • Delightful ambience of Vieux-Montréal

• Shopping in the Underground City

Canadians are quietly proud of their second largest city which was home to both the 1967 World Exposition and the 1976 Olympic Games (see pp124–5) – and is simply an exciting and fun city to visit at any time of the year. Vieux-Montréal (see pp110– 11), the old city built along the shore of the St. Lawrence River, is a charming 18thcentury enclave of horsedrawn carriages, boutique hotels, and cafés. The Basilique Notre-Dame-deMontréal (see p112) is a

Gros Morne National Park

(see p70) on the western coast, or Terra Nova National Park (see p69) on the eastern side of the island. Labrador, nearby on the Canadian mainland, has a sizable aboriginal population, as well as the town of Happy Valley-Goose Bay (see p73), with its World War II historical background.

The 18th-century charm of Vieux-Montréal

Indian Encampment on Lake Huron c. 1845 by Paul Kane (Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto)

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must-see site as is the Musée des Beaux-Art (see p118). Shopping is centered on rue Sainte-Catherine, and the nationally famous Underground City (see p119) is a labyrinthine network with hundreds of shops and restaurants.

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SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN QUEBEC • Farmland in the south • Skiing in the Laurentian Mountains

• Canadian Museum of Civilization

• Laid-back Gatineau

Soaring façade of Sainte-Anne-deBeaupré Basilica in Quebec City

QUEBEC CITY AND THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER • UN World Heritage Site • Historic seat of French

Just south of Montreal, rich farming communities straddle the US border around the Appalachian Mountains, particularly at Sherbrooke and Lac Memphrémagog (see p148). North of the city the magnificent Laurentian Mountains (see p151), such as Mont Tremblant, display beautiful colors in the fall and in winter delight skiers and other wintersports enthusiasts. Across the river from Canada’s capital city of Ottawa is the Gatineau Region (see p154) and the dynamic Canadian Museum of Civilization (see p155). For those seeking adventure in the far north of this vast province, Nunavik (see p157) – not to be confused with the territory of Nunavut – is for the hardiest traveler.

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• Gourmand’s paradise • Rare marine wildlife Quebec City, with its narrow cobblestone streets which give it a European flavor, is truly representative of French Canada. It was named a UN World Heritage Site in 1985. The small capital of the province of Quebec embraces visitors with a wealth of sights, from the fascinating La Citadelle fort (see pp136–7), to the renowned religious shrine of Sainte-Anne-deBeaupré (see p138), and the wondrous cuisine in the restaurants surrounding the imposing hotel, Château Frontenac (see p134). Farther afield, you can experience French maritime charm on the Iles-de-la-Madeleine (see p143) or on the Gaspé Peninsula (see p144–5), where there is bountiful seafood and rare marine wildlife.

TORONTO • • • •

Dynamically multicultural Soaring CN Tower Renaissance in the arts Superb shopping and entertainment

Canada’s largest city, with a population of nearly 4 million people, is a wonder of ethnic diversity, with disparate

Mont Tremblant and Village, a four-season resort in Quebec

cultural and linguistic communities. Under the gaze of the CN Tower (see p172) – the tallest freestanding structure in the world – is a city that pulses with exciting nightlife, fine and varied dining, and a truly global shopping experience. Stroll along fashionable Yorkville (see p183) with its cafés and upscale shops, or the colorful and lively Chinatown (see p180) on Spadina Avenue, with its boisterous streetlife. Toronto is increasingly renowned for its unique architecture, with the new look Art Gallery of Ontario (see pp178–9) and a bold, futuristic addition to the Royal Ontario Museum (see pp184–5). Both museums hold extensive collections. The city has a rich tradition of entertainment, with a wide range of theater, festivals, music, and dance offerings.

The modern Toronto skyline on the north side of Lake Ontario

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OTTAWA AND EASTERN ONTARIO • National capital region • Camping at the Alonquin Provincial Park

• Picturesque Kawartha Lakes

• National Gallery of Canada Ottawa, the nation’s delightful capital city, has enough culture and history (and fun things to do) to make for an interesting visit. Your first stop could be the Parliament Buildings (see p192), and then a pleasant walk to the National Gallery of Canada

(see pp198–9) for the country’s best array of the fine arts. The Canadian War Museum (see p195) is far from somber, and you can find the best Canadian live music, theater, and dance at the National Arts Centre (see p197). The vast Algonquin Provincial Park (see pp204–5) is rich in wildlife and typifies the great outdoors, as do the Kawartha Lakes (see p202).

The breathtaking spectacle at Niagara Falls

visitor-friendly. No visit to this region would be complete without experiencing the majestic Niagara Falls (see pp212–17), and the pictureperfect town of Niagara Falls. Point Pelee National Park

(see p210) juts out into Lake Erie, offering rural charm and the country’s southernmost point. The town of Stratford (see p211) is renowned in North America for its excellent annual festival of Shakespeare’s (and others’) works, and SainteMarie among the Hurons (see pp220–21) is a fascinating glimpse of a Jesuit settlement among the Huron natives in the 17th century. CENTRAL CANADA • • • •

The copper-roofed Victorian Parliament Buildings in Ottawa

THE GREAT LAKES • Point Pelee National Park • Stratford’s world-class live theater

• Thundering Niagara Falls The Great Lakes are the lifeblood of millions of Canadians and Americans. The cities, towns, and villages that have been built on their shores are verdant, vibrant, and definitely

sands of Alberta fuel not only the economy here, but also keep the gargantuan shopping mecca of West Edmonton Mall (see p250) busy year-round.

First Nations culture Dinosaur Provincial Park West Edmonton Mall Polar bear territory

Roughly the size of Mexico, Central Canada includes the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. Whether you want to go dinosaur hunting in Dinosaur Provincial Park (see p249), or encounter the Royal Canadian Mounted Police at Regina’s RCMP Centennial Museum (see p245), these sweeping prairies offer a myriad of experiences. You can also learn about First Nations history in Saskatoon (see p246) or visit polar bears in Churchill, Manitoba (see p253). The oil-rich

VANCOUVER AND VANCOUVER ISLAND • Breathtaking mountain and coastal scenery

• Colorful Granville Island in Vancouver

• Victoria – a timeless gem • Whale watching in the Pacific Rim National Park

Sometimes easily confused, British Columbia’s capital – the lovely city of Victoria (see pp280–85) 5 – is situated on Vancouver Island, whereas the striking metropolis of Vancouver ((see pp266–77 7) is located on the mainland. Among many sights to see in Vancouver are the Capilano Suspension Bridge (see p279),

Polar bear and cub near subarctic Churchill, Manitoba

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artsy Granville Island (see p274), 4 the impressive downtown “wilderness” of Stanley 5 and the Park (see p275) stunning UBC Museum of Anthropology (see pp276–7). 7 Vancouver Island is proud of its impeccably landscaped Butchart Gardens (see p286) 6 in Brentwood Bay, and the phenomenal nature displays in the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve (see pp288–9). 9 Watch out for whales!

Back to nature at Vancouver’s Capilano Suspension Bridge

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SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA • Bountiful Okanagan Valley • Queen Charlotte Islands and the Haida people

• Whistler – host of the 2010 Winter Olympics

• Thriving, cultural Nelson A climatically diverse province, British Columbia is able to host the 2010 Winter Olympics in Whistler (see p316), grow bountiful fruits and vegetables in the Okanagan Valley (see p317), and produce some excellent wines at the same time! The Queen Charlotte Islands (see p321) in the north have yet another ecosystem, and are the proud home of the native Haida people, known for their artistry. The town of Nelson (see p318) in the south also has a thriving cultural scene, and its pretty location on the shores of Kootenay Lake is an envied one. NORTHERN CANADA

THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS • Gold Rush history in • Sublime Banff National Park • Calgary Stampede • Jasper’s treasures • Canada Olympic Park

Dawson City

• Inuit art and culture • The Northern Lights • Nunavut, Canada’s newest territory

The “Rockies,” as they are affectionately termed, contain no fewer than six national parks, four of which are UNESCO World Heritage sites. Banff National Park (see pp300–303) was Canada’s first, and nearby Jasper (see pp308–11) is idyllic in both summer and winter. The youthful city of Calgary (see ( p294), 4 a former host of the Winter Olympics and home to the annual ten-day Calgary Stampede festival of all things western, is the country’s fastest growing urban area, so some may prefer quieter cities such as Cranbrook (see p298), Prince George (see p312), or Fort Nelson (see p313). The Rocky Mountains are nearby, silent and impressive sentinels for year-round vacationing.

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Multitudes of tourists have yet to discover the barren beauty of Canada’s northern regions. Witnessing the

The spectacular Northern Lights, seen in Northern Canada

magical Northern Lights (see p337) is a definite highlight, as is appreciating the uniqueness of Inuit art and culture (see pp326–7) by native artisans and musicians. Dawson City (see p336) in the Yukon is embedded in the Canadian psyche thanks to its rollicking history of the Klondike Gold Rush. Locally produced diamonds are the newest gem in demand and can be purchased in the Northwest Territories’ capital city of Yellowknife (see pp338–9). The new territory of Nunavut (recently formed in 1999), and its capital Iqaluit on Baffin Island (see pp340–41), may be remote but offer a once-in-alifetime experience.

Epic mountain scenery in the Rockies’ Banff National Park

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A PORTRAIT OF CANADA

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lessed with ancient forests, rugged mountains, and large cosmopolitan cities, Canada is unimaginably vast, stretching west from the Atlantic to the Pacific and north to the Arctic Ocean. Around 20,000 years ago Canada was inhabited by aboriginal peoples but by the 19th century it had been settled by Europeans. Today, the country is noted as a liberal, multicultural society.

In part, Canada’s heritage the country has had of tolerance is a result difficulties evolving a of its conflict-ridden past. national identity. When Two centuries of comPierre Berton, one of promise was necessary Canada’s most prolific to fully establish the writers, was prompted to country. Following fightdefine a Canadian he ing between the British evaded the question, Inuit wooden mask and French armies in the replying: “Someone who 1750s, the British won control of the knows how to make love in a canoe.” country in 1759. The self-governing The second largest country in the colonies of British North America world, Canada has a surface area of spent three years hammering out 9,970,610 sq km (3,849,652 sq miles). the agreement that brought them Over 40 percent of the land is north together as the Dominion of Canada of the treeline at 60˚ latitude; this in 1867. Newfoundland did not extraordinarily hostile and sparsely become part of the nation until inhabited wilderness is bitterly cold 1949. Powerful regional differences, in winter, averaging -30°C (-22°F), particularly between French- and and plagued by millions of insects English-speaking Canada meant that in summer. Not surprisingly, most

The snow-laden rooftops of Quebec City overlooking the St. Lawrence River at dusk Bull elk grazing in Jasper National Park in the Rocky Mountains

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European fashion for beaver hats that created and sustained the Canadian fur trade and opened up the interior to European settlers, paving the way for the growth of the modern nation. In the east, deciduous forests conFLORA AND FAUNA taining the emblematic maple are In the far north, the permafrost of the populated by deer, skunk, and mink. treeless tundra (or taiga) supports the Across central Canada, the grasslands, growth of only the toughest known as the Prairies, house elk, flora, such as lichen, mosses, gophers, and the few thouand a range of unusually sand buffalo which are all hardy varieties of flowers that remain of the vast herds and grasses. In spring and that once roamed here. fall however, the tundra flora British Columbia’s temperate bursts into an impressive rain forests are rich in wildf from f the display of color. Animal life is Spring flower life such as black tail deer, Bruce Peninsula abundant in this region, and brown bear, and cougar. Rare includes the polar bear, arctic fox, wolf, orchids and ferns grow here, among seal, musk ox, and caribou. towering cedars, firs, and spruce trees. Farther south, the boreal or coniferTHE FIRST NATIONS ous forest covers a wide band from Newfoundland in the east to the Although thought of as a new counYukon in the west. A variety of trees try, Canada’s prehistory dates back here, including spruce, balsam fir, and about 20,000 years to the end of the jack pine, provides a home for those first Ice Age. At that time there was a animals most typically thought of as land bridge joining Siberia to Alaska; Canadian, primarily moose, beaver, Siberian hunter-nomads crossed this lynx, and black bear. The beaver is bridge to become the first human inCanada’s national symbol. It was the habitants of North America, and over Canadians live in the more temperate regions farther to the south. Of the country’s 30 million inhabitants, more than 80 percent live within 200 kilometers (124 miles) of the US border.

The bald eagle, a common sight around the Charlotte Island archipelago in British Columbia

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the succeeding cenevery federal speech turies their descendants and bill has to be delivgradually moved south. ered in both languages. Archaeological digs in Canada’s population is about 24 percent the Old Crow River Basin in the Yukon French Canadian, prehave unearthed a coldominantly the descenlection of tools believed dants of French setto date to this initial tlers who came to the period of migration. colony of New France in the 17th and 18th These Siberian nomads were the ancestors of centuries (see p45). the continent’s native Their English-speaking Inuit children at Bathurst compatriots are largely peoples, who adapted Inlet, Nunavut to their new environdescended from 18thment in a variety of ways. and 19th-century British immigrants. Canada’s reputation as a multicultural By the 16th century, Spanish and Portuguese traders were the first society began to be established in the Europeans to have close dealings with 19th century when successive waves the aboriginal peoples of the Americas, of immigration, along with various whom they named “Indians” in the settlement plans, brought people from mistaken belief that they had reached all over the world to Canada’s cities India. The “Indian” appellation stuck, and its rural areas. Today, perhaps the and the “Red” was added by British best way to experience modern settlers in the 17th century when they Canada’s vibrant cultural mix is to met the Beothuks of Newfoundland, visit its three largest cities – Toronto, who daubed themselves in red ochre Montreal, and Vancouver. to repel insects. The native peoples of the far north were also given a name they did not want – “Eskimo,” literally “eaters of raw meat.” Given the history, it is hardly surprising that modern-day leaders of Canada’s aboriginal peoples have rejected these names in favor of others: aboriginal, native Canadians, and First Nations are all acceptable, though the people of the north prefer Inuit (meaning “the people”). Included among Canada’s native peoples are the Métis, mixed race descendants of aboriginal peoples and French-speaking European traders. SOCIETY

The joint official languages of Canada are French and English, and the interplay between Canada’s two largest linguistic and cultural groups is evident in the capital city of Ottawa, where

View from f Centre Island’s l d parks k and d gardens d on Lake k Ontario toward Toronto’s CN Tower

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political party to win majority support in all parts of the country at any one time. The most conspicuous aspect of this process has been the conflict over Quebec, where there is a strong separatist movement. Twice since 1981, the Quebecois have been asked to vote in referenda seeking their support to leave Canada and, although the electorate voted “No” on both occasions, it was a close result. Sadly, the issue of Quebec’s relationship with the rest of Canada is still unresolved, and further poliChanging h off the h Guard d outside d Ottawa’s Parliament l Building ld tical disputes seem inevitable. Since the 1980s aboriginal poliGOVERNMENT AND POLITICS tics has come to the fore with camCanada is a parliamentary democracy paigns for constitutional, land, and with a federal political system. Each mineral rights. The Assembly of First province or territory has its own Nations has been at the forefront of democratically elected provincial leg- the establishment of the Inuit homeislature headed by a Premier, and land, Nunavut. Current issues include also sends elected representatives to battles for self-government and the federal parliament in Ottawa. The schools to preserve native languages, House of Commons is the main fed- as well as hunting and fishing rights. eral legislature. The Prime Canada has played its part Minister is the head of the in the major events of the political structure, as well 20th century, including as an elected member of both world wars, and the House of Commons today holds a prominent where he must be able to position in international command a majority. Bills politics. The country is a h ceremoniall unveiling l off passed in the Commons The member of NATO and one the new Nunavut flag in 1999 are forwarded to an upper of the Group of Eight (G8) chamber, the Senate, for ratification. countries, which, with the US, UK, Italy, At present, the Prime Minister appoints Japan, France, Germany, and Russia, senators, although there is increasing decide on world trade agreements. pressure to make the upper chamber elective too. The nominal head of state ART AND CULTURE is the British monarch, currently Queen The vast and beautiful landscape of Elizabeth II, and her Canadian repre- the country is a defining feature of sentative is the Governor-General. Canadian culture. Outdoor pursuits In recent years, the dominant politi- such as hiking, skiing, and canoeing cal trend in Cnanadian politics has been are high on the list of popular activities. regionalism. The provinces have sought Canadians are also great sports fans, to take back power from the center, and ice hockey, baseball, basketball, which makes it difficult for any one and Canadian football attract huge

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crowds of spectators, and foster deeply felt allegiances. In addition to their passion for sports, Canadians are also enthusiastic about the arts. This is the country that has produced internationally renowned classical pianist, Glenn Gould, and whose major cities possess well-respected orchestras. Canada has also produced more than its share of popular music stars, from ground breaking singer-songwriters such as Joni Mitchell and Neil Young to more middle-of-the-road artists such as Celine Dion, Bryan Adams, and Shania Twain. Canada’s cosmopolitan culture also means that visitors are likely to find a wide choice of music in bars, cafés, and at the country’s numerous festivals. All kinds of drama International rock star, Alanis Morissette from Shakespeare (pp 178–9) has an extensive display to new writing can of Group of Seven paintings, as well be seen at the re- as cutting-edge contemporary art. nowned Stratford Major contemporary Canadian artists Festival, which is on the international circuit include Janet Cardiff and Rodney Graham. held in Ontario. Many Canadian Among Canadian writers, there are artists have looked to distinguished practitioners in both the wilderness as a English and French, and an impressive Toronto Maple l Leaff Mats Sundin source of inspilist of contemporary novelists includes ration. The first artist to attempt to such prize-winning authors as express a sense of national identity Margaret Atwood, Carol Shields, Michael Ondaatje, Jacques Poulin, Yann was Tom Thomson, with his distinctive landscapes of Northern Ontario. Martel, and Germaine Guèvremont. He influenced the country’s most The Canadian film industry is thriving, celebrated group of painters, the with established directors such as David Group of Seven (see pp164–5), who Cronenberg and Atom Egoyan continevolved a national style of painting uing to create daring films. Atanarjuat capable of representing (The Fast Runner), a beauCanada’s wilderness, a tiful film written, directed, theme developed by their acted and produced by Inuit, was a surprise contemporaries and successors, notably Emily Carr. international hit in 2001. Canada’s world-class Behind Canada’s museums and galleries flourishing cultural life, lies represent the country’s a pride in its history and pride in its art collections: cosmopolitan heritage, the outstanding Art Gallery Author Margaret Atwood, and an affection for the lauded worldwide of Ontario in Toronto land’s daunting beauty.

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Landscape and Geology Canada is the second largest country in the world, covering an area almost as big as Europe. It was created from the world’s oldest landmasses. The billion-year-old bowl-shaped Canadian Shield covers much of the country, dipping around Hudson Bay and rising to mountain ranges at its edges. The country is bordered by oceans on three sides, with a coastline 243,800 km (151,400 miles) long and an interior containing some two million lakes. Canada is well known for the diversity of its landscapes: from the frozen, barren north that descends to the mountainous west with its forest and wheat plains, through the wooded, hilly east, and the fertile lowlands of the southeast.

The Interior Plains, including the prairies,

are the principal wheat-growing areas of the country, and range southeast 2,600 km (1,600 miles) from the Cordilleras to the US border. The plains are divided into three huge steppes.

THE ROCKIES AND THE WESTERN CORDILLERA This region is part of one of the world’s longest mountain chains. In Canada, the Cordillera comprises the Pacific Coastal Mountains and forested basins. Graduated peaks and ridges reveal Ice Age erosion, as does the Columbia Icefield (see p310). The Rockies developed from continental plate movement, which began about 120 million years ago (see pp258–9). GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS Characterized by its variety, Can landscape falls into six main are The north of the country offers landscape of tundra, with the fa north ice-covered for much of t year. In the west and south, the warmer, fertile lands of the Cordillera and interior plains sup port the rural population. To th east, the Great Lakes area is an agricultural center. The vast Cana Shield cradles the plains and ris to form the northern Innuitian re and the Appalachians in the sou

The Great Lakes region covers

3% of Canada’s landmass, and comprises a fertile lowland bowl, vital to its agricultural economy.

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The Appalachians’ rolling landscape is two-thirds woodland and covers both arable lowland areas and the highest peaks in Quebec. These are found on the Gaspé Peninsula, the outer mountain ring of the Canadian Shield highland. Most of the Appalachian mountain chain lies in the US. They are nature’s barrier between the eastern seaboard and the continental interior lowlands.

The Canadian Shield, formed of the 1,100-

million-year-old bedrock of the North American continent, is the core of the country. It spreads out from Hudson Bay for 5 million sq km (1.9 million sq miles). The center is scrub and rock, and rises to steep mountains around the rim. The Innuitian region stretches northward from the Arctic Lowlands’ modest height of 100 –700 m (330 – 2,000 ft) above sea level to the peaks of the Innuitian mountain range, at their highest on Ellesmere Island at 2,926 m (9,600 ft). Vigorous glaciation for millenia has developed deep fjords, sharp peaks, and frost patterns on the earth. This region is rich in oil, coal, and gas.

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Canada’s Wildlife By the time it emerged from the last Ice Age 10,000 years ago, Canada had developed a geography and climate that remains one of the most diverse on Earth. In the north, the Arctic weather produces a harsh, barren desert, in darkness for several months and frozen most of the year. By contrast, the country’s most southerly province, Ontario, shares a latitude with northern California and offers fertile forests laced with rivers and lakes. In southern Canada, many varieties of wildlife flourish in the coniferous forest that covers the ancient rocks of the Canadian Shield. In the central plain are wheat-filled open prairies. From here, foothills lead to the Rocky Mountains, which gradually roll westward to coastal mountains and the balmy landscape of temperate rainforest along the Pacific coast.

THE BOREAL FOREST The boreal forest extends from eastern Canada, across most of Quebec and Ontario, and into the northern parts of the prairie provinces. It consists of a mix of spruce, pine, birch, and aspen, and occurs mostly on the giant rock outcrop of the Canadian Shield (see pp22–3). Dotted with thousands of lakes, it is a rich habitat for some of Canada’s best-known wildlife.

The muskox is a gregarious

herd animal and a remnant of the last Ice Age. Its thick topcoat of guard hair and undercoat r of finer, fleecier hair keeps it warm even at –45°C (–50°F).

THE PRAIRIES Once referred to as a “sea of grass,” the Canadian prairie is now predominantly agricultural in nature, specializing in growing wheat and other grains, and ranching prime beef cattle. While little original prairie wilderness remains, this is still a land of great open spaces that supports a surprising, often rare, wildlife population.

The timber wolff,

The pronghorn antelope is

or gray wolf, was hunted almost to extinction by 1950. It has now returned to the more isolated parts of its range in the boreal forest.

the last of its species to survive in North America The fastest American mamma it can reach speeds of ov 75 km (47 miles) per ho

The loon has a

haunting call that rings out over northern lakes and is symbolic of the Canadian wild

The bison now

exists in only two remaining wild herds in Alberta and the Northwest Territories.

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CANADA’S SPORTS FISH From the northern pike and lake trout in the north to the walleye and smallmouth bass in the south, Canada is blessed with a large number of sports fish species. Some fish that are much sought after as sport in Europe (the common carp, for example) are regarded as “trash,” or undesirable, in Canada, and exist in large numbers in lakes and rivers across the Canadian Prairies. The arctic char, plentiful in the far north, is also prized for its taste.

Fishing is one of Canada’s most popular sports and is superbly supported by 37 national parks, each containing plentiful rivers and lakes.

Salmon migrating upriver

provide an annual challenge for the keen sport fisherman. Canada has half the freshwater in the world, but deep sea angling can also prove rewarding.

THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS The Rocky Mountains begin in the foothills of western Alberta and rise into British Columbia. Along with the Columbia Mountains and the coastal mountains, they form a unique environment that ranges from heavily forested lower slopes, through alpine meadows, to snowcovered rocky peaks. This habitat is home to some of the most majestic wildlife in Canada. The recurving horn

THE CANADIAN ARCTIC North of the 60th parallel of latitude, the forest yields to arctic tundra and rock. The tundra is mostly bare, and frozen year-round a few inches below the surface, the icy ground being known as permafrost. During the brief summer the top layer thaws, and the Arctic bursts into bloom. Even though the Arctic is a freezing desert with little moisture, wildlife flourishes. The great white polar bear spends

of a mature male b horn sheep, found more remote spots of the Rockies, weigh as much as all its bones put together.

most of its life alone, out on the polar icepack, hunting for seals.

Canada’s grizzly bear

stands up to 2.75 m (8.8 ft) high and weighs up to 350 kg (800 lbs). It feeds on roots, berries, and meat.

The caribou is a North

American cousin of the reindeer. Caribou in the arctic migrate with the season in herds of 10,000, heading north on to the tundra in spring, south into the forest during winter.

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Multicultural Canada Canada prides itself on its multiculturalism. The country has evolved a unique way of adjusting to the cultural needs of its increasingly diverse population. In contrast to the US’s “melting pot,” Canada has opted for what is often called the “Canadian mosaic,” a model based on accepting diversity rather than assimilation. The origins of this tolerant and fruitful approach are embedded deep in Canadian history. Fearful of attack by the US in 1793, the British safeguarded the religious and civic institutions of their French-Canadian subjects in the hope that they would not ally with the Americans. This policy set the pattern of compromise that is now a hallmark of Canada. Citizens of British and French ancestry still make up the bulk of the population of 30 million, but there are around 60 significant minorities.

Young Inuit people in traditional dress huddled against the snow

NATIVE CANADIANS Today there are approximately one million Native Canadians, though national census figures usually break this group down into three sub-sections – aboriginals (750,000), métis (Indian and French mixed race 200,000), and Inuit (50,000). Of the million, about 60 percent are known as Status Indians, which means they are officially settled on reserve land. However, over 40 percent of Status Indians now live away from reserve land, and only 900 of Canada’s 2,370 reserves are still inhabited. These lands are home to 608 First Nations groups, or bands, which exercise varying degrees of selfgovernment through their own elected councils. Since the 1970s, progressive councils have played a key role in the reinvigoration of traditional

native culture. Most nonStatus Native Canadians are now integrated within the rest of Canada’s population. Rarely is the membership of a reserve descended from just one tribe. The largest r band is the Six Nations of the Grand River, in Ontario, where the 19,000 inhabitants are made up of of 13 groups including the Mohawks, Delaware, and Seneca peoples. In the far north, where white settlers have always been rare, the Inuit have a small majority. A recent result of their self-determination was the creation of Nunavut, a semi-autonomous Inuit homeland comprising 349,650 sq km (135,000 sq miles) of the eastern Arctic, created officially in April, 1999. Nunavut means “our land” in the Inuit language, and traditional skills of hunting and igloobuilding are being reintroduced to this new region.

BRITISH AND IRISH CANADIANS Canadians of British and Irish descent constitute about 60 percent of the country’s population. The first English settlers arrived in the wake of the fleets that fished the waters off Newfoundland in the 16th century. Thereafter, there was a steady trickle of English, Scottish, Welsh, and Irish immigrants and several mass migrations, prompted either by adverse politics at home or fresh opportunities in Canada. Thousands of Scots arrived following the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie at Culloden in 1746, and the Irish poured across the Atlantic during and after the potato famine (1845–49). When the Prairie provinces opened up in the 1880s and at the end of both World Wars another largescale migration took place. These British and Irish settlers did much to shape Canada, establishing its social and cultural norms and founding its legal and political institutions. Canada’s official Head of State is still the British monarch.

British poster of the 1920s promoting emigration to Canada

FRENCH CANADIANS Canada’s French-speakers make up about 25 percent of the total population, and are the country’s second largest ethnic group. They are mainly based in just one of the 10 provinces, Quebec,

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but other pockets thrive in other provinces. The French first reached the Canadian mainland in 1535 when Jacques Cartier sailed up the St. Lawrence River in search of a sea-route to Asia. Furtraders, priests, and farmers followed in Cartier’s footsteps and by the end of the 17th century, New France, as the colony was known, was well established. After the British captured New France in the Seven Years’ War of 1756–63 (see pp46–7), most French colonists stayed on as British subjects. The French-speakers maintained their own religious and civic institutions and a feeling of independence that has grown over time. Since the 1960s, the constitutional link between Quebec and the rest of the country has been the subject of political debate, with a strong minority of Quebecois pressing for full independence (see p55).

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Street scene in Chinatown, Toronto

ITALIAN CANADIANS

The widespread Italian presence in Canada can prove hard to see, as, for the most part, all 600,000 immigrants have merged almost GERMAN CANADIANS seamlessly with the English speakers. There are, however, Although there have been exceptions; in Toronto, a large and flourishing “Little Italy” German-speakers in Canada since the 1660s, the neighborhood delights both first major migration visitors and the city’s came between epicurean residents. The 1850–1900, with other first major influx of Italian Canadians mass arrivals following came in the wake both World Wars. On the whole, the Englishof the civil wars that speaking majority has disrupted Italy in the second half of the absorbed the Germans, but distinctive pockets 19th century; another wave arrived in the of German-speakers hold strong today in German beer 1940s and 1950s after stein Lunenburg, Nova World War II. ImmigraScotia (see p88), and tion continues into the Kitchener-Waterloo in Ontario 21st century, with two percent (see p218). The rural commuof Canadians today speaking nities surrounding Kitchener- Italian as their first language. Waterloo are strongholds of the Amish, a Germanspeaking religious sect, whose CHINESE CANADIANS members shun the trappings During the 1850S, Chinese of modern life and travel around on horse-drawn laborers arrived in Canbuggies wearing traditional ada to work in the gold fields homemade clothes. of British Columbia. ThereGerman food and drink, after, they played a key role especially its beer-making in the construction of the techniques, have added to railroads, settling new towns and cities as their work proCanadian cuisine. Ethnic restaurants in German areas gressed eastward. During still run on traditional lines. this period the Chinese

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suffered much brutal racism, including laws that enforced statutory discrimination. A flood of Chinese immigration took place just before the return of Hong Kong to China by the British in 1997. Most settlers chose Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver, but recently British Columbia has gained in popularity. With the Chinese focus on keeping large families together, most new arrivals today aim for an established community. About half of all Canada’s new immigrants today come from Asia. Over two percent of the Canadian population claimed Chinese as their first language in the late 1990s. UKRAINIAN CANADIANS Although Ukrainians are a small fraction of the Canadian population, numbering less than three percent, they have had a strong cultural influence, especially in the Prairie Provinces where the cupolas of their churches rise above many midwestern villages. The first major wave of Ukrainian migrants arrived in the 1890s as refugees from Tsarist persecution. The Soviet regime and the aftermath of World War II caused a second influx in the 20th century.

Woman in native Ukrainian dress in Battleford, Saskatchewan

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French Canada Many Canadians are quick to point out that Canada’s origins are more French than British, that the first European Canadians were explorers from France, and therefore called canadiens. French Canadians “Free Quebec” have had a centuries-long history of demonstrator conquest and battle to preserve their language and culture, strongest in Quebec and parts of Atlantic Canada. This has left large parts of the country with a French cultural base that lives on in language, religion, and the arts. More recently, the FrenchCanadian struggle for recognition in the 20th century has left unresolved the issue of Quebec’s independence. The heart of French Canada is Quebec, a province many times the size of France. Here, 85 percent of people count French as their mother tongue. French is not just the language of food, folklore, and love; it is also the language of business, government, and law.

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gutturals of the Acadian fishermen of the Maritimes. Residents of Quebec’s Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region speak a hard, clear French that must sound very like that of their Norman forbears. Over the years Quebecois have evolved a dialect called joual, which is informal, slangy, and peppered with anglicisms. It is also very colorful and viewed with a mix of pride and disdain. The accent may be hard for foreigners to follow.

French is the joint official language of Canada, but it has mutated in much the same way that North American English has. Canadiens, especially those in the bigger cities, have adopted some anglicisms; modern English words relating to industries and trades introduced by English-speakers are favorites. Conversely, some words that have passed out of fashion in France survive here; Canada is one of the few places where a cart remains FOOD a charette, for example, Canadiens have always instead of a tombereau, and the fin-de-semaine is the considered themselves the time to get away for some epicures of Canada, and with relaxation, rather than the some justice, enjoying the delights of the table more pasnow-universal le weekend. Young Quebecois in sionately than their northern particular are also far more free in using the informal tu, than more formal vous, than their parents would perhaps consider polite. Wide varieties exist in the quality and style of French spoken. The Paris-influenced intonation of Montreal’s college-educated haute bourgeoisie, for examSugar pie, a traditional Acadian family ple, is quite distinct dessert, served at celebrations from the rhythmic

European counterparts. Traditional food is rich and hearty. Meat pies are a specialty: cipaille comprizes layers of game meat under a flaky crust, and the more common tortière has a filling made of ground beef spiced with cloves. Salmon pie, stews made with pigs’ feet, and meatballs in a rich gravy are also typical. Desserts are rich; the Acadian tarte au sucre (sugar pie) is popular, as well as pudding au chomeur (literally “unemployed pudding”), an upsidedown cake with a sweet, caramelized base of sugar baked into a rich batter.

Musician Felix Leclerc, guardian of the folk music of Quebec

MUSIC Chansoniers are the troubadours of French Canada. Rooted in the traditional music of the first settlers, their haunting songs and simple melodies, such as the ballads of Felix Leclerc, might be melancholy or upbeat, but they are almost always romantic. These folk songs, accompanied by guitar, usually reflect optimism and a deep love for the land. Quebec chansonier Gilles Vigneault’s Mon Pays has become a nationalist anthem for those seeking independence. Of course, French music is not confined to the traditional; there are several successful rock, pop, and independent bands. Acadia’s singers are often chansonières, including Edith Butler and Angèle Arseneault vividly evoking the sadness and joy of life by the sea.

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to force their provincial government to translate all Manitoba statutes into French. This resurgence of national pride was felt most strongly in Quebec, where the charismatic and popular politician René Lévesque and his PartiQuébecois won the provincial election in 1976 and made outright separatism respectable. The party now regularly wins local elections and has so far held two referenda on independence. Both times Quebecois said no by the narrowest of margins, but the threat still dominates Canada’s political life. SYMBOLS The Quebec flag has a white cross on a blue background with a white Bourbon lily in persuaded them that the deal each quarter. Acadians have would preserve their faith created their own flag by addand language. The 1960s and ing a gold star to the French 1970s took the campaign into tricolor, which symbolizes a new phase, with the aim Stella Maris (Star of the Sea), being the independence of named after the Virgin Mary. The patron saint of French Quebec, as the politics of mere survival rose Canada is St. JeanBaptiste (St. John the to the politics of assertiveness (with Baptist); parades and French President parties mark his Charles de Gaulle feast day on June adding his rallying 24. The celebrations cry “Vive le Québec take on a strongly Quebec b fl flag with h Bourbon lilies – libre!” in 1966). nationalist style in Acadians in New Quebec, where the Brunswick gained real politbig day is called the Fête ical power to preserve their National. The provincial bird unique heritage, Francoof Quebec is the snowy owl, and the flower remains the Ontarians fought for control over their own schools, and white lily, both of which Manitobans used the courts flourish in the province.

Traditional Catholic church in Cheticamp, Cape Breton Island

FAITH The first French settlers were Roman Catholic, many very devout and zealous. The founders of Montreal, Paul Chomédy Sieur de Maisonneuve and Jeanne Mance, had hoped to create a new society based on Christian principles. Much of that devotion has evaporated in the modern age, especially in Quebec, which has one of the lowest church-attendance records in the country. Past fidelity has, however, left permanent monuments. Tiny French villages in Quebec and New Brunswick often have huge, stone churches with glittering tin roofs, gilding, and ornate interiors. Some parish churches in Montreal, like the magnificent Basilique Notre-Dame-de-Montréal (see pp112–13), would pass for cathedrals in US cities. NATIONALISM There has been a nationalist strain to most canadien aspirations since the founding of Modern Canada. Quebecois entered the 1867 Canadian Confederation (see p48) only because French leaders

Demonstrators during referendum vote for independence of Quebec

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Native Canadians Most archaeologists believe that the first inhabitants of North America crossed from Siberia to Alaska around 25,000 years ago. These hunter-nomads came in search of mammoth and bison, the ice-age animals that constituted their basic diet. The first wave of migrants was reinforced by a steady trickle of Siberian peoples over the next 15,000 years, and slowly the tribes worked Native mask k from their way east and south until they Vancouver reached the Atlantic and South America. Over the centuries, the descendants of these hunternomads evolved a wide range of cultures, which were shaped by their particular environment. In the icy north or across the barren wastes of Newfoundland, life was austere; but the fertile soils of Ontario and the fish-rich shores of British Columbia nourished sophisticated societies based on fishing and farming.

Europeans began to arrive

in numbers during the 17th century. In Newfoundland, the first part of Canada settled by whites, interracial relations were initially cordial but soured when new settlers encroached on ancient hunting grounds. In a pattern repeated across the continent, the native peoples, many dying from European diseases, were driven to inhospitable lands.

THE IROQUOIS Spread along the St. Lawrence River and the shores of the Great Lakes, were the Iroquois-speaking tribes, among whom were the Mohawks, the Huron, and the Seneca. These tribes hunted and fished, but they also cultivated beans, pumpkins, squash, and corn, growing everything in abundance for a year-round food supply. This enabled them to live in large villages, often with several hundred inhabitants. Their traditional dwelling was the longhouse, built of cedar poles bent to form a protective arch and covered with bark. These settlements were all surrounded Cornplanter, a 17th-century chief of the Seneca tribe by high palisades made of sharpened wooden stakes, a necessary precaution as An Iroquois-built longhouse warfare between the tribes was endemic. THE PLAINS PEOPLES War was also commonplace on the plains of southern Manitoba and Saskatchewan, where the majority Blackfoot tribe was totally reliant on the buffalo: they ate the meat, used the hide for clothes and tents, and filed the bones into tools. The first Blackfoot hunted the buffalo by means of cleverly conceived traps, herding the animals and stampeding them off steep cliffs (see p296). Originally, the horse was Indians on horseback hunting buffalo with arrows unknown to the native peoples of the Americas – their largest beast of burden was the dog – but the Spanish conquistadores brought the horse with them when they colonized South America in the 1500s. Thereafter, horses were slowly traded north until they reached the Canadian plains. The arrival of the horse transformed Blackfoot life: it made the buffalo easy to hunt and, with a consistent food supply now A Blackfoot camp, showing assured, the tribe developed a militaristic culture, focusing partraditional homes ticularly on the valor of their young men – the “braves.”

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PEOPLES OF THE PACIFIC COAST The native peoples of the Pacific Coast were divided into a large number of small tribes such as the Tlingit and the Salish. The ocean was an abundant source of food; with this necessity taken care of, they developed an elaborate ceremonial life featuring large and lively feasts, Totem pole in Stanley Park the potlachs, in which clans tried to outdo each other with the magnificence of their gifts. The peoples of this region were also superb woodcarvers, their most celebrated works of art being totem poles. Each pole featured a myth from the tribe’s religion; magical birds and beasts mix with semi-human Sqylax tribal celebration in figures to tell a story in carved British Columbia panels rising up the pole.

TERMINOLOGY For many Canadians, the words “Eskimo” and “Red Indian“ or just “Indian“ are unacceptable. They are seen as terms of abuse, as they hark back to times when whites dominated the country and crushed its original population. The word “Eskimo” has been replaced by “Inuit,” but modern substitutes for “Indian” are not as clearcut. Some people choose “aboriginal” or “native,” others prefer “indigenous,” or speak of Canada’s “First Nations.” All are acceptable, but it is preferable to determine a specific tribe or band name, such as “Cree” or “Iroquois.”

THE INUIT AND THE PEOPLES OF THE NORTHERN FORESTS Stretching in a band from Alaska to Greenland, the far north was home to the Inuit, nomadic hunters who lived in skin tents in the summer and igloos in the winter. Arctic conditions and limited food supply meant that they foraged in small family groups and gathered together only in special circumstances – during the annual caribou migration, for instance. To the south of the Inuit, and also widespread across modern-day Canada, were the tribes of the northern forest, including the Naskapi, the Chipewyan, and the Wood Cree. These tribes were also nomadic hunters, dependent on fish and seal, or deer and moose. Successful hunters earned prestige, and the tribal priest (shaman) was expected to keep the spirit world benevolent, but there was little An Inuit hunter by his igloo home other social organization.

Inuit in Caribou parka, checking his harpoon

NATIVE CANADIAN ISSUES

Paul Okalik, Nunavut’s first Premier, at his inauguration

Since the 1960s, Canada’s native peoples have recovered some of their self-confidence. A key development was the creation of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN), an intertribal organization that has become an influential player on the national scene. In the 1980s, the AFN successfully argued for a greater degree of self-government on the reservations and tackled the federal government on land rights, sponsoring a series of court cases that highlighted the ways the native population had been stripped of its territories. The AFN was also involved in the establishment of Nunavut (see p55), the new homeland for the Inuit created in 1999 from part of the former Northwest Territories. By comparison with their white compatriots, Canada’s native population remains, nonetheless, poor and disadvantaged. The rectification of historic wrongs will take decades, even assuming that the political will remains strong enough to improve matters.

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Art in Canada Inuit and other First Nations groups have produced art in Canada since prehistoric times: the Inuit carved wood or antler sculptures, and other native groups were responsible for works from rock paintings to richly decorated pottery. Early European immigrants, both French and English, generally eschewed native traditions and followed European forms. Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, artists traveled, to Paris, London, and New York to study European art. It was in the 1900s that painters sought to develop a distinctly national style. However, one consistent subject of Canadian painting is the country itself: a preoccupation with its lush forests, stately landscapes, and expanse of freezing northern wilderness. Today, Canadian art reflects a wide range of art movements, with native art in particular fetching high prices among collectors.

(1855–1936) and Ozias Leduc (1855–1964) were the first artists to learn their craft in Canada. Watson said, “I did not know enough to have Paris or Rome in mind. ... I felt Toronto had all I needed.” His canvases portray Ontarian domestic scenes. After Confederation in 1867, the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and the National Gallery of Canada were founded in 1883. Artists could now train at home, but many still left to study in Paris. Curtis Williamson (1867–1944) and Edmund Morris (1871–1913) returned from France determined to revitalize their tired national art. They formed the Canadian Art Club in 1907, where new schools such as Impressionism were shown. James Wilson Morrice (1865– 1924), Maurice Cullen (1866– 1934), and Marc Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté (1869–1937) were key figures in this move toward modernity. MODERN PAINTERS

The influence of European art was criticized by perhaps the most influential set of Canadian artists, the Group of Seven (see pp164–5). Before On the Saint Lawrence (1897) oil painting by Maurice Cullen World War I, Toronto artists had objected to the lack of a and became very popular, as national identity in art. PAINTERS IN THE NEW did Quebec painters Antoine By the 1920s the Group had WORLD defined Canadian painting in Plamondon (1817–95) and Théophile Hamel (1817–70). their boldly colored landIn the 1600s French settlers Cornelius Krieghoff (1815–72) scapes, such as A.Y. Jackson’s settled in Quebec and was in Canada either imported Terre Sauvage (1913). Despite religious paintings or commis- famous for his snow his early death, painter sioned stock subjects to adorn scenes of both setTom Thomson was a their new churches. Only tlers and natives. His founding influence. contemporary, Paul Three painters who Samuel de Champlain, the “Father of New France” (see Kane (1810–71), came to prominence p45), stands out for his recorded the lives of in the 1930s were influthe First Nations on sketches of the Huron tribe. enced by the Group but After the English conquest in an epic journey followed highly the 1760s, art moved from rel- across Canada. He individual muses, igion to matters of politics, the then completed each of the artists land, and the people. Army over 100 sketches were distinguished Lawren S. Harris, officers, such as Thomas by a passion for and paintings, of painter (1885 –1970) which Mah Min, their own province; Davies (1737–1812), painted fine detailed works, conveying or The Feather, David Milne (1882– their love of the landscape. (c.1856) is one of the most 1953), known for his still lifes, Artists such as Robert Field impressive (see p40). During LeMoine Fitzgerald (1890– (1769–1819), trained in Neo- the 19th century, painters 1956) for his domestic and Classicism, which was prebackyard scenes, and Emily focused on the Canadian valent in Europe at the time, landscape. Homer Watson Carr (1871–1945) (see p282)

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Skidegate, Graham Island, BC, (1928) a later work by Emily Carr

for her striking depiction of the west coast Salish people and their totem poles. Carr was the first woman artist to achieve high regard. A writer as well as painter, her poem Renfrew (1929), describes her intense relationship with nature, which was reflected in her paintings: “... in the distance receding plane after plane... cold greens, gnarled stump of gray and brown.” The strong influence of the Group of Seven provoked a reaction among successive generations of painters. John Lyman (1866–1945) rejected the group’s rugged nationalism. Inspired by Matisse, he moved away from using land as the dominant subject of painting. Lyman set up the Contemporary Arts Society in Montreal and promoted new art between 1939–48; even Surrealism reached the city. Since World War II there has been an explosion of new forms based upon abstraction. In Montreal, Paul-Emile Borduas (1905–60) and two colleagues formed the Automatists, whose inspirations were Surrealism and Abstract Impressionism. By the 1950s Canadian painters achieved international acclaim. Postwar trends were also taken up in Toronto where The Painters Eleven produced abstract paintings. Today, artists work across the range of contemporary art movements, incorporating influences from around the world and from Canada’s cultural mosaic. Experimental work by painters such as Jack Bush, Greg Carnoe, and Joyce

Wieland continues strongly in the wake of ideas from the 1960s. Canada now boasts a plethora of public and private galleries, and exceptional collections of 20th-century art.

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The sculpture of the Northwest coast First Nations people is known worldwide, particularly the cedar-wood carvings of Haida artist Bill Reid, the totem poles of Richard Krentz, and the Kwa Gulth Big House at Fort Rupert by Chief Tony Hunt. Painters such as Norval Morisseau, Carl Ray, and Daphne Odjig cover a range of styles, from realism to abstract work. Native art celebrates the culture of its people, from their legendary survival skills, tales and myths, to their land and the fight for its preservation. SCULPTURE

European sculpture arrived in Canada with the French who created sacred figures to ABORIGINAL ART adorn their churches. Sculptors such as Louis Quévillon The art of the Inuit (see (1749–1832) carved decorapp326–7) and the Northwest h tive altarpieces as well as fine First Nations is highly valued marble statues in Montreal. in Canada. Pre-historic Inuit European traditions continued finds reveal beautiful objects, to dominate through the 19th from sculpted figurines century, and it was not until the 20th century to carved harpoon heads, which were that Canada’s new cities largely created for began to require civic religious use. With the monuments. The façade coming of the of the Quebec ParliaEuropeans the Inuit ment was designed by quickly adapted their Louis-Phillipe Hébert artistic skills to make (1850–1917). objects for sale such as Native subjects were sculptures made from incorporated into ivory, bone, and much 20th-century stone. Today, Inuit sculpture, as were artists such as European styles Robert Murray’s Aqghadluk, Qaqaq including Art NouSculpture veau and Art Deco. Ashoona, and Tommy Ashevak are noted for their Since the 1960s, sculptors contribution to contemporary such as Armand Vaillancourt Canadian art, especially their (b.1932) and Robert Murray sculpture and wallhangings. (b.1936) have sought to develop a Canadian style. Modern materials and the influence of conceptual art inform the work of such current artists as Michael Snow. Their work can be seen not just in museums but also in new commercial and civic The celebrated Haida sculptor Bill Reid buildings.

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Literature and Music in Canada As the Canadian poet the Reverend Edward Hartley Dewart wrote in 1864, “A national literature is an essential element in the formation of a national character.” Much Canadian literature and music is concerned with defining a national consciousness but also reflects the cultural diversity of the country. Both English and French speakers have absorbed a variety of influences from the US, Britain, and France, as well as from the other nations whose immigrants make up the population. The Europeans’ relationship with First Nations peoples has also affected the style and content of much Canadian fiction and poetry, as have the often harsh realities of living in a land of vast wilderness.

native named Grey Owl (see p250), producing some of Canada’s best-loved literature. Pilgrims of the Wild (1935) tells of his journey into Quebec to find sanctuary for the overhunted beaver. The Adventures of Sajo and her Beaver People and Tales of an Empty Cabin (1935–6) are laments for the wild and lost traditions. Classics of the early 1900s deal with domesticity. These include Anne of Green Gables (1908) by L.M. Montgomery (1874–1942). Humorous writing was led by Stephen Leacock (see p218), and Thomas Chandler Haliburton (1796–1865), a judge who created Sam Slick, narrator of The Clockmaker (1876). Painter Emily Carr’s A House of all Sorts (1944) describes her days as a landlady. POETRY

Stars of the popular 1934 film Anne of Green Gables

NEW BEGINNINGS Much of the earliest writing in Canada (between the mid-1500s and 1700s) was by explorers, fur traders, soldiers, and missionaries. French lawyer Marc Lescarbot’s Histoire de La Nouvelle France (1609) is an early example of pioneer commentary and is a lively record of his adventures in Nova Scotia. After the English conquest of 1760, New France was subdued, but by the 19th century, French poets began producing patriotic poems such as Le Vieux Soldat (1855) by Octave Cremazie (1827–79), sparking a renaissance of poetry that continues today. English writing was concerned with man’s struggle with nature and life in the new world. Roughing it in the Bush (1852) by Mrs. Moodie

Early English language poets Standish O’Grady (1793–1843) and Alexander McLachan (1818–76) wrote verse that reflected a colonial point of view. The genre looked critically at an iniquitous motherland (England), while praising the opportunities available in the New World. Creators of a “new” Canadian poetry in the 1870s and 80s used detailed descriptions of landscape to highlight man’s efforts to conquer nature. Two notable authors were Charles Mair (1838–1927) and Isabella Velancey Crawford (1850– 1887). By the 20th century the idea of the wilderness stayed

is a tale of struggles in isolated northern Ontario. British Columbia was the last region to be settled, and a captivating memoir is A Pioneer Gentlewoman in British Columbia: the recollections of Susan Allison (1876). Allison came from England to teach in the town of Hope and was the first European woman to make the dangerous journe across the Hope Mountains on horseback. Much 19thcentury Canadian fiction romanticizes the past, such a William Kirby’s (1817–1906) Golden Dog (1877), with its idealized view of 18thcentury Quebec. Epic novels of the time focused on native lives and cultures, notably Wacousta (1832) by John Richardson (1796–1852). Archibald Stansfield Belaney (1888– Internationally renowned poet and 1938) took on a new songwriter, Leonard Cohen identity as an Ojibway

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in a sparer style that mirrored author Mourning Dove (1888– the starkness of the Group 1936). Another Okanagan of Seven’s landscape paintnovelist, Jeanette Armstrong ings (see pp164–5). Robert (b.1948), published Slash in Service’s (1874–1958) popular 1985. The struggles of a Métis ballads deal with history, and woman in modern Canada are he is noted for his gold rush described in the best-selling poems such as The Spell of autobiography of Maria the Yukon (1907) and the Campbell in Halfbreed (1973). later Rhymes of a Roughneck A mix of legend and (1950). John McCrae (1872– political campaigning for 1918) wrote one of the most native rights informs much famous World War I poems aboriginal fiction, such as In Flanders Fields (1915). Pauline Johnson’s The Modern English a e Wampum (1895) French poetry now Beatrice Culleton’s Michael Ondaatje, the acclaimed a worldwide audien arch of April Rainauthor of The English Patient with writers such as ee (1983). The first Anne Wilkinson, Inuit work in EngCostner in 1989, and Michael Irving Layton, lish was Harpoon Ondaatje’s 1996 The English Earle Birney, E.J. of the Hunter Patient won nine Oscars. Pratt, Leonard (1970), a story There is a strong tradition of Cohen, and of coming of age short-story writing, one master Patrick Anderson, in the northern being Alice Munro (b.1931). whose Poem on Arctic by MarkPopular history is highly reCanada (1946) oosie (b.1942). garded; noted author Pierre looks at the One of Canada’s Berton has written 40 books impact of nature top contemporary on the nation’s history. Canadian poet Robert playwrights is on European Service in 1942 Cree author mentalities. The simple power of Thompson HighMUSIC IN CANADA French writer Anne Hébert’s way (b.1951), whose plays poems, such as Le Tombeau deal with the harsh reality Some of the biggest names des Rois (The Kings’ Tombs) of life on the reservations. in the music industry are (1953) focuses on the univerCanadian. A strong tradition of folk and soft rock has prosal themes of childhood, memory, and death. A postMODERN FICTION duced such artists as Leonard war boom in poetry and Cohen, Kate and Anna McGarfiction was fostered by the Since the 1940s, many rigle, Joni Mitchell, and Neil Canadian writers have Young. A new generation of Canada Council for the Arts. achieved international fame. singer/songwriters that have Margaret Atwood (b.1939) for continued the tradition of reNATIVE CANADIAN her poetry, novels, and critflective, melodic hits include WRITING icism, while Carol Shields Alanis Morissette and k.d. (b.1935) won the prestigious lang; and the Cowboy Junkies Despite a powerful oral British Booker Prize for The and Shania Twain play new tradition – where stories are Stone Diaries in 1996. Morde- styles of country music. Superboth owned and passed cai Richler (b.1931) and stars such as Celine Dion Robertson Davies (1913–95) down through families and and Bryan Adams have made a huge impact in Europe and clans – autobiography, child- are noted for their wry take ren’s books, plays, short stor- on contemporary Canadian the US. In the classical sphere, orchestras such as the ies, poetry, essays, and novels society. Many authors have have been produced by Cana- reached a wider pu tréal Orchestre dian native writers since the through having the mphonique are 19th century. One of the most books adapted for rld famous, as popular autobiographies of big screen. Gabriel as the pianist this period was written by Roy’s Bonheur lenn Gould. Jazz s represented Ojibway native George Cop- d’Occasion (1945) way (1818–69). Titled The became the 1982 by the pianist Life, History, and Travels of movie The Tin Oscar PeterKah-ge-ga-ga-bowh (1847), Flute; a novel by son, and every it had six editions in a year. W.P. Kinsella, year Montreal hosts one of The first book to be published Shoeless Joe by a native woman is thought (1982), became the world’s to be Cogewea, The HalfField of Dreams Legendary composer and Folk most famous Blood (1927), by Okanagan starring Kevin singer, Joni Mitchell festivals.

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Sports in Canada Canadians are avid sports fans, and most of the country’s cities and towns offer visitors a chance to see year-round sports entertainment. Although the official national game is lacrosse – a First Nations game in which the ball is caught and tossed in a leather cradle on a stick – Canadians’ greatest enthusiasm is for ice hockey. Baseball, basketball, and Canadian football (similar to the US game) are also big crowd-pullers. Major cities regularly attract international stars to worldclass racing, golf, and tennis tournaments. Even small towns provide the chance to watch minor professionals, amateurs, and student athletes. For visitors who prefer participating in sports, Canada offers a broad choice of activities from skiing to golf, fishing, and hiking.

National ice hockey heroes in action during a league game

ICE HOCKEY The popularity of ice hockey in Canada knows no bounds. Every town has a rink, and every school, college, and university a team. The North American National Hockey League (NHL) was founded in 1917, and its principal prize, the Stanley Cup, was instituted in 1892 by Canadian Govenor General, Lord Stanley. Today, the league has 30 teams, six of which belong to Canadian cities; the Montreal Canadiens, Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, and the Vancouver Canucks. Although most of the players in both the US and Canada are Canadian, recent years have seen an influx of other nationalities such as Russian, American, and Swedish atheletes playing

for the top teams. Renowned for its toughness, the game usually involves a skirmish or two among the players, which often means that this 60-minute game can last up to three hours. The season runs from October to April when the play-offs for the Stanley Cup begin. Hockey stars such as Wayne Gretzky are national icons. He retired in 1999 after 20 years in the game, having captured 61 NHL scoring records. Tickets to the major games can be hard to come by, and should be booked in advance. It is a good idea to contact the club’s ticket lines, or book through Ticketmaster. Minor league and college games are easier to get into, and the University of Toronto and York, Concordia in Montreal, and the University of Alberta in Edmonton all have good teams. Tickets can be bought

from the local arena, or direct from the administration center, and are usually a great bargain. BASEBALL Although baseball is seen as an American sport, the game also has a large following in Canada. There is one Canadian team that plays in the major leagues: the well-known Toronto Blue Jays, who won the World Series in 1992 and 1993. Baseball is played in the summer, and the season lasts from April to September (with play-offs through October). It can provide a great family day out, with beer, popcorn, an enthusiastic audience, and plenty of betweeninning entertainment, to keep the less baseballobsessed amused. The Blue Jays take on their rivals in the Rogers Centre, an architectural marvel with a retractable roof (see p173). Good tickets are easy to come by – just book a day or two in advance. Seats further back are almost always available on the day of the game. Seeing one of the minor league baseball teams can also be fun.

Jose Canseco during his days with the Toronto Blue Jays

A

FOOTBALL The Canadian version of football (not soccer) is noted for being a more exciting version of American football. Although the best Canadian players tend to move to the US for higher salaries, the game still attracts substantial home audiences. The Canadian Football League has two divisions of four teams who each play over the July to November season. The games tend to attract a lively family crowd and are fun, especially around the Grey Cup final. Played on the last Sunday of November, the game is preceded by a week of festivities and a big parade in the host city. Football is also played at most universities, where a Saturday afternoon game makes for an entertaining excursion. The annual college championship game is called the Vanier Cup and is played at Toronto’s Skydome at the beginning of December. Tickets are relatively easy to come by and are reasonably priced. BASKETBALL What once was an American passion has now spread around the world to become one of the fastest growing international sports. The game was invented in the United States by a Canadian, Dr. James Naismith, and now enjoys huge popularity in his homeland. The Toronto Raptors play in the National Basketball Association, the top professional league in the world, against the likes of the Chicago Bulls, Boston Celtics, Los Angeles Lakers, and New York Knicks. The season lasts from October until late spring, and it is well worth a visit to Toronto’s Air Canada Centre to watch one of their fast-paced games. Most of Canada’s universities have teams, and although crowds tend to be smaller than those drawn by

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the professionals, the competition is fierce and the atmosphere truly exhilarating, especially during the annual national championship tournament played in Halifax each March.

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DIRECTORY National Hockey League 11th Floor, 50 Bay Street, Toronto. Tel (416) 981 2777. www.nhl.com

Ticketmaster (for hockey games) Tel (416) 870 8000. www.ticketmaster.ca

Baseball Toronto Blue Jays Tel Tickets: (416) 341 1234. www.bluejays.com

Football Canadian Football League 110 Eglinton Avenue W. Toronto Tel (416) 322 9650. www.cfl.ca Toronto Raptors versus the L.A. Clippers basketball match

GOLF Canada hosts two major tournaments each year (both in September), which draw large crowds of spectators, as well as the world’s greatest players. The biggest is the Canadian Open, usually played at Toronto’s Glen Abbey on a course designed by Jack Nicklaus. The annual Greater Vancouver Open is a regular stop on the Professional Golfers’ Association tour, although the field is not as strong as that of the Open. Golf is an immensely popular participation sport, with over 1,700 beautiful courses across the country, from the Banff Springs course in the west to the many rolling fairways of Prince Edward Island in the east.

Basketball Toronto Raptors Tel Tickets: (416) 815 5600. www.raptors.com

Golf Royal Canadian Golf Association Tel (905) 849 9700. www.rcga.org

world. Visitors can enjoy a range of options in resorts across the country, from Whistler in the Rockies to Mont Ste-Anne in Quebec. As well as downhill skiing, it is also possible to try snowboarding, snowmobiling, dogsledding, or even heli-skiing on pristine snow (see p403).

WINTER SPORTS Famous for the plentiful snow and sunshine of its cold winters, Canada is one of the top places both to watch and participate in winter sports. Canadian resorts are less crowded than their European counterparts, and are set among some of the most dramatic scenery in the

Snowboarder descending a slope at speed in powder snow

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CANADA THROUGH THE YEAR easonal changes in Canada most outdoor festivals tend to be vary greatly across the counheld in the summer months. try, but in general it is safe There are plenty of events held to say that the winters are long during winter, both indoors and cold and run from Novand out, some of which celeember to March, while spring brate Canadians’ ability to and fall tend to be mild. get the best out of the icy weather, especially activiBritish Columbia is the most temperate zone, with an ties such as dogsledding, average temperature of 5°C snowmobiling, and ice(40˚F) in January. July and Native powwow in Calgary skating. A range of cultural August are reliably warm and sunny events reflect the country’s history, as in most places, even the far north, and well as its diverse peoples and culture.

S

Beaches Easter Parade

SPRING March and April bring the country some of its most unpredictable weather, moving from snow to sunshine in a day. In the north this is a time for welcoming the end of winter, while farther south spring is the start of an array of fun festivals.

(April) Toronto. This annual parade has become a popular spring institution. It follows a route along Queen St. E., between Victoria Park and Woodbine Avenue. Shaw Festival

(April –October) Niagara-onthe-Lake. Theater festival with classic plays by George Bernard Shaw and his contemporaries (see p208).

Saskatchewan. Features guided bird-watching and tours of wildlife habitats. Vancouver International Children’s Festival (last

weekend in May) Vancouver. Theater, circus, and music for children aged 3 and up. JUNE

Warm weather across most of the country means that there is an explosion of festivals, carnivals, and cultural events, from May through August.

Pride Week (early June)

Canadian Tulipfest (mid-

MARCH

Shorebirds and Friends’ Festival (late May) Wadena,

SUMMER

MAY

Dogsledding at Yellowknife’s Caribou Carnival in spring

famous theater festival featuring a range of plays from Elizabethan to contemporary works (see p211).

May) Ottawa. Colorful display of millions of tulips is the centerpiece for a variety of events. Stratford Festival (May – November) Stratford. World

Toronto. A celebration of the gay community, featuring a fun, flamboyant parade. Grand Prix du Canada

(early June) Montreal. Formula One event – future uncertain. Midnight Madness (midJune) Inuvik. Celebration of the summer solstice, with parties under the midnight sun. Mosaic – Festival of Cultures (first weekend in

June) Regina. Cultural events from around the world.

The Caribou Carnival

(late March) Yellowknife. A celebration of the arrival of spring, featuring dogsledding, snowmobiling, and delicious local foods. APRIL Toonik Tyme (mid-April)

Iqaluit. This week-long festival includes igloo building, traditional games, and community feasts.

Vividly colored tulips at Ottawa spring festival, Canadian Tulipfest

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Steer wrestling competition in the Half Million Dollar Rodeo at Calgary’s Stampede

Banff Festival of the Arts

Just for Laughs Festival

Wikwemikong Powwow

(mid-June to mid-August) Banff. Two months of opera, music, drama, and dance.

(July 14 –25) Montreal. Twelve-day comedy festival with more than 600 comedians from around the world.

(first weekend) Manitoulin Island. Ojibway native festival with a dancing and drum competition (see p224).

Canadian Open Tennis Championships (July-Aug)

Discovery Days Festival

Jazz Fest International

(late June –July) Victoria. Jazz and blues musicians play in venues all over town. Red River Exhibition (late June –July) Winnipeg. A huge fair with many entertainments. Festival International de Jazz de Montréal (late

June –July) Montreal. Famous jazz festival with a number of free outdoor concerts. Nova Scotia International Tattoo (late June –July)

Halifax. There are 2,000 participants in one of the world’s largest indoor shows.

Montreal. Major international tennis tournament. Caribana (July–Aug) Toronto. One of the largest and livliest Caribbean celebrations in North America. The main event is the parade. Antigonish Highland Games (mid-July) Antigonish.

Oldest traditional highland games in North America, with pipe bands and dancing.

Quebec City. Ten days of music and dance.

Victoria. (mid-Aug) Three days of exhibitions, dancing, and a traditional native gathering known as the potlatch. Folklorama (mid-Aug) Winnipeg. Multicultural festival of food, performance, and the arts. Moncton. Atlantic Canada’s largest outdoor sale of arts, antiques, and crafts.

Folk on the Rocks (second

Quebec City Summer Festival (second week)

First People’s Festival

Victoria Park Arts and Crafts Fair (mid-Aug)

JULY weekend) Yellowknife. Inuit drummers, dancers, and throat singers perform here. Klondike Days (July) Edmonton. Commemorates the city’s frontier days. Calgary Stampede (mid-July) Calgary. Ten-day celebration of all things western, including a rodeo (see p294). Molson Indy (mid-July) Toronto. Indy car race held at Exhibition Place.

(mid-Aug) Dawson City. Commemorates gold rush days, with costumed parades and canoe races.

Festival Acadien de Caraquet (Aug 5 –15)

Caraquet. Celebration of Acadian culture and history. Halifax International Busker Festival (second

Ford race car at the Molson Indy meeting held in Toronto

AUGUST Royal St. John’s Regatta

(Aug 4) St. John’s. Noted as North America’s oldest sporting event, features rowing races and a carnival.

week) Halifax. The best street entertainers from around the world. Canadian National Exhibition (Aug –Sep)

Toronto. Annual fair featuring spectacular air show, concerts, and a casino. Folkfest (mid-Aug) Saskatoon. Saskatchewan’s multicultural heritage celebrated in a variety of events.

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Flambée des Couleurs

(mid-Sep –Oct) Eastern Townships. A series of celebrations of glorious fall leaf colors. Niagara Grape and Wine Festival (last week) Niagara

Falls. Vineyard tours, wine tastings, and concerts welcome the area’s grape harvest. OCTOBER Okanagan Wine Festival

(early-Oct) Okanagan Valley. Tours and tastings throughout the valley (see p317). Oktoberfest (mid-Oct) Kitchener-Waterloo. Largest Bavarian festival outside Germany (see p218).

Showjumping in the Masters equestrian event held in Calgary

SEPTEMBER FALL The Masters (first week)

Cool, but often sunny weather provides the best setting for the dramatic reds and golds of the fall foliage, which are mostly seen in the deciduous forests of the eastern provinces. In Ontario and Quebec, fall signals the end of the humid summer months and heralds crisp days that are perfect for outdoor pursuits.

Calgary. Equestrian event with top international riders. Molson Indy (early Sep) Vancouver. This year’s second Molson Indy sees car racing in downtown Vancouver. Toronto International Film Festival (Sep)

Toronto. Famous movie stars and directors attend this prestigious festival.

VANCOUVER

TORONTO

Climate Average daily maximum temperature

27/81 23/73 °C/°F

°C /°F 14/57 13/55 14/57

12/54

7/45 6/43

5/41

6

9

hrs

hrs

90

39

mm

mm Jul

month Apr

17/63 15/59

-1/30

2

6

10

9

-8/18 2

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

172

214

66

74

41

66

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

Oct

Jan

month Apr

Jul

Oct

Jan

4

Average daily hours of sunshine Average monthly rainfall

OTTAWA

MONTREAL

27/81

26/79

14/57 4 °C /°F

-6/21 6

9

4

-16/3 3

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

14/57 14/57 9/48

7/45

6/43

2/36

3/37

0/32

23/73 °C/°F

13/55

11/52

This vast country has a variable climate, despite being famous for having long, cold winters. Most Canadians live in the warmer south of the country, close to the US border. Southern Ontario and BC’s south and central coast are the warmest areas, while central and northern Canada have the coldest winters. HALIFAX

17/63

°C/°F

13/55

10/50

Average daily minimum temperature

7/45 3/37

0/32

Traditional Bavarian costumes and music at the Oktoberfest

-5/23 5/23 5

8

hrs

hrs

1/34

0/32 -7/19

4

-13/9 3

5

8

5

3

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

hrs

69

82

67

62

83

98

84

87

113

94

120

140

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

mm

month Apr

Jul

Oct

Jan

Jul

Oct

Jan

Jul

Oct

Jan

month Apr

month Apr

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Celtic Colours (mid-Oct)

Cape Breton Island. International Celtic music festival held across the island. WINTER Apart from coastal British Columbia, Canadian winters are long and cold with lots of snow. Events focus on winter sports, with some of the best skiing in the world available at such resorts as Whistler in British Columbia. The Christmas holidays are a time of fun activities to cheer everyone up in the midst of long, dark days.

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PUBLIC HOLIDAYS New Years Day (Jan 1) Good Friday (variable) Easter Sunday (variable) Easter Monday (variable)

Vacation for government offices and schools only. Victoria Day. (Monday before May 25) Canada Day (July 1) Labour Day (first Monday in September) Thanksgiving (second Monday in October) Remembrance Day

(Nov 11) Christmas Day (Dec 25) Boxing Day (Dec 26)

NOVEMBER

Christmas Carolships Parade (mid-Dec) Vancouver.

Royal Agricultural Winter Fair (early –mid-Nov)

Boats are beautifully decorated with Christmas lights, and cruise Vancouver’s waters.

An illuminated display of Christmas decorations

JANUARY

canoe race across the St. Lawrence River is just one attraction at these huge winter celebrations. Jasper in January (last two weeks) Jasper. Winter festivities include skiing parties, races, and food fairs.

(mid-Nov) Edmonton. Canada’s cowboy champions are decided at this event.

Ice Magic (mid-Jan) Lake

Banff/Lake Louise Winter Festival (last week) Banff,

Winter Festival of Lights

Techni-Cal Challenge – Dog Sled Race (mid-Jan)

Toronto. The world’s largest indoor agricultural fair features the Royal Horse Show and the Winter Garden Show. Canadian Finals Rodeo

(mid-Nov–mid Jan) Niagara Falls. Spectacular light displays and concerts. DECEMBER Canadian Open Sled Dog Race (Dec) Fort St. John and

Fort Nelson. Snow sports and family fun-days as well as dogsled races.

Louise. International ice sculpture competition.

Lake Louise. Variety of fun events, including skating parties and barn dances.

Minden. Over 80 teams compete in international races.

FEBRUARY

Rossland Winter Carnival

Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race (Feb)

(last weekend) Rossland. Snowboarding contests, a torchlit parade, and lots of music and dancing at this weekend-long party. Quebec Winter Carnival

(Jan-Feb) Quebec. A famous

Whitehorse. Famous 1,600 km (1,000 mile) race from Fairbanks, Alaska to Whitehorse. Yukon Sourdough Rendevous (Feb)

Whitehorse. A “mad trapper” competition and an array of children’s events in this winter festival. Frostbite Music Festival

(third weekend) Whitehorse. Features a wide range of music from jazz to rock. Calgary Winter Festival

Two eagle ice sculptures at Ottawa’s February festival, Winterlude

(second week) Calgary. Winter festival with lots of fun family activities, music, and feasting. Festival du Voyageur (midFeb) Winnipeg. Celebration of fur trade history featuring an enormous street party. Winterlude (every weekend) Ottawa. A wide array of activities including iceskating on the Rideau Canal.

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THE HISTORY OF CANADA

C

anada is known for its wild and beautiful terrain, yet with the help of the aboriginal peoples, European settlers adapted to their new land and built up a prosperous nation. Despite continuing divisions between its English- and French-speaking peoples, Canada has welcomed immigrants from around the globe and is respected as one of the most tolerant countries in the world today.

Long before the first Eurowinters and brief summers. peans crossed the Atlantic To the south, the Iroquois in AD 986, the landscape settled in forest villages we now know as Canada where they lived in longwas inhabited by various Detail of totem pole made by houses and grew corn civilizations. Tribes of Haida peoples from the west as their staple crop. hunters came on foot, On the western plains, walking across a land bridge that once other tribes depended on the bison joined Asia with North America as part for their livelihood, while communiof the ancient land mass of Laurasia. ties living along the Pacific Coast These first inhabitants, now referred relied on fishing and trading. Their to as the First Nations, endured towering totem poles indicated a rich centuries of hardship and adaptation, culture and spiritual belief system. eventually developing the skills, The common bond between all the technology, and culture required to First Nations, despite their disparate survive the rigors of life in Canada. lifestyles, was that they saw themselves as part of nature and not as its EARLY SURVIVAL masters. They believed the animals Across most of the country, from the they hunted had kindred spirits, and Yukon to the Atlantic, there were two misfortune befell those who offended main groups of hunter-gatherers, the such spirits by gratuitous killing. Algonquins and the Athapaskans. The generosity of the natives toward They lived in small nomadic bands, Europeans may have hastened their which developed birch bark canoes own downfall. As Canadian historian and snowshoes to travel across this Desmond Morton points out: “Without vast land. Food and clothing were the full... assistance of natives showprocured through fishing and animal ing the Europeans their methods of trapping, traditions that gave Canada survival, their territory, and their the lucrative fish and fur trades. resources, the early explorers and To the north of these two groups settlers would have perished in even were the Innu people, who mastered greater numbers and possibly life in the Arctic, being able to sur- abandoned their quest, much as the vive in a region of dark, ice-bound Vikings had done 500 years before.” TIMELINE 9,000 BC Native peoples are living at least as far south as the Eramosa River near what is now Guelph, Ontario

Viking ship c.980 AD 30,000 BC

20,000 BC

1497 John

AD 986 Bjarni Herjolfsson,

10,000 BC

AD1

Cabot’s first voyage to North America

a Viking sailing from Iceland to Greenland, is the first European to see the coastline of Labrador 500

1000

1500

1003 Thorfinn Karlsefni starts a 30,000–10,000 BC Nomadic

hunters arrive in North America across a land bridge from Asia

992 Leif “the Lucky” Ericsson visits Labrador and L’Anse aux Meadows, Newfoundland

Mah-Min or The Feather, painting of an Assiniboine chief by Paul Kane c.1856

colony in Labrador (Vinland) to trade with the natives, but it is abandoned two years later because of fighting with the hostile aboriginals

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THE FIRST EUROPEANS

The Norse sagas of Northern Europe aboard the Matthew, bound for America. tell how Vikings from Iceland first On June 24, he found a sheltered place reached the coast of Labrador in AD on Newfoundland. Here he went 986 and made a series of unsuccessful ashore with a small party to claim the attempts to establish a colony land for England. He then went here. Leif “the Lucky” Ericsson on to chart the eastern coastline sailed from Greenland in 988, before sailing home, where he naming the country he found was greeted as a hero. In May 1498, Cabot sailed in the west Vinland after the wild grapes found growing again with five ships and 300 men hoping to find the Northin abundance there. Around west Passage to China. Harsh 1000 AD Thorfinn Karlsefni tried to establish a Vinland weather drove Cabot to colony. Thorfinn’s group relinquish his efforts and head wintered in Vinland but sailed south to Nova Scotia. Cabot home to Greenland in the then found himself sailing Italian navigator and spring, convinced that a through a sea littered with explorer John Cabot colony was impossible as icebergs. The fleet perished there were too few colonists and the off the coast of Greenland, and English skraelings (aboriginals) were hostile. interest in the new land faded. Remarkably, remains of this early Viking settlement were discovered in THE FRENCH ARRIVAL Originally from the port of St. Malo, Newfoundland in 1963 (see p71). explorer Jacques Cartier (1491–1557) THE ENGLISH INVASION made his first voyage to Canada in 1534. In 1497, the Italian navigator John He reached Labrador, Newfoundland, Cabot (1450–98), on the commission and the Gulf of the St. Lawrence before of King Henry VII of England, set sail landing on Anticosti Island where he

Map off the h voyage off Jacques Cartier and d his h ffollowers ll by b Pierre Descaliers l c.1534 –1541

TIMELINE 1541 At the mouth of the Cap

1567 Samuel de

Rouge River, Cartier founds Charlesbourg-Royal, the first French settlement in America – it is abandoned in 1543

Champlain “Father of New France” born

1525

1550

1575

1605 Samuel de Champlain

and the Sieur de Roberval found Port Royal, now Annapolis, Nova Scotia 1600

1535 Cartier sails up

1608 Champlain founds Quebec

the St. Lawrence River to Stadacona (Quebec City) and Hochelaga (Montreal)

City, creating the first permanent European settlement in Canada Jacques Cartier

1610 Henry Hudson explores Hudson Bay

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realized he was at the mouth of a great river. A year later, he returned and sailed up the St. Lawrence River to the site of what is now Quebec City, and then on to a native encampment at Hochelega, which he named Montreal. In 1543, Cartier’s hopes for a successful colony died when, after a bitter and barren Champlain, “Father off New France,” fighting f the Iroquois winter, he and his dispirited group returned to France. Seventy from Hudson Bay to New Orleans in more years would pass before French Louisiana, and from Newfoundland colonists returned to Canada to stay. almost as far west as the Rockies. In 1612 Champlain became French THE FATHER OF NEW FRANCE Canada’s first head of government. Samuel de Champlain (1567–1635) Champlain’s efforts also helped to was a man of many parts – navigator, create the religious climate that soldier, visionary – and first made the enabled orders such as the Jesuits to journey from France to Canada in establish missions. But his work also 1603. While the ship that carried him laid the seeds of conflict with the across the Atlantic lay at Tadoussac, English that would last well into Champlain ascended the St. Lawrence the next century and beyond. River by canoe to the Lachine Rapids. In 1605, Champlain’s attempt to THE HUDSON’S found a colony at Port Royal failed, but BAY COMPANY in 1608 the seeds of a first tiny French In 1610, English voycolony at Quebec City were planted, ager Henry Hudson with the construction of three twolanded at the bay that story houses, a courtyard, and a watchstill bears his name. tower, surrounded by a wooden wall. The bay’s access to many key waterways The economic engine propelling and trading routes Champlain was the fur trade. In its ensured the fortunes name he made alliances with the of the fur trade. Hudson’s last voyage Algonquins and Hurons, fought their Founded in 1670, the dreaded enemies, the Iroquois, travHudson’s Bay Company won control of eled to the Huron country that is now the lands that drained into the bay, gaining a fur-trading monopoly over the area. The central Ontario, and saw the Great company was challenged only by Scottish Lakes. Champlain and the other Frenchmerchants who established the North men who followed him not only estabWest Company in Montreal in 1783. By lished lasting settlements in the St. 1821, these two companies amalgamated, Lawrence Valley but also explored half and the Hudson’s Bay Company remains Canada’s largest fur trader to this day. a continent. They built a “New France” that, at its zenith, stretched south

1648–49 The Iroquois

disperse the Huron nation and Jesuit father Jean de Brébeuf is martyred during Iroquois raids on Huronia 1625

1650 1629 British

adventurer David Kirke captures Quebec, but it is returned to France in 1632

Engraving of Iroquois

1702 French and British rivalries result in outbreak of Queen Anne’s War

1675 1670 The Hudson’s

Bay Company is founded by royal charter and underwritten by a group of English merchants Raccoon pelt

1676 population of

New France swelled to 8,500 by settlers

1700

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Anglo-French Hostilities Throughout the 18th century, hostilities between the French and English in Europe continued to spill over into the New World. By 1713, Britain ruled Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and the Hudson Bay region and, after the Seven Years War in 1763, all of French Canada. Anglo-French tensions were exacerbated by religion: the English were largely Protestant and almost all of the French Catholic. This resulted in the colony of Quebec being divided in 1791 into the mainly English-speaking Upper Canada (now Ontario), and majority Frenchspeaking Lower Canada (now Quebec). Taking advantage of the British conflict with Napoleon in Europe, the Americans invaded Canada in 1812. They were defeated by 1814, but the threat of another invasion colored Canadian history during much of the 19th century.

The Acadian Exodus French-speaking Acadians were ruthlessly expelled from their homes by the British in the 1750s (see pp62–3).

The Plains Of Abraham, in Quebec, were the site of victory for the British over the French.

General Isaac Brock Brock’s heroic exploits during the War of 1812, such as the capture of an American post at Detroit, buoyed the spirits of the Canadian people.

THE SEVEN YEARS WAR United Empire Loyalists The surrender of British General Cornwallis effectively ended the American Revolution (1775–83). A large number of United Empire Loyalists, refugees from the newly formed United States who remained loyal to the British crown, fled to Canada. They swelled the British population by 50,000.

The famous Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759 was the last between British and French forces to take place in Canada. The British launched a surprise assault from the cliffs of the St. Lawrence River at a site now known as Wolfe’s Cove. Louis Joseph de Montcalm, the French commander, was defeated by General Wolfe and his army. Both generals were killed, and Quebec fell to the British. The war finally ended in 1763 with the Treaty of Paris, which ceded all FrenchCanadian territory to the British.

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Louisbourg The French fortress of Louisbourg on Cape Breton r Island was built between 1720 and 1740, and was the headquarters for the French fleet until it was destroyed by the British in 1758. Today, the restored fortress is a popular tourist attraction (see pp96–7). General Wolfe The distinguished British soldier, shown here fatally wounded at the Plains of Abraham, preceded his 1759 victory in Quebec with the taking of the French fortress, Louisbourg, in 1758.

General Wolfe’s forces sailed up the

St. Lawrence river overnight, allowing them to surprise the enemy at Quebec.

French Rights In 1774 the British government passed the Quebec Act, granting French-Canadians religious and linguistic freedom and giving official recognition to French Civil Law.

Wolfe’s infantry scrambled up a steep,

wooded cliff. They had to defeat an enemy post before the waiting boats of soldiers could join the battle.

TIMELINE 1755 Expulsion of the Acadians from Nova Scotia 1743 The La Vérendrye brothers

discover the Rocky Mountains 1720 1713

British gain control of Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and Hudson Bay

1758 Louisbourg,

the French fortress on Cape Breton Island, falls to the British

1740 1759 Wolfe defeats de

Montcalm in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham Medal for the British capture of Quebec 1759

1760

1793 English explorer

Sir Alexander Mackenzie 1780

and fur trader Alexander Mackenzie crosses the Rockies and reaches the Pacific Ocean by land 1800

1760

1774 The Quebec

1812 The US at

Montreal falls to the British

Act grants French colonists rights to their own language and religion

war with Britain until the Treaty of Ghent in 1814

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C A N A D A

A BRITISH DOMINION

Twenty-five years after the War of 1812 ended in stalemate, violence of a different sort flared in Canada. The English wanted supremacy in voting power and to limit the influence of the Catholic Church. By 1834 the French occupied one quarter of public positions, although they made up three-quarters of the population. Rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada during 1837–38 were prompted by Representatives meet in London to discuss terms off union both French and British reformers, who wanted accountable govern- discussed at conferences held from ment with a broader electorate. The 1864 onward. Only by uniting in the response of the British Government face of this common menace, said the was to join together the two colonies politicians, could the British colonies into a united Province of Canada in hope to fend off these incursions. The new country was born on July 1, 1840. The newly created assembly won increased independence when, in 1867. Under the terms of the British 1849, the majority Reform Party passed North America Act the new provinces an Act compensating the 1837 rebels. of Quebec (Canada East) and Ontario Although the Governor-General, Lord (Canada West) were created, and along Elgin, disapproved, he chose not to with Nova Scotia and New Brunswick use his veto. The Province of Canada became the Dominion of Canada. The now had “responsible government,” new government was based on the (the right to pass laws without the British parliamentary system, with sanction of the British colonial a governor-general (the Crown’s representative.) representative), a House of Commons, and a Senate. Parliament The rest of British North received power to legislate over America, however, remained a series of self-governing matters of national interest; colonies that, despite their defense, criminal law, and trade, economic successes, were anxwhile the provinces ruled over local issues such as education. ious about American ambitions. Such fears were reinforced by a series of Fenian Raids on Canadian THE METIS REBELLION territory between 1866–70. (The Following confederation, the Fenians were New York Irish immigovernment purchased from grants hoping to take advantage of the Hudson’s Bay Company the area known as Rupert’s Land, French Canada’s anti-British feelwhich extended south and ing to help them to secure independence for Ireland.) The issue Northwest rebel west inland for thousands of Louis Riel of confederation was raised and kilometers from Hudson’s Bay. TIMELINE 1818 8 Canada’s border with the

Unitted States is defined as the 49th h Parallel from Lake of the Woo ods to the Rocky Mountains 1820

1839 Lord Durham issues a report recommending the establishment of responsible government and the union of Upper and Lower Canada to speed the assimilation of French-speaking Canadians

1830

1821 Merger of

1837 A general feeling that the

Hudson’s Bay and North West Companies

government is not democratic leads to violent but unsuccessful rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada

1849 The boundary of the

49th Parallel is extended to the Pacific Ocean 1840 1841 An Act of Union unites

Upper and Lower Canada as the Province of Canada

1850

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The Métis people (descenIn 1898, the northern territory dants of mostly French furof Yukon was established traders and natives) who to ensure Canadian jurisdiction over that area lived here were alarmed by the expected influx during the Klondike of English-speaking setgold rush (see pp50–51). tlers. In 1869, local In 1905, the provinces leader Louis Riel took of Saskatchewan and up their cause and led Alberta were created the first of two uprisout of Rupert’s Land, ings. The Red River with the residual area Rebellion was an attempt becoming the Northwest to defend what the Métis Territories. Each province saw as their ancestral rights gained its own premier to this land. A comproand elected assembly. By mise was reached in 1870 Driving home the last spike of the 1911 new immigrants had and the new province of, Canadian Pacific Railroad, 1885 doubled the populations Manitoba was created. of the new provinces. For the time being, Newfoundland However, many Métis moved westward to what was to become the preferred to remain a British colony, province of Saskatchewan in 1905. but in 1949 it was brought into Canada Riel was elected to the House of as the country’s tenth province. Commons in 1874 but, in 1875, he emigrated to the US. The government’s THE METIS PEOPLE intention to settle the west led the The Métis people of central Canada were Métis of Saskatchewan to call Riel descended from native and largely French home in 1884 to lead the North-West stock. Proud of their unique culture, this seminomadic group considered themselves Rebellion. It was short-lived. Defeated separate from the rest of the Dominion. at Batoche in May, Riel was ultimately With their own social structure and lifecharged with treason and hanged in style dependent almost entirely on buffalo Regina on November 16, 1885. hunting, they resisted integration. They BIRTH OF A NATION

The defeat of the Métis and the building of a transcontinental railroad were crucial factors in the settlement of the west. British Columbia, a Crown colony since 1858, chose to join the Dominion in 1871 on the promise of a rail link with the rest of the country. The first train to run from Montreal to Vancouver in 1886 paved the way for hundreds of thousands of settlers in the West in the late 1800s. Prince Edward Island, Canada’s smallest province, joined the Dominion in 1873.

responded to the unification of the country with two failed rebellions. The Métis won no land rights and were condemned to a life of poverty or enforced integration.

Métis hunt buffalo on the Prairie

1870 The Red River

Sir John MacDonald

1867 Dominion of Canada; Sir John A. Macdonald is Canada’s first Prime Minister

Rebellion is quashed by General Wolseley, and the the province of Manitoba is created 1870

1886 Gold

General Wolseley

found on the FortyMile River

1880

1866 The Fenians raid

1885 Riel leads the North-West

Canadian territory to divert British troops from Ireland

Rebellion. The Métis are defeated at Batoche, and Riel is hanged in Regina. The last spike of the transcontinental railroad is put in place

1855 Queen Victoria designates Ottawa

as capital of the Province of Canada

Canadian Pacific

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The Klondike Gold Rush There had been rumors of gold in the Yukon since the 1830s, but the harsh land, together with the Chilkoot Indians’ guarding of their territory, kept most prospectors away. Then, on August 16, 1896 the most frenzied and fabled gold rush in Canadian history started when George Washington Carmack and two Indian friends, Snookum Jim and Tagish Charlie, found a large gold nugget in the river they later named Bonanza Creek. For the next two years at least 100,000 prospectors set out for the new gold fields. Only about 40,000 prospectors actually made it. Most took boats as far as Skagway or Dyea, on the Alaskan Panhandle, then struggled across the Coast Mountains by the White or Chilkoot passes to reach the headwaters of the Yukon River. From here boats took them 500 km (310 miles) to the gold fields. In all, the gold rush generated Can $50 million, although few miners managed to hold onto their fortunes.

Klondike Entrepreneur Alex McDonald, a Nova Scotian with a canny business sense, bought up the claims of discouraged miners and hired others to work them for him. Known as “King of the Klondike,” he made millions.

The stern`wheeler was a

steamboat driven by a single paddle at the back.

Skagway, Alaska The jumping-off point for the Klondike was the tent city of Skagway. There were saloons and swindlers on every corner, and gunfire in the streets was commonplace. The most famous con man was Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith, who died in a shoot-out in 1898. The Yukon River rises in British Columbia’s Coast Mountains, winding for 3,000 km (1,900 miles) to Alaska.

The Mounties Take Control The safety of the Klondike Gold Rush was secured by Canada’s red-coated Mounties. Thanks to them, the rush was remarkably peaceful. A small force of 19 Mounties led by Inspector Charles Constantine were sent to the Yukon in 1895, but by 1898 there were 285, operating out of Fort Herchmer at Dawson.

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Klondike Fever The outside world learnt of the riches in July 1897, when miners docked in Seattle and San Francisco hauling gold. In no time, Klondike fever was an epidemic. Steamboats and other craft brought

thousands of prospectors up the long Yukon River to Dawson, where the boats jostled for space at the dock.

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Dawson City As the gold rush developed in the summer of 1897, the small tent camp at the junction of the Klondike and Yukon rivers grew to a population of 5,000. A year on it had reached 40,000, making Dawson City one of the largest cities in Canada. Capturing the Mood Even literature had a place in the Klondike. The gold rush inspired novels such as Call of the Wild (1903) by Jack London (shown here) and the 1907 verses Songs of a Sourdough by poet Robert Service.

CROSSING THE YUKON RIVER The ferocious Yukon River rapids in Miles Canyon smashed so many boats to splinters that the Mounties decreed that every boat had to be guided by a competent pilot. Experienced sailors could earn up to Can$100 a trip taking boats through the canyon. Past the canyon, only one more stretch of rapids remained before the Yukon’s waters grew calmer all the way to Dawson City. TIMELINE 1896 George Carmack and two friends,

Tagish Charlie and Snookum Jim, strike it rich on Bonanza Creek. Liberal Wilfred Laurier elected as the country’s first French-Canadian prime minister 1896

Klondike News 1898 1898 The Yukon is given territorial status,

partly to assert British authority in the eyes of the Americans from neighboring Alaska 1898

1897 Steamers from

Alaska carry word of the strike to San Francisco and Seattle, setting off a frenzied gold rush

1899 Gold is discovered in Nome, Alaska, and Dawson begins to shrink as people leave to follow the new dream of riches farther west

1899

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NEW OPTIMISM AND ARRIVALS but pressure from the English-speaking The impact of the Klondike gold rush population led to the dispatch of was felt all over Canada. It led to an 1,000 soldiers to Cape Town in 1899. expansion of cities such as Vancouver Before the Boer War ended in 1902, and Edmonton, and the establishment some 6,000 men had made the jourof the Yukon territory. A ney to the South African period of optimism was ushbattlefields. They returned ered in by the new Liberal with a stronger sense of government, elected in national identity than many of their compatriots at 1896 under the first FrenchCanadian premier, Wilfred home had expected. But, while the experience of Laurier, who firmly believed that “the 20th century will war infused some with a belong to Canada.” new sense of national unity, The new central Canadian it also laid bare divisions. provinces provided a home There were fights between for European immigrants French- and English-speakeager to farm large tracts of ing university students, as 1914 poster promoting prairie land. By 1913, this immigration to Canada well as disputes among wave of immigration had Ontario conservatives and peaked at 400,000. Finally Canada French-speaking Quebec politicians. Before matters could come to a began to profit from a prosperous world economy and establish itself as head, another crisis loomed. Joining an industrial and agricultural power. the Allies in Flanders, the Canadians found renewed glory during World SUPPORTING THE ALLIES War I. Canadian pilot, Billy Bishop, The first test of the fledgling nation was the Allies’ greatest air ace, and came in 1899, when the Boer War broke another Canadian, Roy Brown, was the out in South Africa; the second in 1914, pilot credited with downing the Red when Europe entered World War I. Baron. Canadian troops were the Initially, Laurier was cautious in his heroes of two major battles, Ypres approach to the South African crisis, (1915) and Vimy Ridge (1917). When peace was declared on November 11, 1918, there were 175,000 Canadian wounded, and 60,000 had died for their country. INDEPENDENT STATUS

Canada had played so significant a role during World War I that it gained recognition as an independent country, winning representation in the League of Nations. This independence was confirmed in 1931 with the passing of the Statute of Westminster,

Canadians advance at Paardeberg in the Boer War, 1900

TIMELINE 1911 Robert Borden and the 1899 The first

Canadians are sent to fight in the Boer War 1900

Conservatives win federal election, defeating Liberal party leader, Wilfred Laurier on the issue of Reciprocity 1905

1917 Munitions ship explodes in Halifax harbor wiping out 5 sq km (2 sq miles) of the town, killing 2,000, and injuring 9,000

1910

1915

1918 Canadians break

through the German trenches at Amiens beginning “Canada’s Hundred Days” 1920

1903 Canada loses the

1914 Britain declares war on Germany, automati-

1922 Canadians Charles

Allaska boundary dispute when a British tribunal sides with the US

cally drawing Canada into the conflict in Europe. The War Measures Act orders German and AustroHungarian Canadians to carry identity cards

Best, Frederick Banting, and John MacLeod win the Nobel Prize for the discovery of insulin

Dr. Frederick Banting

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which gave Canada for example, many died in the fiercly political independence from Britain fought 1942 raid on and created a comDieppe. Thousands battled up the boot monwealth of sovereign nations under a of Italy, while others single crown. stormed ashore at Normandy. In the However, national optimism was curbitter fighting that tailed by the Great followed, the Second Depression that origiand Third Canadian Divisions took more nated with the Wall Street Crash in 1929. casualties holding the beachheads than Drought laid waste Soup kitchen during the Great Depression the farms of Alberta, any unit under British Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. One in command. It was also the Canadians four workers was unemployed, and the who liberated much of Holland. sight of men riding boxcars in a fruitThe Canadian prime minister of the less search for work became common. day was the Liberal, Mackenzie King (1935 – 48). He ordered a plebiscite to WORLD WAR II allow the sending of conscripts overThe need to supply the Allied armies seas, monitored the building of the during World War II boosted Canada Alaska Highway (see pp262–3) and, out of the Depression. Canada’s navy aided by his minister of munitions and played a crucial role in winning the supply, he directed a massive war effort. Battle of the Atlantic (1940–3) and thousands of Allied airmen were AN INTERNATIONAL VOICE trained in Canada When peace finally came in September da had the third-largest world, the fourth-largest a standing army of 730,000 ugh the price Canada had World War II was high – 000 people died in action d the national debt quadrupled – the nation found itself in a strong position. A larger population was better able to cope with its losses and much of the debt had been spent on doubling the gross national product, creating durable industries that would power German prisoners captured by Canadian Infantry on D-Day, June 6, 1944 the postwar economy.

1926 The Balfour

Report defines British dominions as autonomous and equal in status 1925

Air Canada logo

1937 TransCanada Air Lines, now Air Canada, begins regular flights

1930

1935

1931 The Statute of 1929 The Great Depression begins

Westminster grants Canada full legislative authority

1942 Around 22,000

1944 Canadian

Japanese Canadians are stripped of nonportable possessions and interned

troops push farther inland than any other allied units on D-Day

1940 1941 Hong

Kong falls to the Japanese, and Canadians are taken as POWs

1945 1945 World Waar II

ends. Canada jo oins the UN. Canadaa’s first nuclear reaactor goes on line in n Chalk River, On ntario

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won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1957 for helping resolve the Suez Crisis. Canada is also a respected member of the British Commonwealth, la Francophonie, the Group of Eight industrialized nations, the OAS (Organization of American States), and NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization). THE FRENCH–ENGLISH DIVIDE

Large Canadian grain carrier approaches the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959 – its inaugural year

Since World War II, Canada’s economy has continued to expand. This growth, combined with government social programs such as old-age security, unemployment insurance, and medicare, means Canadians have one of the world’s highest standards of living and a quality of life which draws immigrants from around the world. Since 1945, those immigrants have been made up largely of southern Europeans, Asians, South Americans, and Caribbean islanders, all of whom have enriched the country’s multicultural status. Internationally, the nation’s reputation and influence have grown. Canada has participated in the United Nations since its inception in 1945 and is the only nation to have taken part in almost all of the UN’s major peacekeeping operations. Perhaps it is only fitting that it was a future Canadian prime minister, Lester Pearson, who fostered the peacekeeping process when he

Given all these accomplishments, it seems ironic that the last quarter of a century has also seen Canadians deal with fundamental questions of national identity and unity. The driving force of this debate continues to be the historic English–French rivalry. The best-known players of these late 20th-century events are Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau (1968–84) and Quebec Premier René Lévesque (1968 – 87). When Jean Lesage was elected as Quebec Premier in 1960, he instituted the “Quiet Revolution” – a series of reforms that increased provincial power. However, this was not enough to prevent the rise of revolutionary nationalists. In October 1970, British Trade Commissioner James Cross and Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte were kidnapped by the FrenchCanadian terrorist organization, the

Quebec Premier René Levesque and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau during the 1980 referendum

TIMELINE 1949 New-

foundland joins the Confederation. Canada joins NATO 1950

1959 Prime Minister

John Diefenbaker cancels the AVRO Arrow project, losing 14,000 jobs

1967 Expo ’67

1955 Lester Pearson

1950 The Canadian Army

Special Force joins UN soldiers in the Korean War

is held in Montreal and Canada celebrates its Centennial

The AVRO Arrow Delta High speed aircraft 1960

1965

1957 Lester

1965 Canada’s

Pearson wins the Nobel Peace Prize for helping resolve the Suez Crisis

new flag is inaugurated after a bitter political debate

1970

1972 Canada wins the first

hockey challenge against the Soviets, touching off a huge nationwide celebration 1975

1980

1976 The Olympic games

1980 Quebec

are held in Montreal under tight security. René Lévesque and the separatist Parti Québecois win a provincial election

votes against separation in the 1980 Quebec Referendum

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efforts were made to reform the constitutional system. The 1987 Meech Lake Accord aimed to recognize Quebec’s claims to special status on the basis of its French culture, but Mulroney failed to implement the amendment since it did not obtain the consent of all provinces. When the Inuit began campaigning for more parliamentary representation it 1990 demonstration d for f Quebec b independence d d in Montreall led to the Charlottetown Accord of 1991, which raised Front du Libération de Québec (FLQ). the issue of aboriginal self-governCross was rescued by police but ment. The Accord was rejected in a Laporte was later found murdered. national referendum held in 1992. Trudeau invoked the War Measures Today, many of these reforms are Act, sent troops into Montreal, and finally in place and hopefully aiding banned the FLQ. His actions eventu- Canadian unity. Quebec’s French herally led to nearly 500 arrests. itage has official recognition, and the Trudeau devoted his political life to Inuit rule their own territory of Nunavut. federalism, fighting separatism, and giving Canada its own constitution. In INDEPENDENCE FOR NUNAVUT contrast, Lesage’s successor, René Lévesque, campaigned for a 1980 refOn April 1, 1999, Canada gained its erendum in Quebec on whether that newest territory, province should become independent. the Inuit homeA majority voted against, but the results land of Nunavut. were far from decisive, and separatism The campaign for continued to dominate the country’s an Inuit state began in the political agenda. However, in 1982, the 1960s when the Constitution Act fulfilled Trudeau’s Inuit desire for a Signing ceremony in dream, entrenching federal civil rights political identity Iqaluit, April 1, 1999 and liberties such as female equality. of their own was A MOVE TOWARD CONSERVATISM

In 1984 the leader of the Progressive Conservatives, Brian Mulroney, won the general election with the largest majority in Canadian history. Dismissive of Trudeau’s policies, Mulroney’s emphasis was on closer links with Europe and, in particular, the US. In the years that followed, two major

1988 Calgary hosts the XV Winter Olympics

1985 1984 Aboard the US

shuttle Challenger, Marc Garneau becomes the first Canadian in space

added to aboriginal land claims. Nunavut’s first Premier is 34-year-old Paul Okalik, leader of the first-ever Inuit majority government over an 85 percent Inuit population. English is being replaced as the official language by the native Inuktitut, and traditional Inuit fishing and hunting skills are being reintroduced. By 2012, the federal government will invest over Can$1 billion in public services for Nunavut.

1999 The

Inuit territory of Nunavut established

1989 The Canada–US

Free Trade agreement goes into effect 1990

1995 Marc Garneau

2000

2010 Vancouver

& Whistler host the XXI Winter Olympics

Canadian & Nunavut flags 2005

2010

1997 A 13-km (8-mile)

2006 Conservative

bridge connecting Prince Edward Island to the mainland is opened

government under Stephen Harper wins power from Liberal Party

Atlantic Canada

INTRODUCING ATLANTIC CANADA 58–63 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR 64–73 NEW BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA, AND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND 74–97

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Introducing At Atlantic Canada is renown rocky coastlines, picturesq villages, sun-warmed bea country inns, and friendly province has a distinctive northeastern New Brunsw Acadian culture flourishes offers the pristine, tide-ca of Fundy. Nova Scotia, fam attractions, such as the 18 Louisbourg and the stunn Cabot Trail, is also home Lunenburg. Prince Edward green farmland, fine sand catches. In Newfoundland National Park rise 800 m fjords. Labrador offers an landscape, often with a b

500

Acadian homesteads still flourish af culture that dominates northeaste

11

2

The fresh maritime scenery of Two twin offshore islands, in Parrsboro

Lobster traps

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11 104

103 1 101

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Maritime Wildlife of Atlantic Canada The provinces of Atlantic Canada – Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island – along with Newfoundland, the Quebec north shore of the St. Lawrence River, and the Gaspé Peninsula, constitute a rich and diverse maritime habitat for wildlife. The climate is dominated by the ocean, being influenced by the moderating Gulf Stream that flows north from the Caribbean and by the southward flow of icy waters, often bearing icebergs, from the Canadian Arctic. The terrain of the eastern Canadian coastline varies from rocky headlands to soft, sandy beaches. Both sea and land mammals inhabit this coast, as do hundreds of species of seabird.

SHORELINE HABITAT The maritime shoreline encompasses rocky cliffs, sandy beaches, and salt-flat marshes. Moving a little inland, the landscape shifts to bog, forest, and meadow. It is an inviting habitat for many smaller mammals such as raccoons and beavers, and also provides a home for a diversity of bird life. Where the shoreline meets the water, fertile intertidal zones are a habitat for mollusks, algae, and invertebrae.

The piping plover is a small,

endangered shore bird that lives and breeds along the Atlantic coast of Canada.

The river otter

lives in “families,” frequenting rivers, lakes, and ocean bays, in its search for fish.

The common puffin is a shoreline bird, which lives on cliff edges and is characterized by a brightly colored bill and its curious, friendly nature.

The raccoon, with

its ringed tail and black-masked face, preys upon fish, crayfish, birds and their eggs.

The beaver, symbol of Canada, lives in marshy

woodland near the coast. It gnaws down trees, using them to build dams, its lodge, and for food.

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OCEAN HABITAT The sea around Atlantic Canada is influenced by the cold Labrador Current flowing from the north, the Gulf Stream from the south, and the large outflow of fresh water at the mouth of the St. Lawrence River. The region is home to myriad ocean creatures, and the highest tides in the world at the nutrient-rich Bay of Fundy. Off Newfoundland lie the Grand Banks, once one of the Earth’s richest fishing grounds. Over-fishing has endangered fish stocks, and quotas are now limited. The adult blue whale is the

world’s largest mammal, reaching up to 30 m (100 ft) long. Today, whale-watching is a growing eco-tourism enterprise, particularly off the east coast, where this and other species congregate.

Lobster, a favorite seafood of the area, is

caught in traps set near the shore. Rigid conservation rules have been put in force to protect its dwindling numbers.

The Atlantic salmon, unlike its

Bottle-nosed dolphins, charac-

Pacific cousins, returns to its home stream to spawn several times during its lifetime. Atlantic salmon are renowned sport fish (see p25).

terized by their long beaks and “smiles,” live off the east coast, in both New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

SEABIRDS OF THE ATLANTIC COAST The maritime coast of eastern Canada is a perfect environment for seabirds. Rocky cliffs and headlands provide ideal rookeries. The rich coastal waters and intertidal zones ensure a generous larder for many species, including the cormorant and storm petrel. Some Atlantic Coast seabirds are at risk due to environmental changes, but puffins and razorbills, in particular, continue to thrive. The double-crested cormorant

or “sea crow,” as it is sometimes known, is a diving fishing bird, capable of capturing food as deep as 10 m (30 ft) under water.

Leach’s storm-petrel is part of

the Tubenose family of birds, whose acute sense of smell helps them navigate while out at sea.

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The Acadians Few stories surrounding the settlement of the New World evoke as many feelings of tragedy and triumph as the tale of the Acadians. Colonizing Nova Scotia’s fertile Annapolis Valley in the 1600s, 500 French settlers adopted the name Acadie, hoping to establish an ideal pastoral land. They prospered and, by 1750, numbered 14,000, becoming the dominant culture. The threat of this enclave proved too much for a province run by the British, and in 1755 the Acadians were expelled overseas, many to the US. When England and France made peace in 1763, the Acadians slowly returned. Today their French-speaking culture still thrives in coastal villages.

Acadian women play a part in

summer festivals, displaying local woolcraft and linen textiles.

Ile Sainte-Croix was the earliest Acadian settlement, established by the French in New Brunswick in 1604. The neat, spacious layout of the village is typical.

ACADIAN FARMING As hardworking farmers, Acadians cleared the land of the Annapolis Valley, built villages, and developed an extensive system of dikes to reclaim the rich farmland from tidal waters. Summer crops were carefully harvested for the winter; potatoes and vegetables were put in cellars, and hay stored to feed cattle and goats. By the 19th century, Acadian farmers had expanded their crop range to include tobacco and flax. An important crop, hay was raked into “chafauds,” spiked

haystacks that dried in the fields for use as winter animal feed. The Embarkation of the Acadians took place in August

1755. British troops brutally rounded up the Acadians for enforced deportation. Over 6,000 Acadians were put on boats, some bound for the US, where they became the Cajuns of today. Others returned in later years, and today their descendants live in villages throughout Atlantic Canada.

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The Acadian people maintained a traditional

farming and fishing lifestyle for centuries, re-created today at the Village Historique Acadien (see p79).

The Church of Saint Anne in Sainte-Anne-du-

Ruisseau represents Acadian style in its fresh simplicity and elegance. Catholicism was very important to the Acadians, who turned to their priests for succour during the 1755 diaspora.

Acadian musicians have reflected their

culture since the 17th century. Playing lively violin and guitar folk music, they are known for their upbeat tunes and ballads of unrequited love and social dispossession. Acadian life revolved around the farmsteads in each community. Men tilled the fields and fished while women helped with the annual harvest.

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW One of the most popular poets of the 19th century, both in the US and Europe, the American Henry Longfellow (1807–82) is best known for his long, bittersweet narrative poems. Based on the trials and injustices of the Acadian civilization, Evangeline, published in 1847, traces the paths of a young Acadian couple. The poem, now regarded as a classic, stirringly records Evangeline’s tragic loss in this land intended as an idyll when their love was destroyed through the upheavals and expulsion of the 18th century: “Loud from its rocky caverns, the deep-faced neighbouring ocean [sings], List to the mournful tradition sung by the pines of the Forest, ... List to a Tale of Love in Acadie, home of the happy.”

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NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR ith towering peaks, vast landscapes, and 17,000 kms (10,500 miles) of rugged coastline, Newfoundland and Labrador displays wild, open spaces and grand spectacles of nature. In this captivating land, massive icebergs drift lazily along the coast, whales swim in sparkling bays, and moose graze placidly in flat open marshes. Newfoundland’s west coast offers some of the most dramatic landscapes

W

east of the Rockies. The granite mountains of Gros Morne National Park shelter deep fjords, while the eastern part of the island has a more rounded terrain, featuring the bays and inlets of Terra Nova National Park. Part of the area’s appeal is retracing the history of past cultures that have settled here, including Maritime Archaic Indians at Port au Choix, Vikings at L’Anse-AuxMeadows, and Basque whalers at Red Bay in the Labrador Straits.

SIGHTS AT A GLANCE Historic Towns and Cities

Nain t St. John’s 1 Trinity 6

Gander 9 G Hap Ha appy Valleyy

Bonavista Peninsula 5 Burin Peninsula 3 Churchill Falls u Labrador Straits e Northern Peninsula w Notre Dame Bay 8 Saint-Pierre and Miquelon Islands 4 The Southwest Coast 0

National Parks

Labrador City i

Gros Morne National Park q Terra Nova National Park 7 Historic Sites and Areas of Natural Beauty

Avalon Peninsula 2 Battle Harbour r KEY k International airport Nain

Major road Major rail routes

Lab

ge or

Ge

rad

or S

ea 0 km

200

0 miles Smallwood Reservoir

Churchill Falls Labra adorr Cityy

Churchill

Goose Bay Little M

Batt Battle

ec

i na at

aine

Rom

HavreSt.-Pierre

Ile d’Anticosti

Gan nd nder Cornerr Brook Br

Gulf of St. Lawrence

The weathered seaside fishing villages of Newfoundland have relied on the fishing trade for centuries

200

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1

Italian explorer John Cabot (see p44) aroused great interest in Newfoundland (after his 1497 voyage on behalf of Henry VII of England) when he described “a sea so full of fish that a basket thrown overboard is hauled back brimming with cod.” Cabot started a rush to the New World that made St. John’s a center of the fishing industry, and North America’s oldest and liveliest settlement. Today, St. John’s still bustles with the Pendant commerce of the sea: fishing, oil exploration, in local museum and the ships of a hundred nations waiting to be serviced. The people of St. John’s are known for their friendliness, a delightful counterpoint to the harsh, rugged beauty that surrounds this historic town.

and Duckworth Street now offer an array of gift shops, art galleries, and some of Newfoundland’s top restaurants. Harbour Drive, along the waterfront, is a great place to stroll, while George Street is the hub of the city’s nightlife. P East End King’s Bridge Rd. n (709) 576 8106.

The East End is one of St. John’s most architecturally rich neighborhoods, with narrow, cobblestone streets and elegant homes. Commissariat House, now a provincial museum, was built in 1836 and was once the home of 19th-century British officials. Nearby Government House, built during the 1820s, is the official residence of the province’s Lieutenant Governor. P The Battery Battery Rd. n (709) 576 8106.

Downtown St. John’s, seen from the approach by sea

Exploring St. John’s

The capital of Newfoundland is easily explored on foot. Most of the sights are within a short distance of each other moving east along Water Street. Approaching by sea offers the best view of the harbor, in particular the steep cliff-lined passage on the east side where pastel-colored old houses cling to the rocks. P Murray Premises cnr Water St. & Beck’s Cove. # 8am–10:30pm daily. 7

At the west end of Water Street stands Murray Premises. Built in 1846, these rambling brick and timberframe buildings are the last remaining examples of the large mercantile and fishprocessing premises that were common on the St. John’s waterfront. Murray Premises once bustled with the work of shipping cod to world markets. It narrowly escaped destruction in a huge fire that engulfed the city in 1892, and the buildings mark the western boundary of the fire’s devastation. Now a Provincial Historic Site, the restored buildings are home

to a boutique, hotel, offices, and a fine seafood restaurant, hung with photographs that recall the busy town of the 1900s. E The Rooms 9 Bonaventure Ave. Tel (709) 757 8000. # 10am–5pm Mon–Sat (to 9pm Wed, Thu; Museum & Art Gallery also open noon–5pm Sun). ¢ Mon mid-Oct–May; Dec 25, Jan 1 www.therooms.ca

A major new landmark, The Rooms is a modern facility housing three provincial institutions: the Provincial Archives; the Museum of Newfoundland, which charts the province’s history over the past 9,000 years; and the Art Gallery of Newfoundland and Labrador, which showcases the work of local, national, and international artists.

The colorful houses clinging to sheer cliffs at the entrance to the Harbour are known as the Battery. With the look and feel of a 19th-century fishing village, this is one of St. John’s most photographed sites. The community is named for the military fortifications built here over centuries to defend the harbor. Local residents used the battery’s guns in 1763 to fight off Dutch pirate ships. } Signal Hill Historic Site of

Canada Signal Hill Rd. Tel (709) 772 5367. # Visitor Centre: Jun –Sep: 8:30am– 8pm; Sep–Oct: 8:30am–4:30pm; Oct–May: 8:30am–4:30pm Mon–Fri; closed Dec 25, 26 & Jan 1. & 7

This lofty rise of land presents spectacular views of the open Atlantic, the harbor entrance, and the historic splendor of the city of St. John’s.

P The Waterfront Water St. Tel (709) 576 8106. 7

Tracing the edge of St. John’s waterfront, Water Street is the oldest public thoroughfare in North America, dating to the late 1500s when trading first started in the town. Once a brawling wharfside lane of gin mills and brothels, Water Street

View of Signal Hill from St. John’s picturesque fishing harbor

For hotels and restaurants in this region see p346 and p370. For transport information see p421

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST

P Quidi Vidi Village Quidi Vidi Village Rd. Tel (709) 729 2977. # daily.

* 102,000. k 6km (4 miles) N of the city. @ Memorial University. 4 Argentia 130 km (80 miles) SE. n 1st Floor, City Hall Annex, New Gower St. (709) 576 8106. _ St. John’s Days Celebrations (Jun); Signal Hill Tattoo (Jul-Aug); Royal St. John’s Regatta (Aug).

On the other side of Signal Hill, the weathered buildings of ancient Quidi Vidi Village nestle around a small harbor. Visitors can browse through the eclectic collection of antiques for sale at Mallard Cottage, dating back to the 1750s. Above the village, the Quidi Vidi Battery was a fortified gun emplacement built in 1762 to defend the entrance of Quidi Vidi Harbour. Today, the site is a reconstruction of the small barracks that soldiers lived in. Guides in period military dress are on hand to relate tales of their lives and hardships.

The Cabot Tower as it rises above Signal Hill over the harbor

P Cabot Tower Signal Hill Rd. Tel (709) 772 5367. # Jun–Sep: 8:30am–8pm; Sep– May: 8:30am–4:30pm. 7

here too, featuring nine underwater windows that look onto the natural activity of a rushing freshwater trout stream. P Cape Spear Lighthouse

Historic Site of Canada Tel (709) 772 5367. # mid-May– mid-Oct: daily. & 7

Ten km (6 miles) southeast of town, Cape Spear marks the most easterly point in North America. Set atop seaside cliffs, as the ocean pounds rocks below, the majestic Cape Spear Lighthouse has long been a symbol of Newfoundland’s independence. Two lighthouses sit here. The original, built in 1836 and the oldest in Newfoundland, stands beside a graceful, modern, automated lighthouse, added in 1955.

Y Pippy Park Nagles Place. Tel (709) 737 3655. # daily. 7

The building of Cabot Tower at the top of Signal Hill began in 1897 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Cabot’s arrival. On summer weekends, soldiers in period dress perform 19th-century marching drills, with firing muskets and cannon. It was here that another Italian, Guglielmo Marconi, received the first transatlantic wireless signal in 1901.

Visitors are sometimes startled to see moose roaming free in St. John’s, but it happens often in this 1,400-ha (3,460-acre) nature park, 4 km (2 miles) from the town center. The park is also home to the ponds and gardens of the local Botanical Gardens. The only Fluvarium in North America is based

ST. JOHN’S CITY CENTER Cabot Tower 6 East End 3 Murray Premises 1 Signal Hill 5 The Battery 4 The Waterfront 2

Vidi Village

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Burin Peninsula 3 c St. John’s. g Argentia. n Columbia Drive, Marystown Jun-Nov: (709) 279 1211; Dec-May: (709) 279 1887.

Whale- and bird-watching boats tour the Avalon Peninsula frequently

Avalon Peninsula 2 c St. John’s. g Argentia. n Dept. of Tourism, Confederation Building, St. John’s (709) 729 0862.

At the southern end of the peninsula, Cape St. Mary’s Ecological Reserve is the only nesting seabird colony in the province that can be approached on foot. A short trail leads along spectacular seacliffs to a site where over 8,000 goldenheaded gannets nest on a rock just a few yards over the cliff. On the southwest side of the peninsula, overlooking the entrance to the historic French town of Placentia, visitors can stroll through Castle

The Burin Peninsula presents some of the most dramatic and impressive scenery in Newfoundland. Short, craggy peaks rise above a patchwork green carpet of heather, dotted by scores of glittering lakes. In the fishing town of Grand Bank, The Provincial Seaman’s Museum is a memorial to Newfoundland seamen who perished at sea. The nearby town of Fortune offers a ferry to the Frenchruled islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon. E The Provincial Seaman’s

Museum Marine Drive. Tel (709) 832 1484.

The picturesque community # May – Oct: daily. 7 limited. 8 of Ferryland on the Avalon Peninsula is the site of a largescale archeological excavation of Colony Avalon, a settlement founded by 4 English explorer Lord Baltimore * 6,400. k ~ g n 4274 Place and 11 settlers de General DeGaulle (508) 41 23 84. in 1621. This Hill National www.st-pierre-et-miquelon.com Historic Site. was Baltimore’s first New World Boat-tour sign in Witless Bay These French These two small islands are venture, intended fortifications dat- not Canadian but French, and to be a self-sufficient colony ing back to 1632 protected the have been under Gallic rule engaged in fishing, agriculture, town, and the site of the resince 1783. Saint-Pierre, the and trade, with firm principles mains offers fine coastal views. only town on the island of the same name, is a charming of religious tolerance. } Cape St. Mary’s Ecological French seaside village, comBy the end of the following Reserve plete with gendarmes, bicycles, year there were 32 settlers. off Route 100. Tel (709) 277 1666. The population continued and fine French bakeries where # year round. Interpretive Centre to grow, and for many years people line up every morning # daily, May – Oct. & 7 it was the only successful for fresh baguettes. The SaintP Castle Hill National colony in the area. Although Pierre Museum details the Historic Site of Canada excavations to date have unhistory of the islands, includJerseyside, Placentia Bay. Tel (709) earthed only five percent of ing their lively role as a boot227 2401. # Sep – mid-Jun: the colony, it has proved to legger’s haven during Prohi8:30am – 4:30pm; late Jun – Aug: be one of the richest sources bition in the 1930s when over 8:30am –8pm. & 7 8 of artifacts from any early 3 million cases of liquor passed European settlement in North America. Over half a million pieces have been recovered, such as pottery, clay pipes, household implements, and structural parts of many buildings, including defensive works, a smithy, and a waterfront commercial complex. An interpretive center tells the story of the colony and a guided tour includes the chance to watch archeologists working The Newfoundland Ferry collects visitors for Saint-Pierre and Miquelon on site and in the laboratory. For hotels and restaurants in this region see p346 and p370

Saint-Pierre and Miquelon

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Cape Bonavista Lighthouse, built on the spot believed to be John Cabot’s first landing place in the New World

through this tiny port annually. Many of the harborfront warehouses originally built for this trade are still standing. A daily ferry leaves SaintPierre for the smaller village of Miquelon. Miquelon Island is made up of two smaller islands, Langlade and Grand Miquelon, joined by a narrow, 12-km (7-mile) long strand. The road across this sandy isthmus crosses grassy dunes where wild horses graze and surf pounds sandy beaches. E Saint-Pierre Museum Rue du 11 Novembre. Tel 011 508 41 35 70. # 2–5pm daily. & 7

Bonavista Peninsula 5 c St. John’s. g Argentia. n Discovery Trail Tourism Association (709) 466 3845. www.thediscoverytrail.org

Bonavista Peninsula juts out into the Atlantic ocean, a rugged coastal landscape of seacliffs, harbor inlets, and enchanting small villages such as Birchy Cove and Trouty. The town of Bonavista is believed to be where Italian explorer John Cabot (see p44) first stepped ashore in the New World. His monument stands on a high, rocky promontory, near the Cape Bonavista Lighthouse, built in 1843. Along the Bonavista waterfront, the huge 19th-century buildings of Ryan Premises,

once a busy fish merchants’ processing facility, are now restored as a National Historic Site. Ryan Premises include three large buildings where fish were dried, stored, and packed for shipping, and displays on the history of the fisheries in North America. The waterfront salt house offers local music.

Trinity 6 * 300. n Trinity Interpretation Centre, West St. (709) 464 2042/0592.

The charming village of Trinity, with its colorful 19thcentury buildings overlooking the blue waters of Trinity Bay, is easily one of the most beautiful Newfoundland communities. Best explored on foot, Trinity has a range of craft shops and restaurants. The Trinity Museum contains over 2,000 artifacts, illustrating the town’s past. Also here is Hiscock House, a turn-of-thecentury home, restored to the style of 1910, where merchant Emma Hiscock ran the village store, forge, and post office while raising her six children. E Trinity Museum Church Rd. Tel (709) 464 3599. # mid-Jun–mid-Sep: 10am – 6pm daily. & 8

Terra Nova National Park 7 Trans-Canada Hwy. c from St. John’s. # Jun – mid-Oct: daily. & 7 8 limited. n Glovertown (709) 533 2801. www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca

The gently rolling forested hills and deep fjords of northeastern Newfoundland are the setting for Terra Nova National Park. The park’s Marine Interpretation Centre offers excellent displays on the local marine flora and fauna, including a fascinating underwater video monitor that broadcasts the busy life of the bay’s seafloor. Whale-watching tours are also available.

A lookout over Terra Nova National Park

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Notre Dame Bay 8 c Gander. g Port-aux-Basques. n Notre Dame Junction, Rte 1. www.kittiwakecoast.ca

On the east side of Notre Dame Bay, traditional Newfoundland outports maintain a way of life that echoes their history. The Twillingate Museum, located in an elegant Edwardian rectory in Twillingate, has several rooms furnished with period antiques. Also on display are aboriginal artifacts collected from nearby sites, and marine memorabilia recounting the region’s fascinating shipping history. Boat tours take passengers out into the bay for a closeup look at the huge icebergs that float by in spring and summer, and to see the many whales that roam about offshore. Nearby Wild Cove and Durrell are romantic villages.

A mamateek dwelling reveals a past way of life in Grand Falls Indian village

the Mary March Regional Museum, named after the last survivor of the now extinct Beothuk people, traces 5,000 years of human habitation in the Exploits Valley. Throughout Newfoundland, the Beothuks were decimated by disease and genocide between 1750 and 1829. Behind the museum, visitors can take a guided tour through the historic village.

The Southwest Coast 0 c Ferry dock terminal. g Port-auxBasques. n Port-aux-Basques (709) 695 3688. The elegant Edwardian rectory that houses the Twillingate Museum

Gander 9 * 10,000. k ~ n 109 TransCanada Hwy (709) 256 7110.

Best known for its illustrious aviation history, Gander is a s c G

In southern Newfoundland a 45-km (28-mile) coastal drive along Route 470 from Channel Port-aux-Basques to Rose Blanche leads through a landscape of ancient, jagged, green mountains and along a rocky, surf-carved shoreline. Near Rose Blanche, a 500-m (545-yd) boardwalk trail winds through bright wild

noted for its many shipwrecks, and so the Rose Blanche Lighthouse, built in 1873, stands in defiant splendor atop the harbor headland.

Gros Morne National Park q Tel (709) 458 2417. c Corner Brook. g St. Barbe. # daily. & 7 8 www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca

A United Nations World Heritage Site, Gros Morne is Newfoundland’s scenic masterpiece. Here the Long Range Mountains rise 700 m (2,000 ft) above blue fjords that cut into the coastal range. Some of the world’s oldest mountains, these are preCambrian and several million years older than the Rockies. The best way to see the park is on a boat tour along Western Brook Pond, a narrow fjord cradled between soaring cliffs where waterfalls vaporize as they tumble from great heights. Wildlife including

The Long Range Mountains in Gros Morne National Park, seen from a walkway in the park For hotels and restaurants in this region see p346 and p370

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Northern Peninsula Tour

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A land of legends and mystery, the Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland offers adventurous travelers the chance to experience over 40 centuries of human history, from early aboriginal Road d sign on people through colonization to today’s modern fishing life. The road north Hwy 430 travels along a harsh and rocky coast. Along the way, important historic sites, such as L’Anse-aux-Meadows, tell the story of the earlier cultures who chose this wild land as their home.

TIPS FOR DRIVERS Tour length: 430 km (267 miles) along Hwy 430. Starting point: Deer Lake, at junction of Hwy 1. Stopping off points: Gros Morne’s Wiltondale Visitors’ Centre and Tablelands; Port au Choix National Historic Site; Grenfell Museum in St. Anthony.

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town’s buildings, many of which date back 200 years, were left standing, and in the 1990s the town was restored. Today, visitors can tour the island and get a taste of the way life was in coastal Labrador a century ago.

Nain t * 1,200. ~ g n Town Council, Nain (709) 922 2842. Fishermen’s huts in the village of Red Bay on the coast of Labrador

Labrador Straits e g Blanc Sablon. n Forteau (709) 931 2013. www.labradorcoastal drive.com

Hauntingly beautiful coastal landscapes explain why the Labrador Straits is a popular place to visit in this province. A summer ferry service crosses the straits from Newfoundland to Blanc Sablon, Quebec, just a few kilometers from the Labrador border. From there, an 85-km (53-mile) road leads along the coast through a wild countryside of high, barren hills, thinly carpeted by heath and wind-twisted spruce. The Labrador Straits was an important steamship route in the mid-19th century. To aid navigation in the often treacherous waters, the Point Amour Lighthouse was built in 1854 near L’Anse-Amour. Now a Provincial Historic Site, this 30-m (109-ft) tower is the second-tallest lighthouse in Canada. Visitors can ascend the tower for stunning views of the Labrador coast. Along the road to the lighthouse is a monument that marks the site of the Maritime Archaic Burial Mound National Historic Site, North America’s oldest burial mound, where a Maritime Archaic Indian child was laid to rest 7,500 years ago. At the end of Rte. 510 lies

where as many as 1,500 men worked each season, rendering whale oil for lamps in Europe. T Red Bay National

Historic Site Route 510. Tel (709) 920 2142. # mid-Jun – mid-Oct: daily. & 7

Battle Harbour r ~ g n Mary’s Harbour, Newfoundland. (709) 921 6216. www.battleharbour.com

Traveling north, Nain is the final community of more than a few hundred people. The town can be reached by a coastal boat service that carries passengers and freight, but no cars. A large part of Nain’s small population is Inuit and the town is home to many of Labrador’s most prominent Inuit artists. The Torngasuk Cultural Center has a gift shop with CDs and books by local artists for sale. The staff here can also put visitors in touch with local soapstone sculptors. Nearby Hopedale was the site of one of the many Moravian Missions built in Labrador. Today the main feature in Hopedale is the

Once considered the unofficial capital of Labrador (from the 1870s to the 1930s), Battle Harbour, a small settlement on Hopedale Mission an island just off the south-ern National coast of Historic Site. Labrador, was a Visitors can thriving fishing tour the Mission, Inuit children in Nain community constructed in during the late 1782, which 18th and 19th centuries. In is the oldest woodframe 1966, the dwindling population building in Atlantic Canada. was relocated to St. Mary’s on Both the Mission and the mainland, but all of the other structures were

Red Bay National Historic Site. Here visitors can take a

short boat ride to an island where 16th-century Basque whalers operated the first factory in the New World. A tour around the island leads past the foundations of the shanties, shipworks, and cooper shops

Battle Harbour Island with icebergs on the horizon

For hotels and restaurants in this region see p346 and p370

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Labrador City

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* 9,000. ~ £ n Labrador West Tourism Development Corporation (709) 944 7631.

A snowy street in Nain during the long winter

built in Germany, shipped across the Atlantic, and reassembled here. P Hopedale Mission

National Historic Site Agvituk Historical Society, Hopedale. Tel (709) 933 3881. # daily. &

The Moravian Church in Happy Valley-Goose Bay

Happy ValleyGoose Bay y

Churchill Falls u n Churchill Falls Development Corporation (709) 925 3335. & 8 obligatory, book ahead.

The town of Churchill Falls is ideally placed for visitors to stock up on supplies, fill up with gas, and check tyres as there are no service stations between Happy Valley-Goose Bay and Labrador City. Churchill Falls is famous as the site of one of the largest hydroelectric power stations in the world. Built in the early 1970s, the plant is an extraordinary feat of engineering, diverting the Churchill River (it is Labrador’s largest) and its incredible volume of water to power the underground turbines r that produce 5,225 megawatts of power – enough to supply the needs of a small country. Guided tours are available of this impressive complex.

In the midst of ancient tundra, Labrador City is a mining town that shows the modern, industrial face of Canada. The town is home to the largest open-pit iron mine in the world and the community has largely grown up around it since the late 1950s. The historic building that once held the town’s first bank is now the Height of Land Heritage Centre, a museum of photographs, artifacts, and displays dedicated to preserving the history of the development of Labrador. The vast open wilderness surrounding Labrador City, with its myriad pristine lakes and rivers, is renowned as a sportsman’s paradise that attracts hunters and anglers from around the world. Every March, this region sponsors the Labrador 150 Dogsled Race, which has become one of the world’s top dogsledding competitions. The western Labrador wilderness is also home to the 700,000 caribou of the George River herd. The herd moves freely through the area for most of the year, grazing the tundra in small bands. Professional outfitters take groups of visitors out to track the herd through the region. Many tourists make the trip to admire the animals.

* 8,600. ~ g n Labrador, Lake Melville Tourism Association (709) 896 3489. 8 book ahead.

The largest town in the wilderness of Central Labrador, Happy Valley-Goose Bay was a strategically important stopover for transatlantic flights during World War II. German, Italian, and British pilots now train at the NATO base here. Today, the town is home to the Labrador Heritage Museum, where exhibitions depict its fascinating history. It pays particular attention to the life of trappers, with displays that include animal furs, trapper’s tools, and a traditional tilt (wilderness shelter).

THE LABRADOR COASTAL FERRY The Labrador Coastal Ferry is the primary mode of transportation for many communities along the Coast. Departing from St. Anthony in northern Newfoundland, the ferry round-trip takes 12 days, visiting up to 48 communities, delivering goods, passengers, and supplies in each port. Half the passenger space is for tourists, half for locals. Along the way, the ferry calls at the historic port of Battle Harbour and travels into fjords. Icebergs are a common sight.

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NEW BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA, AND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND he beauty and lure of the sea is always close at hand here. Stunning coastal scenery, picturesque centuries-old villages, world-class historic sites, and a wealth of family attractions have turned these three Maritime Provinces into one of Canada’s top vacation destinations. New Brunswick’s ruggedly beautiful Bay of Fundy is matched by the gently rolling landscape of Acadian villages

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tucked into quiet coves and long sandy beaches. With its sparkling bays and ancient weathered fishing towns, Nova Scotia embodies the romance of the sea. Elegant country inns and historic sites bring the past to life. Canada’s smallest province, Prince Edward Island, is known for its vibrant green farmlands, red bluffs, deep blue waters, and golf courses, and is enjoyed by cyclists, anglers, and hikers.

SIGHTS AT A GLA LANCE LA Historic Towns and Citi Hi ities iti

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Passamaquoddy Bay 3 c St. Stephen. g Black’s Harbour & Letete. n St. Andrew’s Tourism Bureau (506) 529 3556.

Humpback whales at play in the Bay of Fundy

Fundy National Park 1 Tel (506) 887 6000. £ Moncton. c Sussex. g Saint John. # daily. & May–Oct. 7 8 www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca

More recently, restoration has made Saint John’s historic center a delightful place to explore. The Old City Market is a working public market, with colorful produce stacked high, fresh seafood vendors, cafés, and an excellent traditional fish restaurant. In nearby Market Square, an airy atrium links buildings that were once the city’s center of commerce. Here visitors will find upscale restaurants and stores. Market Square is also the home of the lively

There is a genteel historic charm to the villages surrounding the island-filled waters of Passamaquoddy Bay, and none is more charming or intriguing than the lovely resort town of St. Andrews-by-the-Sea. The beautifully maintained Fairmont Algonquin Resort, with its elegant grounds and 18-hole golf course, recalls early 20th-century days when St. Andrews was renowned as an exclusive getaway of the rich and powerful. In town, Water Street is lined with intriguing boutiques, craft shops, and fine restaurants housed in centuryold buildings. At the town dock, tour companies offer numerous sailing, whalewatching, and kayaking adventures. Nearby, the elegant Georgian home built for Loyalist Harris Hatch in 1824 is now the location of the Ross Memorial Museum which contains an extensive collection of antiques and art assembled early in the 20th century. Two ferries leave from the St. George area nearby for Campobello and Grand Manan Islands, 20 km (12 miles) and 30 km (18 miles) south respectively of St. Andrews.

Along New Brunswick’s southern shore, the tremendous tides of the Bay of Fundy are a powerful feature of everyday life. Twice a day, over 100 billion tons of water swirl into and out of the bay, creNew Brunswick Museum. Three ating a tidal shift of up to 15 m (48 ft) floors offer clever and carving out a and entertaining Moose in Fundy stunning wild and exhibits on New National Park rocky shoreline. Brunswick’s geological, cultural, One of the best places to experience these and natural history. Children world-famous tidal wonders is particularly enjoy the Hall of at Fundy National Park, which Whales and the three-level is filled with wildlife and hiking Tidal Tube in which trails. Here at low tide, visitors water rises and falls, re-creating the height can walk out for over a kilometer. The Bay is a favorite of the tides roaring away just outside. with naturalists, who study the fascinating creatures that Nearby, the Loyalist live half their lives under water House Museum is locand the other half above. ated in an impressive Georgian house built by Loyalist David 2 Merritt in around 1810. Inside, the house has * 125,000. ~ c g n City been renovated to Hall, King St. (506) 658 2990. reflect the lifestyle of a www.tourismsaintjohn.com wealthy family of that time, with authentic New Brunswick’s largest period furnishings. city, Saint John, still retains E New Brunswick the charm of a small town. In Museum 1785, 14,000 loyalists Market Square. Tel (506) escaping the turmoil of the 643 2300. # daily. American Revolution built ¢ Dec 25. & 7 Saint John town from the Saint John River Saint John in under a year.

Saint John

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3

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The charming Victorian vista of Fredericton seen from across the Saint John River

The Roosevelt Campobello International Park is a 1,135-ha (2,800-acre) preserve on Campobello Island built around the elegant summer home of US President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The 34-room Roosevelt Cottage has been restored, and includes historic and personal artifacts belonging to Roosevelt and his family. Renowned for its rugged coastal beauty, Grand Manan Island has high rocky cliffs, picturesque fishing villages, and brightly painted boats resting against weathered piers. It is popular with birdwatchers as it attracts large flocks of seabirds annually. E The Ross Memorial

Museum

King’s Landing Historical Settlement, 37 km (22 miles)

west of Fredericton is a living history museum that re-creates daily life in a rural New Brunswick village of the 19th-century. Over a hundred costumed workers bring villagers’ homes, church, and school to life. E Beaverbrook Art Gallery 703 Queen St. Tel (506) 458 8545. # Jun – Oct: daily; late Oct – May: Tue –Sun. & 7 8 P King’s Landing

Historical Settlement Rte 2, W of Fredericton. Tel (506) 363 4999. # Jun – mid-Oct: 10am – 5pm daily. & 7 partial.

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188 Montague St. Tel (506) 529 5124. # late Jun – Sep: Mon – Sat; Sep & Oct: Tue – Sat.

* 6,100. c n Malabeam Reception Centre &

Fredericton 4

From Fredericton to Edmundston, the Saint John River flows through a pastoral valley of rolling hills, woods, and farmland. The

* 44,000. ~ c n Carlton Tourism Division (506) 460 2041. www.tourismfredericton.ca

Straddling the Saint John River, Fredericton is New Brunswick’s provincial capital. Its Victorian homes and waterfront church make it one of the prettiest small cities in Atlantic Canada. Several historic buildings reflect the town’s early role as a British military post. The Beaverbrook Art Gallery contains an impressive collection of 19th- and 20thcentury paintings, including Salvador Dali’s masterpiece Santiago el Grande (1957).

town of Grand Falls consists of one well-appointed main street, which is a useful refreshment stop. The town was named Grand Falls for the mighty cataract the Saint John’s River creates as it tumbles through Grand Falls Gorge. Framed by parkland, the surge of water drops more than 25 m (40 ft). Over time it has carved a gorge 1.5 km (1 mile) long, with steep sides as high as 70 m (200 ft) in places. Upriver and north through the valley, the town of Edmundston offers the New Brunswick Botanical Garden. Paths lead through

eight themed gardens and two arboretums that provide dazzling input for the senses. Bright colors, delicate scents, and even soft classical music delight visitors. Y New Brunswick Botanical

Garden Saint-Jacques, Edmundston. Tel (506) 737 5383. # Jun – Oct: 9am – dusk daily. & www.umce.ca/jardin

The deep waterfall valley of Grand Falls Gorge

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Endless sandy beaches stretch to the horizon at Kouchibouguac National Park

The Acadian Peninsula 6

“Order of the Good Times” at Annapolis Royal in 1604 and focus on the expulsion of 1755.

£ Bathurst. c Bathurst. g Dalhousie. n Jun-Sep: Water St., Campbellton (506) 789 2367; Oct-May: Campbellton Chamber of Commerce (506) 759 7856.

q Marine Centre and

The quiet coastal villages, beaches, and gentle surf of the Acadian peninsula have made it a favorite vacation destination. Established here since the 1600s, the Acadians have long enjoyed a reputation for prosperous farming, pretty villages and a strong folk music tradition (see pp62–3). In Shippagan, the small fishing town at the tip of the mainland, the Marine Centre and Aquarium holds tanks with over 3,000 specimens of Atlantic sealife and displays on local fishing industries. Nearby, the Lamèque and Miscou islands are connected by causeways to the mainland. On Miscou Island, a 1-km (0.5mile) boardwalk leads through a peat bog with signs about this unique ecosystem. The 35-m (85-ft) high Miscou Lighthouse is the oldest operating wooden lighthouse in Canada. Home to many Acadian artists, Caraquet is the busy cultural center of the peninsula. On the waterfront, adventure centers offer guided kayak trips on the Baie des Chaleurs. For those wanting an introduction to the story of the Acadians, the Acadian Wax Museum features a self-guided audio tour past 23 tableaus from Acadian history. The scenes begin with the founding of the

Marine Adventure, a threehour canoe paddle to offshore sandbanks where hundreds of gray seals relax in the sun.

Aquarium 100 Aquarium Street, Shippagan. Tel (506) 336 3013. # mid-May –mid-Oct: 10am–6pm daily. & 7 E Acadian Wax Museum Rte 11, Caraquet. Tel (506) 284 2591. # Jun – Sep: daily. & 7

Kouchibouguac National Park 7 Tel (506) 876 2443. £ Newcastle. c Newcastle. g Miramichi. # daily. www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca

The name of this park comes from the native Mi’kmaq word for “River of Long Tides.” The park’s 238 sq km (92 sq miles) encompass a salt-spray world of wind-sculpted dunes, salt marshes packed with wild life, and 25 km (16 miles) of fine sand beaches, as well as excellent terrain for cyclists. A popular activity is the Voyager V

Bouctouche 8 * 2,350. c n Jun-Sep: 14 Acadia St. (506) 743 8811; Oct-May: Bouctouche Chamber of Commerce (506) 759 7856. www.bouctouche.org

A seaside town with a strong Acadian heritage, Bouctouche is home to Le Pays de la Sagouine. This theme village is named for La Sagouine, the wise washerwoman created by Acadian authoress Antonine Maillet (b. 1929). Theatrical shows here act out her tales. Nearby, the Irving Eco-Centre studies and protects the beautiful 12-km (8-mile) network of dunes, saltmarshes, and beach that extend along the entrance to Bouctouche Harbour. P Le Pays de la Sagouine 57 Acadia St. Tel 1 800 561 9188. # mid-Jun – Sep: 10am – 6pm daily.

The raised boardwalk at the Irving Eco-Centre, La Dune de Bouctouche

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3

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Village Historique Acadien

9

After the tragic deportation of 1755–63 (see p62–3), Acadians slowly returned to the Maritimes, clearing new farmlands and rebuilding their way of life. The Village Historique Acadien portrays a rural Acadian community between 1770 and 1939. The village’s 45 restored historic buildings, including several working farms, cover 364 ha (900 acres). Throughout the village, period-costumed bilingual guides re-create the daily activities of the 19th century. Visitors can ride in a horsedrawn wagon, watch the work of the blacksmith, print shop, or gristmill, and also tour working farms and homes where women are busy spinning, weaving, and cooking.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Route 11, 10 km (6 miles) W of Caraquet. Tel (506) 726 2600. c from Bathurst. # Jun –Oct: 10am – 6pm daily. ¢ late Oct– May. & 7 8 = 0

School and Chapel Through centuries of turmoil, Catholicism was a vital mainstay of the Acadian people. Priests were also schoolteachers;

for the people of the area.

0 yards

100

in its restaurant.

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Exploring Prince Edward Island The smallest province in Canada, Prince Edward Island’s concentration of activity means every corner of the island is accessible. Charlottetown, known as the birthplace of Canada, is centrally located, and its tree-lined streets make a gentle start to exploring the outlying country. Red clay roads guide the visitor through farms and fishing villages to tiny provincial parks scattered throughout the island. T Traveling the north coast takes in the splendid rolling green scenery of PEI National Park, with its famous beaches, while southward, warm swimming spots abound.

the park’s western end, the Homestead Trail leads for 8 km (5 miles) through rustic green woodlands and meadows. The park’s quieter eastern side features a long stretch of pristine beach and dunes, and a scenic coastal road. The Reeds and Rushes Trail is a lovely short boardwalk track leading to a freshwater marsh pond where local species of geese and duck nest and feed. Y Prince Edward Island

National Park c Charlottetown. g Wood Islands. n (902) 672 6350. # daily. & 7 www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca

The South Coast

Fishing huts overlooking French River near Cavendish

Cavendish

This is such a busy little town that it can be hard to see the gentle, pastoral home of the Anne of Green Gables novels. The best place to get in touch with its charm is at the site of Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Cavendish Home, where the

author lived for many years, a simple and authentic site. The town is also the location of Green Gables, the novels’ fictional 19th-century home. P Lucy Maud Montgomery’s

Cavendish Home Route 6. Tel (902) 963 2231. # midMay–mid-Oct: 10am–5pm daily. & 7

P Green Gables Route 6. Tel (902) 963 7874. # daily by appointment. 7

Cavendish Routes 6 & 13. n (902) 963 7830.

Prince Edward Island National Park

Green Gables is part of Prince Edward Island National Park, whose western entrance is in Cavendish. This is the park’s busier side. The soft sand and gentle surf of Cavendish Beach make it one of the most popular beaches in the province. The park’s coastal road leads to North Rustico Beach, which is a favorite with sightseers. At

Enchanting vistas are found along the roads of the south shore, between Confederation Bridge and Charlottetown. Visitors will also find Victoriaby-the-Sea, a small village that is home to some of the island’s most interesting craftshops. En route to Charlottetown, visitors can make a short detour to Fort Amherst-Port-laJoye National Historic Site. It was here, in 1720, that the French built the island’s first permanent settlement. The British captured it in 1758, and built Fort Amherst to protect the entrance to Charlottetown Harbour. While the fort is long gone, the earthworks can still be seen in the park-like surroundings. P Fort Amherst-Port-la-Joye

National Historic Site of Canada Rocky Point. Tel (902) 566 7626. # mid-Jun– Aug: daily. & 7

The red bluffs of Cavendish Beach, one of the most favored spots in Prince Edward Island National Park For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3. For transport information see p421

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where the 1864 Charlottetown Conference was held, d which led to the formation of Canada as a nation. Several rooms have been meticulously restored to their 19th-century character. Ardgowan National Historic Site was once the home of William Pope, one of the Fathers of Confederation. E Confederation Centre

of the Arts 145 Richmond St. Tel (902) 628 1864. # daily. 7 View of 19th-century church at Orwell Corners Historic Village

Panmure Island

The natural beauty of the island’s eastern area is easy to experience on Panmure Island, south of Georgetown. Level roads make it popular with cyclists. In summer, the octagonal wooden Panmure Island Lighthouse is open, and the view from the top takes in a long vista of the island’s beaches, saltmarshes, and woodlands. The lighthouse still guides ships into port as it did when it was first built in 1853. P Panmure Island

Lighthouse Panmure Island. Tel (902) 838 3568. # Jul – Aug: 9am – 7pm daily. &

Orwell Corners Historic Village

Just outside of the small hamlet of Orwell, Orwell Corners Historic Village re-creates the day-to-day life of a small 19thcentury crossroads community. Orwell Corners was thriving until well into the 20th century, when changes in transportation and commerce lessened the importance of the settlement. This charming villlage was restored and opened in 1973. Among the buildings are a blacksmith’s, church, schoolhouse, and Clarke’s store, the social center of the village. Upstairs is the workshop of Clarke’s seamstresses, who made dresses for local ladies. Just 1 km (0.5 mile) away is the Sir Andrew Macphail Homestead. This Victorian house and its surroundings were the much-loved home of Macphail, a local doctor, journalist, teacher, and soldier who counted among his friends prime ministers and

acclaimed writers such as Kipling. The house features many exhibits dealing with Macphail’s life. Outside, trails wind through deep woodlands.

P Province House National

Historic Site of Canada 165 Richmond St. Tel (902) 566 7626. # daily; call ahead for hours. 7 P Ardgowan National

Historic Site Mount Edward Rd. Tel (902) 651 8510. # daily. 7

P Orwell Corners Historic

Charlottetown

Village

n Water St. (902) 368 4444. www.visitcharlottetown.com

Orwell. Tel (902) 651 2013. # May – Oct: daily. & 7 P Sir Andrew Macphail

Homestead off Rte 1, Orwell. Tel (902) 651 2789. # Jun–Sep: 10am–5pm daily. & 7

Charlottetown

The birthplace of Canada is a charming small city. Along Peake’s Quay, sailboats lie snug against marina piers, and the waterside buildings are home to intriguing shops and restaurants. The elegant Confederation Centre of the Arts hosts an array of live

entertainment including the popular musical Anne of Green Gables. Province House National Historic Site is

Historic homes in Great George Street, Charlottetown

LUCY MAUD MONTGOMERY The island’s most famous author, Lucy Maud Montgomery, was born in Cavendish in 1874. Nearby Green Gables House became the setting of her internationally best-selling novel, Anne of Green Gables (1908), set in the late 19th century. The manuscript was accepted only on the sixth attempt. To date, millions of copies of Anne have been published, in 16 languages. In 1911, Lucy married and moved to Ontario, where she raised two sons. She continued to write, producing 17 more books, ten of which feature Anne, with all but one set on Prince Edward Island. She died in 1942 and was buried overlooking the farms and fields of her beloved native Cavendish, the Avonlea of which she wrote so often. Author Lucy Maud Montgomery

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Amherst q * 9,700. c n Rte 104, exit 1 (902) 667 8429.

A busy commercial and agricultural town right in the center of Atlantic Canada, Amherst overlooks the world’s largest marsh, the beautiful Tantramar. Along its edge, hayfields grow on land reclaimed by Acadian dikes during the 18th century. The Cumberland County Museum is located in the family home of Senator R.B. Dickey, one of the Fathers of Confederation. The museum focuses on the region’s industrial development, local, and natural history. Particularly interesting are examples of goods once made in the town’s busy factories. E Cumberland County

Museum 150 Church St. Tel (902) 667 2561. # May–Sep: 9am–5pm Mon–Sat; Oct–Apr: 9am–5pm Tue–Sat. & 7

Truro w * 11,700. £ c n Victoria Square (902) 893 2922.

A prosperous town at the hub of Nova Scotia’s major transportation routes, Truro is also the site of a unique geographical phenomenon, the tidal bore. As the Great Fundy tides return landward, sweeping into the Minas Basin, they generate a wave or “bore” that is driven for several kilometers up the rivers that empty into the back of the basin. An information display next to the Salmon River explains each process and posts the

Façade of Haliburton House in Windsor, home of the famous humorist

tidal times. On the nearby Shubenacadie River, visitors can ride the bore in rafts. The waves generated can reach 2 m (7 ft) in height, particularly on the new and full moons, creating a churn of whitewater that the rafts race through as they follow it for miles upstream.

Windsor r * 3,600. c n Hwy 101, exit 6 (902) 798 2275.

A quiet town whose elegant Victorian homes overlook the Avon River, Windsor was the home of Judge Thomas Chandler Haliburton, lawyer, historian, and the author of e the Canadian “Sam Slick” stories, which achieved enormous * 1,600. n Main St. (902) 254 popularity in the mid-1800s. 3266. Haliburton was one of the first widely recognized humorists Located on the north shore in North America. His clever, fast-talking character Sam Slick of the Minas Basin, Parrsboro was a Yankee clock peddler is famous as the home of the world’s highest tides, which who coined idiomatic terms reach over 15 m h as “the early (50 ft) in height. bird gets the Rockhounds are worm,” and drawn to the “raining cats Minas Basin and dogs.” His whose beaches elegant home is are scattered with Prosauropod dinosaur skull now the Halifrom Fundy Museum semiprecious gems burton House Provincial and fossils. The excellent displays at Fundy Museum. Surrounded by garGeological Museum in dens that Haliburton tended Parrsboro feature superb and loved, the house is examples of the amethysts furnished in Victorian period found locally. There are also antiques and contains many dinosaur footprints and bones. of his personal possessions, including his writing desk.

Parrsboro

E The Fundy Geological

Museum

E Haliburton House

6 Two Islands Rd. Tel (902) 254 3814. # Jun – mid-Oct: daily; late Oct – May: Tue – Sun. & 7

Provincial Museum 414 Clifton Ave. Tel (902) 798 2915. # Jun–mid-Oct: daily. & 7 limited.

Two Island Beach in Parrsboro, famous for the two large rock outcrops known as the “Brothers Parrsboro” For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3

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Wolfville t

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An hour’s drive inland from Annapolis Royal lies Kejimkujik National Park, which covers 381 square km (148 sq miles) of inland wilderness laced with sparkling lakes and rivers. Throughout the park there are numerous paddling routes and 15 hiking trails, ranging from short walks to a 60-km (37-mile) perimeter wilderness and wildlife trail.

* 3,800. n Willow Park (902) 542 7000.

The home of the acclaimed Acadia University, Wolfville f and the surrounding countryside radiate a truly gracious charm. Here the green and fertile Annapolis Valley meets the shore of the Minas Basin, and keen visitors can follow P Port Royal National country roads past lush farmHistoric Site lands, sun-warmed orchards, 15 km W. of Annapolis Royal. gentle tidal flats, and wildlifeTel (902) 532 2898. # May – Oct: filled salt marshes. Longfellow’s Evangeline 9am – 5pm. & 7 Much of the valley’s rich } Kejimkujik National Park farmland was created by the Maritimes. Many families Hwy 8. Tel (902) 682 2772. dikes built by the Acadians in hid locally, but even deportees # daily. & mid-May – Oct. 7 the 1700s. When the Acadians returned in the 18th century. www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca were deported in the Great P Grand Pré National Expulsion of 1755, the British Historic Site offered the land to struggling Hwy 101, exit 10. Tel (902) 542 New England villagers on the u 3631. # May–Oct: daily. & 7 condition that the entire village would relocate. These * 2,300. ~ c g n Shore Rd hardworking settlers, known (902) 245 5714. y as Planters, proved so successful that the towns of the AnnaThe hardworking fishing polis Valley flourished. * 630. c n Prince Albert Rd. town of Digby is virtually Wolfville is a pretty town of (902) 532 2562. synonymous with the plump, tree-lined streets and inviting juicy scallops that are the shops and restaurants. Nearby, At the eastern end of the prime quarry of the town’s the town’s Visitor Information Annapolis Valley lies the extensive fishing fleet. The historic and picturesque town Center marks the beginning area around Digby also offers of a beautiful 5-km (3-mile) of Annapolis Royal. It was near splendid scenery and is the trail along the Acadian dikes here that Samuel de Champlain starting place for a scenic trip to the graceful church at built the fur trading post of along Digby Neck to the rocky the Grand Pré NatPort Royal in 1605 (see coastal landscape of beautiful ional Historic Site. p45). A purely comLong and Brier Islands. When the British mercial venture, this The waters off Long and marched into the was the first European Brier Islands brim with finback, Acadian village of settlement in the New minke, and humpback whales, Grand Pré in August World north of and whale-watching tours are 1755, it marked the Florida. The Port one of the region’s favorite beginning of the Great Kejimkujik Park Royal National Histo- pastimes. Some visitors may entrance sign Uprooting, Le Grand ric Site is an exact even glimpse the rare right Dérangement, which replica of the original whale, as about 200 of the 350 eventually forced thousands colony, based on French left in the world spend their of peace-loving Acadians farms of the period, from summers basking and breedfrom Nova Scotia (see pp62–3). plans drawn by Champlain. ing in the warm Bay of Fundy. In 1921 a beautiful stone church modeled after French country churches was built on the site of the old village of Grand Pré as a memorial to this tragedy. Today, visitors tour the church and stroll around the garden grounds where a statue of Evangeline, the heroine of Longfellow’s epic poem about the Acadians, stands waiting for her lover, Gabriel. The site’s information center features exhibits on the Acadians, their deportation Children having fun in a canoeing lake at Kejimkujik National Park and eventual resettlement in

Digby

Annapolis Royal

Riverfront houses at Bridgewater near Lunenburg, Nova Scotia

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Heritage Site, one of the bestpreserved planned settlements in the New World. Lunenburg is also the home port of Bluenose II, I a replica of Canada’s most famous schooner. The Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic fills several build-

ings along the waterfront. Its docks are home to the Theresa E. Conner, the last of the Grand Banks Schooners, and the side-trawler, Cape Sable. The Dory Shop Museum in Shelburne, center of local boat-building

Shelburne i * 2,250. c n Dock St. (902) 875 4547.

A quiet historic town nestled on the shore of a deep harbor, Shelburne was founded hastily by 3,000 United Empire Loyalists fleeing persecution after the American Revolution in 1775. More loyalists followed over the next few years, and Shelburne’s population swelled to 16,000, making it at the time the largest town in British North America. Many of these settlers were wealthy merchants who were unprepared for the rigors of living in a primitive land. Over time, many relocated to Halifax or returned to England, leaving behind the fine 18th-century homes they had built. Today, a walk along Water Street leads past some of the town’s most attractive historic homes to the Dory Shop Museum. This two-storey structure has been a commercial dory (flat-bottomed) boat building shop since its founding in 1880. During the days of the Grand Banks schooner f

famous for their strength and seaworthiness, and the town boasted seven shops that built thousands of boats each year. The museum’s first floor features displays on the industry and the salt-cod fishery. Upstairs, skilled shipwrights demonstrate the techniques of dory building that have changed little in a century.

E Fisheries Museum of the

Atlantic Bluenose Dr. Tel (902) 634 4794. # mid-May – mid-Oct: daily; late Oct–May: Mon–Fri. & 7 limited.

E Dory Shop Museum Dock St. Tel (902) 875 3219. # Jun – Sep: daily. & 7 limited.

Lunenburg o * 2,800. c n May–Sep: (902) 634 8100; Oct–Apr: (902) 634 3170. www.explorelunenburg.ca

No town captures the seafaring romance of Nova Scotia as much as Lunenburg. In the mid-1700s the British, eager for another loyal settlement, laid out a town plan for Lunenburg. They then offered the land to Protestant settlers from Germany. Although these were mainly farmers, they soon turned to shipbuilding and fishing. In 1996 the town was

One of Mahone Bay’s three waterfront churches

Mahone Bay p * 1,100. c n South Shore Tourist Association (902) 634 8844. www.mahonebay.com

The small seaside town of Mahone Bay has been called the “prettiest town in Canada.” Tucked into the shores of the bay that shares its name, the waterfront is

View of the Lunenberg Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic along the town’s romantic waterfront For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3

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dating to the 1700s, and at the back of the harbor three stately churches cast their reflection into the still waters. The town has attracted some of Canada’s finest artists and craftspeople, whose colorful shops line the main street. The small Settlers Museum offers exhibits and artifacts relating the town’s settlement by foreign Protestants in 1754, and its prominence as a boatbuilding center. There is also a collection of 18th- and 19thcentury ceramics and antiques. E Settlers Museum 578 Main St. Tel (902) 624 6263. # Jun–Sep: Tue –Sun.

Peggy’s Cove a * 60. n Sou’wester Restaurant (902) 823 2561/1074.

The graceful Peggy’s Cove Lighthouse stands atop wave-worn granite rocks and is one of the most photographed sights in Canada, a symbol of Nova Scotia’s enduring bond with the sea. The village, with its colorful houses clinging to the rocks, and small harbor lined with weathered piers and fish sheds, has certainly earned its reputation as one of the province’s most picturesque fishing villages. This is a delightful place to stroll through, but visitors may want to avoid midday in summer, when the number of tour buses can be a distraction. Early morning and late afternoon are the most peaceful times. Just outside the village is a memorial to the victims of the 1998 Swissair crash. The village was also the home of well-known marine artist and sculptor, William E. deGarthe (1907–83). Just above the harbor, the deGarthe Gallery has a permanent exhibition of 65 of his best-known paintings and sculptures. Right outside the gallery, the Memorial is a 30-m (90-ft) sculpture created by deGarthe as his monument to Nova Scotian Fishermen. Carved into an outcropping of native granite rock, the sculpture depicts 32 fishermen, and

The best-known symbol of Atlantic Canada, Peggy’s Cove Lighthouse

their wives and children. The large angel in the sculpture is the original Peggy, sole survivor of a terrible 19thcentury shipwreck, for whom the village was named.

Halifax s See pp90– 91.

The Eastern Shore d £ Halifax. c Antigonish. g Pictou. n Canso (902) 366 2170.

A tour along the Eastern Shore is a trip through oldworld Nova Scotia, through towns and villages where life has changed little since the turn of the 20th century. The tiny house and farm that comprise the Fisherman’s Life Museum in Jeddore, Oyster Ponds (60 km/37 miles east of Halifax) was the home of an inshore fisherman, his wife,

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and 13 daughters around 1900. Today, the homestead is a living-history museum where guides in period costume (many of them wives of local fishermen) reenact the simple daily life of an inshore fishing family, still the heart of Nova Scotia culture. Visitors who arrive at midday may be invited to share lunch cooked over a woodburning stove. There are also daily demonstrations that include rug-hooking, quilting, and knitting, and visitors can tour the fishing stage where salted fish were stored. Sherbrooke Village is the largest living-history museum in Nova Scotia. Between 1860 and 1890, this was a gold and lumber boomtown. As the gold ran out, Sherbrooke once again became a sleepy rural village. In the early 1970s, 25 of Sherbrooke’s most historic buildings were restored. Within W the village, scores of costumed guides bring 19th-century Nova Scotia to life. A ride on a horse-drawn wagon offers an overview of the town; the drivers share bits of local history as the horses trot along the village roads. At the Apothecary, visitors can watch the careful mixing of patent medicines, and those interested in the Ambrotype Studio can dress in period costumes, sitting very still while the vintage camera records their image on glass. Just outside town a massive waterwheel turns, powering the Lumber Mill. P Sherbrooke Village off Hwy 7. Tel (902) 522 2400. # Jun – Oct: daily. &

The Apothecary at the living history museum Sherbooke Village

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Halifax

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s

P Harbourfront n (902) 490 5946.

With its gleaming waterfront, pretty parks, and unique blend of modern and historic architecture, Halifax is a romantic and fascinating small city. Its cultured flavor belies Halifax’s 250-year history as a lusty, brawling, military town. Founded in 1749 by General George Cornwallis and 2,500 English settlers, Halifax was planned as Britain’s military center Town memorial to north of Boston. The city has a long history merchant seamen of adventure, being the town where swashbuckling legalized pirates, or privateers, brought captured ships to be shared with the crown, at a time when men made huge fortunes from sea trading. Today, Halifax is best known as one of Canada’s foremost centers of higher learning and has many colleges and five universities. Exploring Halifax

This is an easy town to explore on foot, as many of the better museums, historic sites, shops, and restaurants are located within the fairly contained historic core. Downtown, leading west from Brunswick Street, is hilly and green, ideal for a leisurely walk to appreciate the old-style architecture. Citadel Hill offers excellent views of the town as it stretches out over the water. P Historic Properties 1869 Upper Water St. Tel (902) 429 0530. # daily. 7

The Historic Properties are a wharfside collection of elegant stone and timber-frame structures, which were originally built in the 19th century to hold the booty captured by privateers. Today, they house an intriguing collection of specialty and gift shops, pubs, and fine restaurants. This is one of the city’s favorite gathering spots on warm

summer nights, with crowds of strollers enjoying the lights of the harbor and music drifting from nearby pubs, or placing bets at the Nova Scotia Casino. E Maritime Museum

The Harbourfront Walkway, features interesting gift shops, cafés, and restaurants in historic settings along the boardwalk. This delightful promenade leads to the Dartmouth Ferry, North America’s oldest town ferry. A trip round the harbor is an inexpensive way to enjoy a panorama of Halifax. P Government House 1200 Barrington St.

The current home of Nova Scotia’s lieutenant-general, this beautiful building is not open to the public but well worth exterior inspection for its historic and architectural interest. Its Georgian façade lends an urban grandeur. Completed in 1807, Government House cost over £30,000 (Can$72,000), a huge amount for a humble fishing village.

of the Atlantic 1675 Lower Water St. Tel (902) 424 7490. # May–Oct: daily; Nov–Apr: Tue–Sun. & 7 8 on request.

This harborfront museum offers extensive displays on Nova Scotia’s seafaring history, including small craft, a restored chandlery, and, at the dock outside, the elegantly refitted 1913 research vessel Acadia. The museum’s most popular exhibit is the Titanic display, which offers artifacts recovered from the ship. There are fragments of the ship’s grand staircase, as well as a mural-sized photo showing the staircase in its original state. After the 1912 catastrophe, many of the bodies that were recovered were brought to Halifax, and 150 are buried in the town.

The bandstand of Halifax Public Gardens, framed in flowers

P Pier 21 1055 Marginal Road Tel (902) 425 7770. # May–Oct: daily; Nov–Apr: Wed–Sat. & 7 www.pier21.ca

Canada’s entry point for more than a million immigrants and refugees, Pier 21 is now a National Historic Site. With powerful and emotional displays and fascinating images, Pier 21 provides a unique glimpse into Canadian history. Y Halifax Public Gardens Spring Garden Rd. Tel (902) 435 8327. # daily. 7 limited.

The waterfront of Halifax, seen from the town ferry

Created in 1836, the Public Gardens are a beautiful 7-ha (17-acre) oasis of Victorian greenery and color in a

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3. For transport information see p421

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST

bustling city. A peaceful place to stroll, the gardens’ paths wind past duck ponds, fountains, and a seemingly endless array of vivid flowerbeds. In the center of the gardens, an ornate bandstand is the site of Sunday concerts. On weekends, craftspeople gather outside the park’s cast-iron fence to display their varied and colorful wares.

* 385,000. k 35 km (22 miles) N of the city. £ @ 6040 Almon St. n 1595 Barrington St. (902) 490 5946. _ Nova Scotia International Tattoo (Jul); Atlantic Jazz Festival (Jul); International Busker’s Festival (Aug). www.destinationhalifax.com

and citizens would arrive at their appointed destinations on time.

P Halifax Citadel National

Historic Site

Halifax’s famous town clock, built in 1803 as a gift from British royalty

Citadel Hill. Tel (902) 426 5080. # May– Oct: daily. & summer. 7 8

P Province House 1726 Hollis St. Tel (902) 424 4661. 8 Jul–Aug: 9am–5pm Wed–Fri; Sep–Jun: 9am–4pm Mon–Fri. 7

P Old Town Clock Citadel Hill.

Overlooking the city, this huge star-shaped fortress has a commanding view of the world’s second-largest natural harbor. Built between 1828 and 1856, the citadel and its outlying fortifications provided a formidable defense. Visitors can stroll the parade grounds where the kilted regiment of the 78th Highlanders perform with twice-daily musket drills.

At the base of Citadel Hill stands the city’s most recognized landmark, the Old Town Clock. The clock was a gift in 1803 from Edward, the British Duke of Kent and then military commander, who had a passion for punctuality. He designed the clock with four faces so that both soldiers

Built between 1811 and 1819, Province House is the oldest seat of government in Canada. In 1864 the Fathers of Confederation held two days of meetings here on the formation of Canada (see p48). Visitors can tour the rooms where these plans were laid.

HALIFAX CITY CENTER Old Town Clock 8 Pier 21 5 Province House 9 6

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Government House 4 Halifax Citadel National Historic Site 7 Halifax Public Gardens Harbourfront 3 Historic Properties 1 Maritime Museum of the Atlanticc 2

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Cape Breton Island

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Magnificent natural beauty is the attraction on Cape Breton. Every year thousands of people travel the famous Cabot Trail through the craggy splendor of Cape Breton Highlands National Park (see p94–5). But Cape Breton’s beauty is not limited to these two renowned sights; it can be found along inviting country roads and in the less explored corners of this green, fertile island. Particularly stunning are Glenora the Mabou Highlands, which cradle the gentle Whisky waters of Lake Ainslee, Bras d’Or Lake where eagles soar over scenic shores, and romantic coastal villages such as windswept Gabarus. The reconstructed 18th-century French garrison and village, Fortress Louisbourg, is also highly popular.

Cabot Trail Highway This sublime 300-km (18 mile) drive around the island’s northwest and national park attracts more visitors each ye

St. Pierre Church at Cheticamp Built in 1883, the silver spire of this church is typical of Catholic style. The church is in the center of the town of Cheticamp, which offers whale-watching opportunites and is the focus of the 3,000-strong local Acadian community.

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Exploring Cape Breton Island The largest island in Nova Scotia, Cape Breton has a wild beauty and grandeur that makes for some of the most impressive scenery in Canada. From the rolling highlands, sprinkled with sparkling streams, to fine sandy beaches, the island’s 300-km (200Cape Breton fresh f h mile) Cabot Trail provides one of the most lobster memorable tours in Canada. Other inviting country roads lead to the stunning Mabou Hills, surrounding Lake Ainslee, and to romantic little towns including Baddeck and the Acadian settlement of Cheticamp near the green Margaree Valley.

North Mountain, which, at 457-m (1,500-ft), is the highest point in the park. The trail descends into the Aspy River Valley, where a gravel road leads to the base of the 30-m (100-ft) high Beulach Ban Falls. At Cape North, another side road leads to the scenic whalewatching destination of Bay St. Lawrence just outside the park and the stunningly pretty road to Meat Cove. Farther on, the Scenic Loop breaks away from the Cabot Trail and follows the coast, offering awesome views as it descends to White Point. This road rejoins the Cabot Trail to the east, where it reaches the resort town of Ingonish. The Highland Links Golf Course here is ranked as among the top golf courses in Canada. Y Cape Breton Highlands

National Park n Cheticamp. Tel (902) 224 2306. # daily. & 7 limited.

Baddeck

Lobster fishing boats in the Main à Dieu harbor on Cape Breton Island

Cape Breton Highlands National Park

In 1936 the Canadian Government set aside the 950 sq km (366 sq miles) of magnificent highlands in the northern tip of Cape Breton Island to form Cape Breton Highlands National Park. The park contains some of Canada’s most famous scenery, with its mountains, green wilderness, and windswept coastal beauty. The best-known feature of the park is the spectacular 106-km (66mile) section of the Cabot Trail highway, which traces much of the park’s boundary in a loop from Cheticamp to Ingonish. The Cabot Trail is the primary route through the park, and most attractions are found along it. Entering the park, the trail ascends along the flanks of the coastal mountains. The 24 look-out points on this stretch present farreaching views of the highlands rising from the sea. Continuing inland, the trail travels across the highland plateau. Just past French Lake, the short Bog Walk is a

boardwalk trail through marshes, with educational panels that describe this unique bogbound ecosystem, which is home to rare orchids. Visitors may even catch a glimpse of the park’s many moose grazing here in a wetland marsh. Crossing the French and Mackenzie Mountains, the trail descends dramatically to the charming old community of Pleasant Bay. It then reenters the highlands, crossing

Across the lake from the estate of Alexander Graham Bell, who loved the little town, Baddeck lies in rich farmland and is very much the island’s premier resort destination. Set on the northwest side of Bras d’Or Lake, Baddeck is still the small, friendly town that charmed visitors in the 19th century. All amenities are within walking distance. The town’s main street follows the waterfront and is lined with shops, cafés, and restaurants. Boat cruises around the lake are available from several places on Water Street by the shore. The town’s top attraction is the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site. The museum here contains the world’s largest collection of photographs, artifacts, and documents about the life of this famous humanitarian and inventor. There are early telephones and several of his later inventions, including a copy of his HD-4 Hydrofoil. Baddeck n Chebucto St. (902) 295 1911. E Alexander Graham Bell

National Historic Site Picturesque Ingonish Beach on Cape Breton Island

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp347–9 and pp371–3

559 Chebucto St. Tel (902) 295 2069. # daily. & 7

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A fly-fisher tries his hand in the salmon- and trout-filled waters of the Margaree River

Margaree River Valley

Small and emerald green, the Margaree River Valley is in a delightful world of its own. The river has attracted salmon and trout anglers in large numbers since the mid-19th century. Today the region is also a favorite with hikers, antiquehunters, and sightseers. In the little town of North East Margaree, the tiny but elegant Margaree Salmon Museum will fascinate even non-anglers with its beautiful historic rods and reels. Paved and gravel roads follow the Margaree River upstream to the scenic spot of Big Intervale, where the headwaters come tumbling out of the highlands. This area is ideal for a long hike, fishing, or cycling, and is dazzling when the hillsides are carpeted in the flaming colors of fall. } Margaree Valley n Margaree Fork (902) 248 2803. E Margaree Salmon

Museum 60 E. Big Interval Rd. Tel (902) 248 2848. # mid-Jun–mid-Oct: 9am–5pm daily. & 7 limited.

Cheticamp

This vibrant town is the largest Acadian community in Nova Scotia. Its beautiful Saint Pierre Church is visible from miles out at sea. The Acadians of Cape Breton are skilled craftspeople, and the town’s seven cooperatives

produce pottery and hooked rugs. Cheticamp’s best-known rug hooker was Elizabeth LeFort, whose large and intricate works depicting prominent moments in history have hung in the Vatican and in the White House. Several of her finest rugs are on display at the Dr. Elizabeth LeFort Museum at Les Trois Pignons. Cheticamp is also a popular whale-watching destination; tours are available for seeing many varieties of whale. E Dr. Elizabeth LeFort

Museum 15584 Main St. Tel (902) 224 2642. # May– Oct: daily. &

Sydney

The only city on Cape Breton Island, Sydney is the thirdlargest town in Nova Scotia. Boasting the biggest steel plant in North America, the town is the region’s industrial center. Despite this, Sydney has a small, attractive historic district around the Esplanade, with several restored buildings, such as Cossit House and Jost House, both dating from the 1870s. Downtown, boutiques, stores, and restaurants can be found along the town’s main drag, Charlotte Street. P Sydney n Sydney (902) 539 9876.

ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL Alexander Graham Bell was born in 1847 in Scotland. Bell’s mother was deaf, and, as a child, he became fascinated by speech and communication. In 1870, Bell and his family moved to Ontario (see p218). His work involved transmitting the voice electronically, and he began experimenting with variations of the technology used by the telegraph. In 1876 he transmitted the world’s first telephone message, Alexander Graham Bell “Watson, come here, I want you.” With the patenting of his invention, Bell secured his role as one of the men who changed the world. In 1877, Bell married Mabel Hubbard, one of his deaf students. In 1885, the couple visited Cape Breton, where Bell later built his beautiful estate, Beinn Bhreagh, by Bras d’Or Lake. There he lived and worked each summer until he died in 1922. In Baddeck, the Alexander Graham Bell Museum focuses on his life and varied work.

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Fortress Louisbourg Built between 1713 and 1744, the magnificent Fortress Louisbourg was France’s bastion of military strength in the New World. Today, it is the largest military reconstruction in North America. Visitors stepping through the fortress gate enter the year 1744, when war had just been declared between France and England. Inside scores of historically costumed Overview of the Fortress Costum interpr

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Rte. 22 SW of Louisbourg. Tel (902) 733 2280. # May, Jun, Sep & Oct: 9:30am–5pm daily; Jul & Aug: 9am–6pm. & 7 = 0 8 www.louisbourg.ca/fort

. King’s Bastion The largest building in the Citadel, the King’s Bastion Barracks was home to the 500 French as esh e.

fficers’ ooms

King’s Bakery Visitors can buy warm bread from this working bakery that produced the soldiers’ daily rations. The Forge Traditional skills are in evidence here, with costumed workers demonstrating exactly the carefully learned craft of the 18th century. The Guardhouse held the vital

human line of defense; guards were stationed here while on duty.

Dauphin Gate ers in historic uniforms at the gate challenge ors, just as they would have in 1744. The gate’s tic details are based on archeological relics the original gate recovered in the 1960s.

Quebec

INTRODUCING QUEBEC 100–105 MONTREAL 106–127 QUEBEC CITY AND THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER 128–145 SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN QUEBEC 146–157

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Introducing Quebec Quebec is the largest of Canada’ biggest French-speaking territory many of its seven million citizens guage and culture inherited from Landscapes range from pastora along the American border, to v on the shores of Hudson Bay. A St. Lawrence River. Its north sho Charlevoix region edging a wil tundra that stretches to the Hu world’s largest power projects lies the mountainous Gaspé Pe major cities; multiethnic Montr provincial capital and North A

The picturesque lakeside resort of St- Jovite in the La Mountains set amid a backdrop of magnificent fall col

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whole pro Orléans Express, and sm vices. Greyhound buses, based in the US, avel to Montreal. Limocar bus travel covers the Laurentian Mountains and Autobus Viens serves the Eastern Townships. Rail services are limited to the southern part of Quebec. The region also has a comprehensive network of high standard highways for exploring by car.

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Maple Forests Long the pride of Quebec and Ontario, there is more to Canada’s ancient maple forests than their annual display of beauty. Every fall, turning leaves splash crimson and orange across the south, but it is in springtime that the trees give up their most famous product: maple syrup. The red maple leaf of Canada Extracting techniques which were developed by native peoples were passed to Europeans in the 17th century. Traditional methods changed little until the 1940s, when part of the process was mechanized. Many age-old methods remain, however, including the final hand-stirring of the syrup. Maple trees, either red maple (Acer rubrum) or sugar maple (Acer saccharum), grow to heights of well over 30 m (100 ft), with thick trunks a meter (3 ft) in diameter. While their main product is the syrup, the hard wood is used for furniture and, of course, the leaf itself is the national symbol of Canada, officially established on the flag in 1965.

Collecting sap from trees

by tapping maple trunks is the first step. Cuts are made low in the wood in spring as sap rises.

Transporting the sap in large barrels on a horse-drawn sleigh through the snowy forests is traditional. In the 1970s this was largely replaced by a network of plastic tubing that take the sap directly from tree trunks to the sugar shacks. Sugar shacks are built in the forest in the center of the sugar bush, the cluster of maple trees that are producing sap. Men and women alike work long hours at slowly evaporating the sap, reducing it to syrup. Quebecois have their own rite of spring: when the first syrup is ready, it is poured onto the crisp snow outside the shacks to make a tasty frozen taffy.

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MAPLE SYRUP PRODUCTS Although 80 percent of Canada’s annual maple harvest eventually becomes maple syrup, there is more to the industry than simply a sweet sauce. Boiled for longer, the syrup hardens into a pale golden sugar that can be used to sweeten coffee or eaten like candy. Maple butter, which is whipped with sugar, is also popular. Savory products benefit too; ham and bacon can Maple products are used in a variety of be cured in syrup, which is delicious. The foods, both sweet and savory sweet-toothed people of Quebec use the syrup to make sugar pie, a tart with a sweet, fudge filling. Syrup is graded according to quality; clear golden fluid, produced at the start of the season, is the most prized, and is generally bottled. Later, darker syrup is used in cooking, and the final, even darker, batch makes a base for synthetic Maple syrup flavors or syrups. Over Can$100 million is spent annually on maple products. THE STORY OF MAPLE SYRUP The first maple-sugar farmers were native Canadians. Long before European settlers arrived in the 16th century, tribes all over Northeast America sweetened savory dishes with syrup. An Iroquois legend tells the story of a chief in ancient times who, hurling an ax at a tree, found it stuck in the trunk at the end of the next day, dripping sweet fluid. That night the chief’s wife boiled the day’s hunt in the sap, and the syrup was born. Folk tales apart, it is certain that native people discovered the sap and techniques for refining it, few of which have changed, and passed their knowledge to Europeans freely. Boiling maple sap involves 40

liters (88 pts) of sap to create one liter (2.2 pts) of syrup. The gold color and maple flavor develop as distillation takes place. The paler first syrup of the season is the most valuable.

Transforming sap into maple syrup

takes place very slowly. The sap bubbles over a wood fire (maple wood is prefered) until about 98 percent of its water content evaporates. Modern processes use mechanized evaporators to boil the sap and draw off the steam, but even hi-tech methods still require a final hand-stirred simmering.

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The St. Lawrence Seaway Extending from the Gulf of St. Lawrence on the Atlantic coast to Duluth at the western end of Lake Superior in Minnesota, the St. Lawrence Seaway and Great Lakes System flows across North America for over 3,700 km (2,300 miles). The St. Lawrence Seaway itself stretches 553 km (344 miles) from Montreal to Lake Erie and covers 245,750 square km (95,000 sq miles) of navigable water. Open from March to December, it is the world’s longest deep-draft inland waterway. Ships carry a huge quantity of domestic traffic, but over 60 per cent of the total freight travels to and from overseas ports, mainly from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Traffic varies: cargoes of grain travel in superships alongside pleasure boats.

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Pleasure boats

THE HISTORY OF THE SEAWAY The Seaway has ancient beginnings: in 1680, French monk Dollier de Casson started a campaign to build a mile-long canal linking Lac St. Louis and Montreal, which was finally opened in 1824 as the Lachine Canal. In 1833, the first Welland Canal (from Lake Ontario to Lake Erie) opened. The fourth Welland W Canal was the first modern part of the Seaway to be built in 1932. 1951 brought US and Canadian cooperation to bear on a new seaway, which began in Canada in 1954. On April 25, 1959, the Seaway opened, linking the Great Lakes to the world.

cruise the Seaway near the Thousand Islands by Kingston, Ontario. Each summer, small craft take advantage of the excellent sailing and waterskiing available in this section of the Seaway.

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he Lachine t of Montreal. is a watery stairmerica’s heartland. rocess involves raising nd lowering the ships the eight of a 60-story building.

CONSTRUCTION OF THE SEAWAY In 1895, the US and Canadian governments appointed a Deep Waterways Commission to study the feasibility of what was to become today’s St. Lawrence Seaway; it reported in favor of the project two years later. After 50 years of intercountry wrangling, the jointly financed project was begun on August 10, 1954 – in the words of Canadian Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent “a bond rather than a barrier between Americans and Canadians.” The massive undertaking was beset with problems not previously encountered, especially the discovery of ancient rock formations so hard that new machinery had to be created to dig through them. All work, including relocating villages and dredging the existing canals, had to be carried out with minimum disruption to the daily boat, rail, and car traffic of major cities. Nonetheless, the four-year construction was completed almost to the day. Welland Canal

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The Seaway in profile with locks and rising water levels

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M

ontreal is the second largest city in Canada. The pious 17th-century French founders of this vibrant island metropolis might be a little surprised to have produced a place that revels so much in its reputation for joie de vivre, but at least their edifices remain; the spires of some of Canada’s finest churches still rise above the skyline. Montreal’s location at the convergence of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa rivers made it Canada’s first great trading center. It was founded in 1642 by a group of French Catholics as a Christian community and port. Much of its economic power has now moved west to Toronto, and what makes Montreal interesting today is a cultural, rather than a geographical, confluence. About 70 percent of its 3 million residents are of French descent, another 15 percent have British origins, and the rest represent nearly every major ethnic group. Many speak three or more languages. The communities form a kind of mosaic, with the anglophones in the west, the francophones in the east, and other ethnic communities in pockets all over the island. There is nothing rigid about these divisions: Anglophones eat and

drink in the restaurants and bistros of the historic French district, and francophones visit the traditionally English area. The most interesting neighborhoods sprawl along the southern slopes of Mont-Royal – the 234-m (767-ft) hill from which the city derives its name. VieuxMontréal’s network of narrow, cobblestone streets huddles near the waterfront, while the main shopping area is farther north along Rue SainteCatherine. It extends below the city’s surface in the maze of tunnels that connect the Underground City, the complex of homes, stores, and leisure venues that spreads out beneath the bustling city. Other modern attractions include the Olympic Park stadium and the Musée d’Art Contemporain, built in the 1990s to complement Montreal’s fine historic museums.

Visitors admiring the skyline of Montreal Waiters posing outside a typically French traditonal bistro in downtown Montreal

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GETTING AROUND A tunnel and an 15 bridges link Montreal island to the mainland, nllan and the Ville-Marie and Bonaventure Expressways xpressw sw way carry road traffic right into its heart. T mo The most st convenient con nie way to get around within the th he city ty is is on o the mé métro étro and bus system, which hic ser service cee mos most mo sites siite of interest.

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Street-by-Street: Vieux-Montréal Montreal’s founders, led by Paul Chomédy de Maisonneuve, built the Catholic village of Ville Marie, that was to become Montréal, on the Saint Lawrence river in 1642. Missionary efforts failed to flourish, but the settlement blossomed into a prosperous fur-trading town with fine Rue St-Paul street sign homes and a stone stockade. As Montreal expanded in the mid-20th century, the old city, Vieux-Montréal, fell into decline. In 1980, however, the district underwent a renaissance. The remaining 18thcentury buildings were transformed into the restaurants, bistros, and boutiques that are so fashionable today, especially those of rue Notre-Dame and rue St-Paul.

View from the river This clutch of historic streets leading down to the great St. Lawrence River is a district of romance and charm in the midst of this modern city.

. Basilique Notre-Dame One of the most splendid churches in North America, the city’s 1829 Catholic showpiece has a richly decorated and colorful interior 2

Pointe-à-Callière Archeological Museum An underground tour here leads visitors past excavated ruins and early water systems dating from the 17th century.

STAR SIGHTS

. Basilique NotreDame

. Château Ramezay

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

M O N T R E A L

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Hôtel de Ville The city hall was created in grand French Empire style in 1872 –78, and restored to its glory in 1922. The marble hall features a statue of the first mayor.

LOCATOR MAP See Montreal Map pp108–109

Chapelle Notre Damede-Bonsecours Long the spiritual home of Quebec’s sailors, this church has fine views of the river from its tower.

Marché Bonsecours The neo-Renaissance façade of this elegant building conceals its lively history, from its early 19th-century days as Canada’s Parliament to a thriving time as a vegetable market.

100 0 yards

KEY Suggested route

100

. Château Ramezay Once the home of Montreal’s governing city council, this 18th-century building pays tribute to the settling of Quebec with its fine museum of early tools and artifacts 3

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Vieux-Port 1

Château Ramezay 3

333 Rue de la Commune. Tel (514) 496 7678. £ Central Station. @ 55. c Terminus Voyager. m Square Victoria. www.oldportofmontreal.com

280 Rue Notre Dame E. Tel (514) 861 3708. £ VIA Rail. @ 14, 55. c Terminus Voyager. m Champ-deMars. # Jun–Sep: 10am–6pm daily; Oct – May: 10am – 4:30pm Tue – Sun. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7 8 www.chateauramezay.qc.ca

In its glory days of the 19th century, the Vieux-Port of Montreal was one of the most important inland harbors in North America, but it declined with the introduction of megaships and the airplane in the early 20th century. By the late 1980s, the Canadian government had begun to transform it into one of the most popular parks in Montreal. Its 12.5 km (8 miles) of waterside walkways and open grassy fields blend almost seamlessly into

Cyclists enjoying the waterfront promenade, Vieux-Port

the lovely streets of VieuxMontréal, giving the old city a wide window onto the river. The port has a bustling, recreational atmosphere. On summer afternoons, visitors and Montrealers alike stroll, cycle, or in-line skate along the Promenade du Vieux Port.

When Montreal’s 11th governor, Claude de Ramezay, arrived in the city in 1702, he was homesick for Normandy and decided to build a residence that was reminiscent of the châteaux back home, with stone walls, dormer windows, and copper roof. The squat round towers, added in the 19th century, reinforce the effect. Many

Basilique Notre-Dame-de-Montréal In the center of Place d’Armes sits the Basilica, Montreal’s grandest Catholic church. Originally built in the 17th century, a new building was commissioned in 1829. American architect James O’Donnell excelled himself with a vast vaulted cavern that combined elements of Neo-Classical and Neo-Gothic design, and provides 3,000 seats in the nave and two tiers of balconies. Splendidly redecorated in the 1870s, the intricate woodcarving is the work of Canadian craftsman Victor Bourgeau.

2

The main altar is

surrounded by delicate pine and walnut woodcarving. The nave is illuminated

by a rose window under an azure ceiling.

. Reredos The focus of the nave is backed by azure, beneath a golden starry sky. STAR SIGHTS

. Reredos . Pulpit

. Pulpit This ornate construction was sculpted by Philippe Hébert. The prophets Ezekiel and Jeremiah stand at its base.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

M O N T R E A L

of de Ramezay’s governor successors lived here and the building also housed the West India Company. This is one of the most impressive remnants of the French regime open to the public in Montreal. The château has been restored to its original style. Of particular interest is the Nantes Salon, with its 18th-century carved paneling by the French architect Germain Boffrand. Uniforms, documents, and furniture on the main floor reflect the life of New France’s ruling classes, while the cellars depict the doings of humbler colonists. The scarlet automobile, made for the city’s first motorist, is an interesting sight.

Sir George-Etienne Cartier National Historic Site 4

houses owned by the Cartiers on the eastern edge of the old town. One is dedicated to Cartier’s career as a lawyer, politician, and railroad-builder. 458 Rue Notre Dame E. Tel (514) 283 In this house, you can sit at a 2282. £ Central Station. @ c round table and listen in either Terminus Voyager. m Champ-de-Mars. French or English to a very # Apr–May, Sep–Dec: 10am–noon & good summary of the political 1–5pm Wed–Sun; Jun–Aug: 10am–6pm founding of modern Canada. daily. ¢ Jan–Mar. & 7 8 The second house focuses on the Cartiers’ domestic life George-Etienne Cartier and the functioning of a (1814–73) was a Father Victorian upper middleof Confederation (see class family. Visitors can p48) and one of the wander through formal most important rooms full of rich furFrench-Canadian niture and listen to politicians of his day. snatches of taped conversation from This national historic site comprises two Ormolu clock at the ‘‘servants’’ talking adjoining graystone Etienne-Cartier about their lives.

The twin towers rise

69 m (226 ft) above the basilica and are visible across the old city.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST The Vieux Séminaire dates

from 1685 and still belongs to the Sulpician Fathers, the priests who also run the basilica. It is one of the oldest building in Montreal.

110 rue Notre Dame W, Place d’Armes. Tel (514) 842 2925. m Place d’Armes. # 8am – 5pm daily. 7 = 8 daily. www.basiliquenddm.org

Pipe Organ The renowned maker Casavant built the organ above the north door in 1891. Recitals are still held frequently.

Stained-glass windows The basilica’s beautiful windows were imported from Limoges in 1930. Each tells a story of Montreal’s past; this shows New World pioneer Maisonneuve climbing Mont Royal in 1643.

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Musée Marc-Aurèle Fortin 5 118 Rue Saint-Pierre. Tel (514) 845 6108. £ Central Station. c Terminus Voyager. m Square Victoria. #, 11am – 5pm Tue – Sun. & 7

This museum, housed in an old stone warehouse belonging to an ancient order of nuns, has an extensive collection of Fortin’s work and also mounts exhibitions of new painting by local artists. Marc-Aurèle Fortin transformed landscape painting in Canada. He was born in 1888, when European styles dominated North American art. Fortin loved the light of his native province, and used many unusual techniques. To capture the ‘‘warm light of Quebec,’’ for example, he painted some of his pictures over gray backgrounds. By the time he died in 1970, he left behind not only a staggering amount of work but a whole new way of looking at nature, especially the various rural areas of his native Quebec.

Centre d’Histoire de Montréal

Montreal’s history, beginning in 1535 with the meeting of First Nations peoples and European explorers and ending with the cultural boom of the 1960s. The second floor houses “Montreal of 1000 Faces,” focusing on trade and immigration through the city’s history. News reel footage from the 30s, 40s and 50s is fun and informative, while a third floor observation deck offers a scenic view of the Old Port and Old Montreal.

Chinatown 7 m Champ-de-Mars; Place des Arts.

Gray stone façade of the Musée Marc-Aurèle Fortin

Centre d’Histoire de Montréal 6

The name is becoming a little anachronistic. Many of the restaurants and shops in this 18-block district just northeast of the Old City are now owned by Vietnamese

and Thai immigrants, who arrived in Montreal in the wake of 20th-century upheavals in Southeast Asia. The Chinese, however, were here first. They began arriving in large numbers after 1880, along with many European immigants, and stuck together in this corner of the city in an attempt to avoid discrimination. As they grew more prosperous, many of the descendants of the first immigrants moved to wealthier areas, leaving Chinatown to the old and to the newly arrived. Many thousands of them now return on weekends, and the narrow streets are busy with people shopping for silk, souvenirs, vegetables, records, and barbecued meat. Restaurants specialize in a range of cuisines, serving Szechuan, Cantonese, Thai, Vietnamese, and Korean food, and the air is fragrant with the smell of hot barbecued pork and aromatic noodles. For those seeking respite from the bustle, there is a lovely little garden dedicated to the charismatic Chinese leader Sun Yat-sen on Clarke Street. Other features of the area include two large, Chinese-style arches which span de la Gauchetière Street, and a pair of authentic pagodas on the roof of the modern Holiday Inn hotel.

335 Place d’Youville. Tel (514) 872 3207. c 61. m Square Victoria. # mid-May – Aug: daily; Sep – May: Tue –Sun. ¢ mid-Dec – mid-Jan. &

The exhibits in this museum trace the history of Montreal from the first Indian settlements to the modern age, with the focus on everyday life. The museum is housed in a handsome, red-brick fire station with a gracefully gabled roof built in 1903. There are two floors of permanent exhibits. On the first floor, “Montreal, 5 Times” traces five passages in

A brightly colored market stall in vibrant Chinatown

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

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Locals picnicking in the leisurely atmosphere of the Parc Lafontaine in Plateau Mont-Royal

Plateau Mont-Royal 8 Tel Tourisme Montreal: (514) 844 5400. m Sherbrooke; Mont-Royal.

No neighborhood captures the essence of Montreal more fully than the Plateau. Its main thoroughfares are lined with bistros, bookstores, boutiques, and sidewalk cafés. Nightclubs veer from the eccentric to the classic, and eateries from snack bars and sandwich shops to some of the best dining locations in the city. Jazz bars, too, are popular in this area and range from the decorous to the distinctly shady. The area’s residents are a mix of students, working-class French-speakers, trendy young professionals, and ethnic families with roots in Europe and Latin America. They congregate either in Parc Lafontaine, a neighborly expanse of green with an outdoor theater, or in ‘‘Balconville,’’ a distinctly Montrealer institution linked to the duplexes and triplexes that many residents live in. To save interior space, these stacks of single-floor flats are studded with balconies linked to the street by fanciful, wrought-iron stairways. Although treacherous in winter, in

summer they are decked with flowers and barbecue grills, and become centers for parties, family gatherings, and picnics. The large working-class families for whom these homes were built in the early part of the century lived very modestly, but they managed to amass enough money to build impressively large and beautiful parish churches, notably the Eglise SaintJean-Baptiste. The Catholic bourgeoisie lived just a little farther south, in gracious Second-Empire homes on Rue Saint-Denis or Carré Saint-Louis, one of the prettiest squares in the city.

Place des Arts 9 183 Rue Ste-Catherine W. Tel (514) 842 2112. m Place des Arts. www.pdarts.com

This complex of halls and theaters is Montreal’s prime center for the performing arts. Both the Opéra de Montréal (Montreal Opera) and the Orchéstre Symphonique de Montréal (Montreal Symphony Orchestra) make their home in the Salle Wilfrid Pelletier, the largest of the center’s five halls. The buildings of Place des Arts share a modern, spacious central plaza with the outstanding Musée d’art contemporain (see pp116–17).

Place des Arts, Montreal’s top entertainment venue

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Musée d’Art Contemporain

Opened in 1964, the Museum of Contemporary Art is the only institution in Canada dedicated exclusively to modern art. Located in downtown Montreal, more than 60 percent of the approximately 6,000 paintings, drawings, photographs, videos, and installations in the permanent collection are by Quebec artists. Works date from 1939, but the emphasis is on the contemporary. There are also works by innovative international talents, such as the controversial Bill Viola, Louise Bourgeois, and Andrès Serrano. The exhibits are in wide, well-lit galleries whose elegance helped to earn the Musée a Grand Prix from Montreal Council. The exhibition space is built around a rotunda, which runs up through the core of the building.

Les Dentelles de Montmirail Young artist Natalie Roy’s 1995 landscape (detail shown) is part of a large collection of new Quebec art.

First floor

0 m

e

. Niagara Sandstone Circle (1981) English sculptor Richard Long’s work is literally ground breaking. Using materials from the natural environment, which itself is the theme of the work, his careful geometric placing acts as a spur to meditation.

Street Level

KEY Permanent exhibition space

d

Temporary exhibition space Pierre Granche sculpture Movie theater

m

Video gallery

Entrance Hall The museum uses this airy modern space, hung in places with pieces from its collection, for special events and receptions. A pleasant first-floor restaurant overlooks the hall.

Multimedia gallery Theater/Seminar hall Art workshops Nonexhibition space

STAR EXHIBITORS

. Pierre Granche . Richard Long

MUSEUM GUIDE Only a small proportion of the exhibits in the museum are on permanent display. They occupy the upper floor space along with rotating and visiting items. There is also a sculpture garden, accessible from the main museum building, that has rotating exhibits and is a good spot to rest during a tour of the galleries.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

M O N T R E A L

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 185 Ste. Catherine St. W. Tel (514) 847 6226. m Place-des-Arts. # 11am–6pm Tue, Thu–Sun; 11am– 9pm Wed. ¢ Mon; Dec 25, Jan 1. & ^ 7 = 0 - 8 by arrangement. www.macm.org

. Comme si le temps ... de la rue (1991–2) Pierre Granche’s permanent outdoor installation is based on Egyptian mythological figures whose shapes symbolize Montreal. Created to contrast with its urban milieu, the work exudes humor and poetry.

Christ Church Cathedral q

paintings, toys, and porcelain. In 1919, he gave his considerable acquisitions to McGill University with a view to estab1444 Union Ave. Tel (514) 843 6577. lishing a museum of Canadian £ Central Station. c 15. m McGill. social history. That collection, # 8am – 5:30pm daily. 7 now more than 90,000 artifacts, Architect Frank Wills is housed in a stately limestone completed Christ Church building that was once a social in 1859 as the seat of the center for McGill students. The Anglican bishop of Montreal. museum has a good section of early history, as well This graceful Gothic as exceptional folk limestone building, art. A particularly fine with a triple portal and a tall slender collection of Indian spire, has exterior and Inuit items walls decorated with features clothing, gargoyles. The church weapons, jewelry, was too heavy for the furs, and pottery. land, and the stone A separate room is spire was replaced Inuit slippers at the devoted to the social McCord Museum in 1940 with a treated history of Montreal. aluminum steeple. The museum’s most Many local workers find celebrated possession is the respite at noon concerts in the collection of 700,000 photocathedral’s cool, dim interior graphs, that painstakingly with its pointed arched nave chronicle every detail of daily and magnificent stained-glass life in 19th-century Montreal. windows, some from the William Morris studio in London.

McGill University e

845 Rue Sherbrooke W. Tel (514) 398 4455. £ Central Station. c 24. m McGill. # 9am – 6pm Mon – Fri. 8 book in advance. 7 www.mcgill.ca

= Christ Church Cathedral, based on a 14th-century English design

=

Main Entrance

McCord Museum of Canadian History w 690 Rue Sherbrooke W. Tel (514) 398 7100. £ Central Station. c 24. m McGill. # 10am – 6pm Tue – Fri; 10am – 5pm Sat & Sun. ¢ Mon. 7 www.mccord-museum.qc.ca

Museum façade Built in the 1990s, the MAC building shows 320 artworks, taken from their much larger rotating collection.

117

Lawyer David Ross McCord (1844–1930) was an avid collector of virtually everything that had to do with life in Canada, including books, photographs, jewelry, furniture, clothing, documents, papers,

When it was founded in 1821, Canada’s oldest university was set on land left for the purpose by fur trader and land speculator James McGill (1744–1813). The university’s main entrance is guarded by the Classical Roddick Gates. Behind them an avenue leads to the domed Neoclassical Arts Building, which is the oldest structure on campus. The rest of the 70 or so buildings range from the ornately Victorian to the starkly concrete. One of the loveliest is the Redpath Museum of Natural History, which holds one of the city’s most eclectic and eccentric collections. A huge number of fossils, including a dinosaur skeleton, sit alongside African art, Roman coins, and a shrunken head. E Redpath Museum of

Natural History 859 Rue Sherbrooke W. Tel (514) 398 4086. # 9am –5pm Mon – Thu; 1pm – 5pm Sun. ¢ Fri & Sat. 7

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Musée des Beaux Arts

r

The oldest and largest art collection in Quebec is housed in two dramatically different buildings that face each other across Rue Sherbrooke. The Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion, fronted with four white marble pillars, faces the huge concrete arch and tilting glass front of the Jean-Noël Desmarais Pavilion. The former focuses on Canadiana, with Inuit art, furniture, and church silver from early settlers, and paintings from the 18th century to the 1960s. The galleries in the Desmarais Pavilion (illustrated here) focus on European art from the Middle Ages to the 20th century, especially the Renaissance. Linking the two pavilions is the gallery of ancient cultures, with rich collections of artifacts, including Roman vases and Chinese incense boxes.

Façade of Jean-Noël Desmarais Pavilion Opened in 1991, the larger pavilion contains a collection that has grown from 1,860 to about 26,000 pieces.

. Portrait of a Young Woman (c.1665) This famous work originated in Rembrandt’s native Holland. Painted in characteristically realist style, the sitter’s pensive concentration is thrown into sharper relief by the deep black background.

MICHAL AND RENATA HORNSTEAIN PAVILION Connected to the Desmarais Pavilion by an underground tunnel that contains an exhibition on ancient cultures, this gallery is dedicated to pre-1960 America and includes Meso-American, Inuit, and Amerindian art, as well as early European-style furniture, domestic silver, and decorative art. Later galleries follow the history of Canadian painting, from church sacred art to early native studies by wandering artist Paul Kane and the impressionism of James Wilson Morrice. The Group of Seven and PaulEmile Borduas are among those representing the 18th-century 20th century. silver teapot

STAR EXHIBITS

. Man of the House of

Level 3

Access to the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion

Leiva by El Greco

. Portrait of a Young

Level S2

Woman by Rembrandt For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

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into a vast network of over 30 km (19 miles) of well-lit, boutique-lined passages that includes more than 1,600 shops, 200 restaurants, hotels, film theaters, and concert halls.

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 1379–1380 Rue Sherbrooke W. Tel (514) 285 2000. £ Central Station. c 24. m Guy Concordia. # 11am – 5pm, Tue, Thu – Sun; 11am – 9pm, Wed. ¢ Mon. & for special exhibitions. 7 & www.mbam.qc.ca

Square Dorchester and Place du Canada y

Level 4

n 1001 Rue Square Dorchester. Tel (514) 873 2015. £ Central Station. c Terminus Voyager. A street-level entrance to the labyrinthine Underground City

Underground City t £ Central Station. c Terminus Voyager. m Place des Arts.

. Man of the House of Leiva (1590) El Greco’s haunting portrayals of the Spanish aristocracy are a Renaissance highlight.

GALLERY GUIDE

When Montreal opened its first métro (or subway) lines in 1966, it inadvertently created a whole new layer of urban life – the Underground City. It is theoretically possible to lead a rich life in Montreal without once stepping outside. The first métro stations had underground links to just the two main train stations, a few hotels, and the shopping mall under the Place Ville-Marie office tower. This has turned

These two open squares create a green oasis in central downtown Montreal. On the north side of Boulevard RenéLévesque, statues including Canada’s first French-Canadian prime minister, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, share the shade of Square Dorchester’s trees with a war memorial. On Place du Canada a statue of the country’s first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, looks out over the stately Boulevard René-Lévesque. The buildings surrounding the park are eclectic. The mix includes a Gothic church, a shiny, black bank tower and the Sun Life Building (1933), a huge stone fortress that housed the British Crown Jewels during World War II.

The exceptional painting collections are contained on levels 3 and 4 of the Desmarais Pavilion. Level 2 offers a fine café. The museum shop and main entrance are on level 1. Lower level S2 has contemporary art galleries and tunnel access to the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion. KEY Contemporary art Art of ancient cultures 19th-century European art 20th-century European art European Decorative arts Old Masters Temporary exhibitions Nonexhibition space

Varied architecture, from historic to post-modern, in Square Dorchester Montreal skyline at night

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Rue Sherbrooke o £ Central Station. c Terminus Voyager. m Sherbrooke.

Marie-Reine-du-Monde façade with statues of Montreal’s patron saints

Cathédrale MarieReine-du-Monde u

Centre Canadien d’Architecture i

1085 Rue Cathédrale. Tel (514) 866 1661. £ Central Station. c Terminus Voyager. m Bonaventure. # 6:30am – 7:30pm Mon – Fri, 7:30am – 8:30pm Sat, 8:30am – 7:30pm Sun. 7

1920 Rue Baille. Tel (514) 939 7000. £ Central. c Terminus Voyager. m Guy Concordia. # 11am–6pm Tue–Sun. ¢ Mon. & 7 8 book ahead.

When Montreal’s first Catholic Visitors enter through an cathedral burned down in unobtrusive glass door 1852, Bishop Ignace Bourget in an almost windowless decided to demonstrate the façade of gray limestone that importance of the Catholic fronts this large U-shaped Church in Canada building. Well-lit exhibition by building a new one in a rooms house a series of district dominated at the time regular exhibits in rotation. by the English The three primary Protestant comexhibits focus on mercial elite. To architecture, show his flock’s design and landscape loyalty to the Pope, he modeled his architecture. new church on The two arms of St. Peter’s Basilica the modern in Rome. building embrace the ornate, grand The cathedral, which was comShaughnessy pleted in 1894, has Mansion, which dimensions that are The altar canopy in the faces Boulevard cathedral René-Lévesque a quarter of those of St. Peter’s. The Ouest. Now part of the Centre, the house was statues on the roof represent the patron saints of all the built in 1874 for the president parishes that constituted the of the Canadian Pacific Railway, Sir Thomas Montreal diocese in 1890. The magnificent altar canopy, Shaughnessy, and has an artnouveau conservatory with an a replica of the one Bernini made for St. Peter’s, was cast intricately decorated ceiling. in copper and gold leaf. The Centre is also a major Another reminder of Bourget’s scholarly institution. Its loyalty to Rome can be found collection of architectural on the pillar in the northeast plans, drawings, models, and corner of the church. Here lies photographs is the most a marble plaque listing the important of its kind names of all the Montrealers anywhere. The library alone has over 165,000 volumes who served in the Papal on the world’s most armies during the Italian war of independence in the 1850s. significant buildings.

In the latter half of the 19th century, Montreal was one of the most important cities in the British Empire. Its traders and industrialists controlled about 70 percent of Canada’s wealth, and many built themselves fine homes on the slopes of Mont Royal in an area that became known as the Golden, or Square, Mile. Rue Sherbrooke between Guy and University was their Main Street, and its shops, hotels, and churches were the most elegant in the country. Some of that elegance survived the modernizing bulldozers of the 1960s. Holt Renfrew, Montreal’s upscale department store, and the stately Ritz-Carlton Hotel still stand. So do two exquisite churches, the Presbyterian St. Andrew and St. Paul, and the Erskine American United at the corner of avenue du Musée, which boasts stainedglass windows by Tiffany. Boutiques, bookstores, and galleries fill many of the rows of graystone townhouses. Millionaires not quite wealthy enough to make it into the Square Mile built graceful row homes on rues de la Montagne, Crescent, and Bishop nearby. Many of these now house trendy shops and bistros. Farther west is the Grande Seminaire, where Montreal’s Roman Catholic archdiocese still trains its priests.

Historic home on Rue Sherbrooke, the “Golden Square Mile”

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

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Montreal’s largest shrine, Oratoire Saint-Joseph, showing the steps climbed annually by pilgrims

Oratoire SaintJoseph p 3800 Chemin Queen Mary. Tel (514) 733 8211. £ Central Station. c Terminus Voyager. m Côte-desNeiges. # daily. 7

Every year, two million pilgrims climb the 300 steps to the entrance of this enormous church on their knees. Their devotion would no doubt please Brother André (1845–1937), the truly remarkable man responsible for building this shrine to the husband of the Virgin Mary. It began when he built a hillside chapel to St. Joseph in his spare time. Montreal’s sick and disabled joined him at his prayers, and soon there were reports of miraculous cures. Brother André began to draw pilgrims, and the present oratory was built to receive them. He is buried here and was beatified in 1982. The church’s octagonal copper dome is one of the biggest in the world – 44.5 m (146 ft) high and 38 m (125 ft) wide. The interior is starkly modern; the elongated wooden statues of the apostles in the transepts are the work of Henri Charlier, who was also responsible for the main altar and the huge crucifix. The striking stained-glass windows were made by Marius Plamondon. The main building houses a museum depicting

André’s life. Beside the crypt church, a votive chapel is ablaze with hundreds of flickering candles that have been lit by hopeful pilgrims.

Parc Mont-Royal a Tel (514) 872 0582. £ Central Station. @ 11. m Mont-Royal. # 6am – midnight daily. 7

The steep green bump that rises above the city center is only 234 m (767 ft) high, but Montrealers call it simply ‘‘the mountain’’ or ‘‘la montagne.’’ Jacques Cartier gave the peak its name when he visited in 1535 and it, in turn, gave its name to the city. The hill became a park in 1876 when the city bought the land and hired Frederick Law Olmsted, the man responsible for designing New York’s Central Park,

to landscape it. Olmsted tried to keep it natural, building a few lookouts linked by footpaths. Succeeding generations have added a manmade pond (Beaver Lake), a 30-m high (98-ft) cross made of steel girders, and the Voie Camilien Houde, a thoroughfare that cuts through the park from east to west. The mountain’s 101 ha (250 acres) of meadows and hardwood forests still offer Montrealers a precious escape from urban life, as well as spectacular views of the city. The wide terrace in front of the Chalet du Mont-Royal pavilion looks out over the skyscrapers of the down-town core. The northern boundary of the park abuts two huge cemeteries, the Catholic Notre-Dame-Des-Neiges and the old and stately Protestant Mount Royal Cemetery, where many of Canada’s finest rest.

A typical view of Montreal from the top of lofty Parc Mont-Royal

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Olympic Park

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Designed for the 1976 Olympic Games, Montreal’s Olympic Park showpieces a number of stunning modern buildings. Paris architect Roger Taillibert created the Stadium, now known

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. Montreal Tower At 175 m (575 ft) this is the world’s tallest inclined tower, arching over the stadium in a graceful sweep. A cable car takes visitors up the side of the tower to its large viewing

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 3200 Viau St. Tel (514) 252 4737. m Viau Station. # Jun –Sep: 9am –8pm daily; Oct–May: 9am–5pm daily. &7=-8 www.rio.gouv.qc.ca

dium roof was originally

d to be retractable. However, structural problems, it was d in 1998 by a detached, ently closed roof.

um ake place in this cavernous tacular opening ceremonies er Olympic Games. Viewing Deck This glass platform provides r some stunning views of the city. Signs point out sights of interest that can be as far as 80 km (50 miles) away.

EA

STAR SIGHTS

. Olympic Stadium . Montreal Tower . Biodome

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18th-century regimental military formations that fought each other over the future of New France until 1759. The fort also houses the Musée David A. Stewart, a small and excellent museum of social and military history. E Musée David A. Stewart 20 Chemin Tour de Lille. Tel (514) 861 6701. # 10am–5pm Wed–Mon. ¢ Tue; Dec 25, Jan 1. &

Ile-Notre-Dame g The Jardin Botanique is an oasis of calm away from the rush of the city

Jardin Botanique de Montréal d

Samuel de Champlain’s wife (see p45), Ile-Sainte-Hélène was the site of Expo ’67, the world fair that brought mil4101 Rue Sherbrooke E. Tel (514) lions of visitors to the city 872 1400. m Pius-IX. # May –Oct: in the summer of 1967. 9am–6pm daily; Nov–Apr: 9am–5pm Several reminders of those Tue–Sun. & 8 7 days remain – most notably La Ronde, the fair’s amuseMontreal’s botanical garden is ment park, and the dome that among the largest in the served as the United States world, a fine accomplishment Pavilion. This is now the for this northern city Biosphere, an interwith a brutal climate. pretive center that Its 75-ha (182-acre) examines the Great Lakes and St. Lawenclose 30 outdoor gardens, 10 greenrence River system. houses, a “courtyard Between the dome of the senses” in and the roller coasters which blind is the Fort de l’Ileinterpreters help Sainte-Hélène, built visitors discover the in 1825 to protect touch and smell of Montreal from a Bonsai tree at the potential American exotic flowers, and Jardin Botanique attack. Its red stone a bug-shaped walls enclose a grassy Insectarium full of parade square that is used creepy-crawlies, both preserved and living. Its most today by members of the Olde peaceful havens are the 2.578th Fraser Highlanders and ha (6-acre) Montreal–Shanghai the Compagnie Franche de la Dream Lake Garden, a delight- Marine, re-creations of two ful replica of a 14th-century Ming garden, and the exquisite Japanese Garden.

110 Rue Notre-Dame. Tel (514) 872 6120. £ Central Station. c Terminus V Voyager. m Place d’Armes. # 6am – midnight daily. 7

This 116-ha (286-acre) wedge of land encircled by the St. Lawrence Seaway did not exist until 1967, when it was created with rock excavated for the Montreal métro system. It shared Expo ’67 with Ile-Sainte-Hélène, and today the two islands constitute the Parc-des-Iles. IleNotre-Dame’s most popular attraction by far is the monumental Casino de Montréal, a province-owned gambling hall housed in the old French and Quebec pavilions. Every day, thousands line up at its tables and slot machines. The casino never closes. There are more refined entertainments – a rowing basin, excavated for the 1976 Olympics, superb floral gardens, and a carefully filtered body of water, which is the site of the city’s only swimming beach.

Ile-Sainte-Hélène f 20 Chemin Tour de Lille. Tel (514) 872 6120. m Jean Drapeau. g Vieux-Port. # 6am – midnight daily. 7

This small forested island in the middle of the St. Lawrence River has played a major role in Montreal’s emergence as a modern city. Originally named after

Built for Expo ’67, the Biosphere has displays on Canadian river systems

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp349–51 and pp373–5. For transport information see p418

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The province-owned Casino on Ile-Notre-Dame is open to the hopeful 24 hours a day

Ile-Notre-Dame’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, named for the Canadian champion, plays host to Canada’s Formula 1 Grand Prix every June.

Maison SaintGabriel h 2146 Place de Dublin. Tel (514) 935 8136. m Charlevoix. @ 57. # late Jun – Aug: daily; Sep – Jun: Tue – Sun. & 7 8 obligatory.

This isolated little fragment of New France at first appears lost among the apartment buildings of workingclass Pointe-Saint-Charles. It was a farm when the formidable Marguerite Bourgeoys, Montreal’s first schoolteacher and now a canonized saint, bought it in 1668 as a residence for the religious order she had founded in 1655. The house, rebuilt in 1698 after a fire, is a fine example of 17th-century architecture, with thick stone walls and a steeply pitched roof built on an intricate frame of original heavy wooden timbers. Marguerite Bourgeoys and her tireless sisters worked the farm and ran a school on the property for native and colonial children. They also housed and trained the filles du roy (the “king’s daughters”),

orphaned young girls sent abroad to be the women of his new colony. The house’s chapel, kitchen, dormitory, and drawing rooms are full of artifacts dating from the 17th century. These include a writing desk the saint used herself and a magnificent vestment and cope, embroidered in silk, silver, and gold by a wealthy hermit who lived in a hut on the property.

Lachine j Blvd. St. Joseph. Tel (514) 873 2015. m Lionel Groulx. @ 191.

Lachine comprises a suburb of southwest Montreal and includes a small island of the same name west of the Lachine Rapids, where the St. Lawrence River widens to form Lac-SaintLouis. Lachine is now part of Montreal, but has a long history of its own. The old town along Blvd. Saint-Joseph is charming. Many of its fine old homes have become restaurants and bistros with outdoor terraces that overlook Parc René-Lévesque and the lake. One of the oldest houses, built by merchants in 1670, is now the Musée de Lachine, a historical museum and art gallery. The Fur Trade at Lachine National Historic

Site is a building dedicated to

the fur trade, which for years was Montreal’s main support. The Lachine Canal, built in the 19th century to bypass the rapids, links the town directly to the Vieux-Port. The canal itself is now blocked to shipping, but the land along its banks has been turned into parkland with a bicycle trail. E Musée de Lachine 110 Chemin de LaSalle. Tel (514) 634 3471 ext. 346. # Mar–Dec: 11:30am– 4:30pm Wed – Sun. 8 reserve. E Fur Trade at Lachine

National Historic Site 1255 Blvd. St. Joseph. Tel (514) 637 7433. # Apr – mid-Oct: daily; midOct–Nov: Wed–Sun. & 7 8

A view of the historical Musée de Lachine from the reclaimed canal

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QUEBEC CITY AND THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER he heart and soul of French Canada, Quebec City sits overlooking the St. Lawrence River on the cliffs of Cap Diamant. As provincial capital, the city is the seat of regional government, and nowadays is the heart of French-Canadian nationalism. Parisian in atmosphere, with every tiny street worth visiting, Quebec City is almost entirely Frenchspeaking. The European ambiance, architecture, and the city’s crucial historical importance all contributed to it being named as a United Nations World Heritage Site in 1985. One of the

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world’s great waterways, the St. Lawrence River is home to rare marine wildlife. Right and minke whales swim as far upstream as Tadoussac and feed at the mouth of the Saguenay River. The Laurentian Mountains rise up above the St. Lawrence on the north shore, a year-round natural playground. Nearer Quebec City, the rich scenery of the Charlevoix region is among the most beautiful in the country, contrasting with the soaring cliffs and wilderness of the Gaspé Peninsula. Offshore, Ile d’ Anticosti is a stunning nature preserve.

SIGHTS AT A GLANCE Historic Towns and Cittie es e

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The historic architecture of Quebec City’s Lower Town

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Street-by-Street: Quebec City One of the oldest communities on the American continent, Quebec City was discovered as an Iroquois village by the French explorer Jacques Cartier and founded as a city in 1608 by explo p45). The British city and the rest of Abraham battle 1759. Today the t of French Canad Basse-Ville, or Lo vated in the 1970 and cafés, it is a

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. Basilique Notre-Damede-Québec This 1647 cathe-

Musée du Fort Military history is brought to life her sound-and-light s reenacting six Qu sieges and battles, numerous war re

Holy Trinity Ang Cathedral An elegant 1804 s Classical façade c an English oak in Château Quebec City’s landmark has ri city since 1893, and has 600 luxurious guest rooms.

Suggested route

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp351–2 and pp376–7. For transport information see p421

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E D A M

Musée de la Civilisation Human history through the ages is explored in this airy modern building linked to historic houses in the rest of the town, includ-

STAR SIGHTS

. Place Royale . Basilique Notre-Dame

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 167,500. k 16 km (10 miles) west of the city. £ 450 Rue de Gare-du-Palais. c 320 Rue Abraham-Martin. g 10 Rue des Traversiers. n 835 Avenue WilfridLaurier (418) 641 6654. _ Winter Carnival (Jan–Feb); Summer Festival (Jul). www.quebecregion.com

lace Royale rtual microcosm anadian history, e Royale has expeced a renaissance, the surrounding ts, with their 18th19th-century itecture, have sandblasted to their nal glory.

his home built he decorative ebec silverware howing how well-to-do families lived in the 18th and 19th centuries.

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Quebec City Containing the only walled city north of the Rio Grande, Quebec City has narrow cobblestone streets and 18th-century buildings that lend a European air to this small provincial capital, just 55 square km (21 square miles). Most of the sights are packed into one accessible corner, above and below the Cap Diamant cliffs, with the Citadel rising up protectively at the top of the cliff. As Quebec’s capital, the city is home to the provincial parliament, the Assemblée Nationale, which conducts its debates almost entirely in French in splendid chambers behind the ornate early 19thcentury façade of the grandiose Hôtel du Parlement.

P Assemblée Nationale Ave. Honoré-Mercier & Grande Allée E. Tel (418) 643 7239. 7 8 daily.

The Assemblée Nationale, Quebec’s provincial parliament, meets just outside the walls of the Old City in this graceful Second-Empire building, completed in 1886 as a showcase of provincial history. Niches along the imposing façade and up the sides of the tall central tower display 22 bronze figures, each representing a person who played a vital role in Quebec’s development. The first inhabitants of the territory are honored in a bronze rendition of a First Nations family by the main door. Inside, the blue chamber is the hub of Quebec’s political activity. P Fortifications de Québec Tel (418) 648 7016. # Apr–Oct: daily. & 7

Château Frontenac dominates the skyline of Quebec City

Exploring Quebec City

Most of the main sights are easily reached on foot. The city can conveniently be divided into three parts. Basse-Ville, or Lower Town, is the oldest part, and rambles along the St. Lawrence River at the foot of Cap Diamant. Above lies the walled city, Haute-Ville, or Upper Town. This area is full of shops and restaurants, similar to the Basse-Ville, but both Catholic and Protestant cathedrals are here, as is the imposing Château Frontenac. Beyond the walls stretches Grande Allée, with the Hôtel du Parlement where the provincial parliament of Quebec sits.

freezing Quebec winter, the municipal authorities install an ice slide for toboggans on the terrace, known as Les Glissades de la Terrasse. Y Parc des Champs-

de-Bataille 835 Ave. Wilfrid Laurier. Tel (418) 648 4071. # daily. 7

Once a battlefield where the future of Canada was decided, the National Battlefields Park is now a delightful grassy recreation ground, with grand monuments and a dedicated fountain the only clues to the area’s bloody and dramatic history. On September 13, 1759, British regJoan of Arc at Parc-des- ulars under GenChamps de Bataille P Terrasse Dufferin eral James Wolfe Sweeping along the defeated the top of Cap Diamant from French army on this clifftop Château Frontenac to the field, the Plains of Abraham, edge of the Citadel, this just outside the walls of boardwalk is well equiped Quebec (see pp46–7), estabwith benches and kiosks, and lishing permanent British rule offers unmatched views of the in Canada. In 1908, the 100ha (250-acre) battlefield was St. Lawrence River, the Laurentian Mountains, and Ile turned into one of the largest d’Orleans. During the urban parks in North America.

After a century of peace, the fortifications that had secured Quebec since their completion by the British in 1760 were transformed in the 1870s from a grim military necessity into this popular attraction. On the city’s northern and eastern edges, low ramparts studded with cannons defend the clifftop, with the walls on the western side reaching 2.5 m (10 ft). Two elegant gates, the Saint-Jean and the SaintLouis, pierce the western stretch. Visitors can walk along the top of the walls for 4 km (3 miles).

Quebec’s 18th-century fortifications in the Parc d’Artillerie

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new and restored modern attractions. Boat cruises downriver to the Chute Montmorency waterfalls (see p139) are available. Waterfront walks pass chic boutiques, apartment blocks, the city’s concert stadium, and shops in trendy warehouse settings.

18th-century merchant’s house. The museum also uses another nearby 18th-century house, Maison Chevalier, for displaying Quebec architecture and furniture in period setting. Museum exhibits include “Encounters with the First Nations,” and the remains of a 250-year-old French flatbottomed boat. Many exhibits are hands-on, and, during workshops for families, participants are encouraged to try on costumes from different eras.

E Musée de la Civilisation 85 Rue Dalhousie. Tel (418) 643 2158. # late Jun– early Sep: daily; late Sep–early Jun: Tue –Sun. & 8 7 www.mcq.org Abundant produce stalls draw crowds at the market in Vieux Port

P Vieux Port n 100 Quai Saint Andre. Tel (418) 648 3300. 7

This delightful area has its focus around the old harbor northeast of the walled city. In contrast to the crammed heritage of much of the Lower Town, Vieux Port is an airy riverside walking site, full of

Top contemporary Canadian architect Moshe Safdie designed this modern limestone and glass building in BasseVille to house Quebec’s museum of history and culture. Although highly upto-date in feel, the construction has won several prizes for blending in well with its historic surroundings. Three heritage buildings are part of the museum’s structure including Maison d’Estebe, an

Antique and modern architecture of the Musée de la Civilisation

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P Place Royale Rue Saint Pierre. Tel (418) 646 3167.

Of all the squares in Canada, Place Royale has undoubtedly the most history. Samuel de Champlain, the founder of Quebec, planted his garden on this site, and the French colonial governor Frontenac turned it into a market in 1673. A bust of Louis XIV was installed in 1686, and the square was named Place Royale. Today it remains much as it did in the 18th century, exuding an air of elegance and delicate grandeur. A cobblestone court in the center of BasseVille, Place Royale is surrounded by steep-roofed early 18th-century buildings with pastel-colored shutters that were once the homes of wealthy traders. The square declined in the 19th century but is now fully restored and a favorite for street performers.

A familiar landmark of the city, the 600-room Château Frontenac hotel

P Place d’Armes

French colonial soldiers once used this attractive, grassy square just north of Château Frontenac as a parade ground, but its uses today are more congenial. Open horse-drawn carriages wait here to offer visitors a journey that reveals the square in all its charm. In the center, the Monument de la Foi commemorates the 300th anniversary of the 1615 arrival of Catholic Recollet missionaries. On the southwest corner next to the fine Anglican cathedral, lies the grand early 19thRue du Petit Champlain bustling with shoppers century Palais de Justice. The Musée E Rue du Petit Champlain du Fort opposite contains a below Dufferin Terrace in Old City. large scale model of Quebec Tel (418) 692 2613. 7 partial. City in the 19th century. www.quartierpetitchamplain.com

The aptly named Escalier Casse-Cou, or Breakneck Stairs, descends from Haute-Ville past several levels of gift shops to end on this narrow little walkway in the oldest part of the town. French artisans built homes here as early as the 1680s, and Irish dockworkers moved to the area in the 19th century. Much of the historic architecture remained, but the area fell into decline early in the 20th century. The workers’ homes have been transformed into 50 art and speciality shops and restaurants, and the short pedestrian walkway has become one of the liveliest spots in old Quebec City. While often crowded, some interesting boutiques can be found.

P Château Frontenac 1 Rue des Carrières. Tel (418) 692 3861. 7 (See p352)

The steep, green copperroofed landmark that dominates the skyline of Old Quebec is a luxury hotel, built by the Canadian Pacific Railway on the heights overlooking the St. Lawrence River. In the 19th century, US architect Bruce Price designed the hotel as a French-style château on a huge scale, with dozens of turrets, towers, and a high copper roof studded with rows of dormer windows. Building continued for almost a century after the first section of the hotel was opened in 1893, with a final part completed in 1983. Made from

brick and stone, the hotel now has over 600 rooms. The public salons are sumptuous and elegant; Salon Verchère and the Champlain are the most visited. R Basilique Notre-Dame-de-

Québec Place de l’Hôtel de Ville. Tel (418) 694 0665. # 7:30am– 4pm daily. 7

This magnificent cathedral is the principal seat of the Roman Catholic archbishop of Quebec, whose diocese once stretched from here to Mexico. Fire destroyed the first two churches on the site before 1640, and the first cathedral built here was torn down by the British in 1759. A fourth version burned down in 1922. The present cathedral replaced it in the style of the 1647 original. Some modern materials, including concrete, steel, and plaster, have been used to re-create the light feel; glowing stained-glass windows, richly gilded decoration, and the graceful baldachin over the main altar add to the effect.

Imposing façade of the BasiliqueNotre-Dame-de-Québec

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P Rue du Trésor off Place d’Armes.

This tiny alley just across rue de Buade from Holy Trinity cathedral is something of a Quebecois institution. Closed to cars, the little street is packed in summer with visitors eager to have their portraits drawn, painted, or caricatured by the dozens of street artists who gather here. Browsing for sketches and watercolors of Quebec scenes can be fun. R Holy Trinity Anglican

Cathedral 31 Rue des Jardins. Tel (418) 692 2193. # daily. 7

After worshiping for nearly a century in the city’s Catholic The Hôtel de Ville seen from the small park in its grounds churches, in 1804 the Anglicans antiques, including Louis XIII the focus for the city’s people. of Quebec finally had their furniture, scientific instruments, The small park here holds own cathedral built at state theater performances in the paintings, and embroideries, expense. Their new mother are displayed in the church was the first summertime and is a meeting Anglican cathedral place for festival-goers. Musée des Ursulines outside Britain and within the monastery. is modeled on P Séminaire de Québec The museum also tells the story of the 2 Côte de la Fabrique. Tel (418) 692 London’s huge Neonuns’ educational 2843. # summer. 8 obligatory. Classical St. Martin’s in the Fields. To this & 7 and missionary achievements. Mère In 1663, the first bishop of day, gifts from England remain, Marie completed the Quebec, Francois Laval, built a seminary next to his catheincluding the prayer first Huron, AlgonReliquary l from f the h Ursuline Convent dral to train Catholic priests book and Bible donquin and Iroquois ated by the British dictionaries. Copies for his huge diocese. Over the King George III. Cut from are on display, along with emcenturies it has been added to the King’s Windsor Forest in broidery and liturgical clothes and now forms a graceful England, the pews are of oak, from the 17th to 19th centuries. complex of 17th-, 18th-, and 19th-century buildings cenand the eight-bell peal is the P Hôtel de Ville oldest in Canada. In the sumtered on a peaceful courtyard. mer artists and artisans fill the Côte de la Fabrique. Tel (418) 691 Within the seminary, visitors 4606. # Interpretive Centre: late can admire the excellent 18thverdant church grounds. Jun–Sep: daily; Oct–Jun: Tue–Sun. 7 century paneling that covers R Monastère des Ursulines This imposing building stands the walls of the chapel. The Rue Donnacona. Tel (418) 694 0694. at the western end of the rue Musée de l’Amérique Française # daily. 7 de Buade, a popular gathering is part of the complex and In 1639, Mère Marie de place for Quebec artists offer- has a wonderfully eclectic coll’Incarnation brought the Ursu- ing their wares. Built in 1833, lection, including a converted line order of nuns to Quebec and still the town hall to the chapel decorated with fascicity, it is the grounds that are and oversaw the construction nating wooden trompe l’oeils. in 1641 of the nunnery, which later burned down. Today, visitors can see the Saint-Augustin and Saint-Famille wings, which date from a period of rebuilding between 1686 and 1721. Surrounded by fruit orchards, the charming complex has gradually evolved over the past four centuries. One of the buildings is North America’s oldest girls’ school. Nearly a hundred nuns still live and work here, so access is limited. The beautifully decorated chapel and French The 19th-century interior of the chapel at the Séminaire de Québec

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La Citadelle Both the French and British armies contributed to the building of this magnificent fort. The French started construction in 1750, with work completed in 1831 by the British. The purpose of the fort was to Regimental stained defend Quebec against an Amglass beaver badge erican attack that never came. Today the fortifications are a pleasant walkway that provides a tour around the star-shaped fortress. The Citadelle is home to the famous French Canadian regiment the Royal 22e (Van Doos). Becaus military barrac perform their d well as their p

The Fortifications From the mid-19th century, the Citadelle served as the eastern flank of Quebec City’s defenses.

Cap Diamant is th

highest point of t Cape Diamond cl from which the Lo Town descends.

Governor-Gen This splendid m its double centr and marble ha official home of governors-gene 19th century.

Cape Diamond Redoubt The oldest building in the Citadelle, the Redoubt dates back to 1693 when it was built under the leadership of the French Count Frontenac as a first citadel for Quebec. Now home to relics of war, the Redoubt offers fine views of the St. Lawrence River.

Chapel A key part of the fortress, this private chapel used to be a British powder magazine and is now used for ceremonial purposes.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp351–2 and pp376–7. For transport information see p421

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 1 Cote de la Citadelle. Tel (418) 694 2815. # daily. & 7 ^ in museum. = - 8 obligatory. www.lacitadelle.qc.ca

. Changing of the Guard, Parade Square Every day from June to Labour Day, the Changing of the

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a wder 1750, 88 wder.

STAR SIGHTS

. Changing of the Guard

. Dalhousie Gate

. Dalhousie Gate One of the original structures remaining from the 19th century, Dalhousie Gate is surrounded by portholes and gun fittings. These helped the four-pointed fortress to cover its north, south, and west flanks with defensive fire.

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Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré

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One of Canada’s most sacred places, the shrine to the mother of the Virgin Mary was originally built in the 17th century. In 1650 a group of sailors who landed here after surviving a shipwreck vowed to build a chapel in honor of Saint Anne, the patron saint of those in shipwrecks. Over 1.5 million visitors now visit every year, including an annual pilgrimage on Saint Anne’s Feastday on July 26. This medieval-style basilica was built in the 1920s, and was the fifth church to be built on this site. In the entrance stand two columns of crutches, testimony to the faith of generations of Roman Catholics. The dome-vaulted ceiling is decorated with gold mosaics portraying the life of Saint Anne. She is represented in a large gilt statue in the Stained-glass transept, cradling the Virgin Mary. windows show the progress of pilgrims through the shrine, with the rose window as centerpiece.

PLAN OF THE SHRINE 1 2 3

Basilica 4 Monastery 5 Church store

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Statue of Saint Anne The focus of the upper floor, the richly decorated statue sits in front of the relic of Saint Anne, presented to the shrine by Pope John XXIII in 1960.

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THE BASILICA In 1876, Saint Anne was proclaimed patron saint of Quebec, and in 1887 the existing church was granted basilica status. The Redemptorist order became the guardians of the shrine in 1878.

Bright mosaic floor tiles echo ceiling patterns

Entrance to Basilica’s upper floor

. The Basilica There has been a church on this site since 1658. In 1922, the previous basilica burned down. Today’s version was built in 1923 and consecrated in 1976.

STAR SIGHTS

. The Basilica . Pietà

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp351–2 and pp376–7. For transport information see p421

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 3,400. Quebec City. n 10018 Av. Royale (418) 827 3781. 7 ^ during mass. 8 9am during summer. www.ssadb.qc.ca

Montmorency Falls at Ile d’Orléans, Quebec’s most dramatic waterfall

. Pietà A faithful copy of Michelangelo’s original in St. Peter’s, Rome, this shows Christ at his death.

Parc de la Chute Montmorency and Ile d’Orléans 3 n Montmorency Falls (418) 663 3330. # 8:30am–11pm daily. 7 mid-Apr– Oct. n Ile d’Orléans Tourist Centre, 490 Cote du Pont, St. Pierre (418) 828 9411.

Located 7 km (4.5 miles) east of Quebec City, Montmorency Falls is Quebec’s most celebrated waterfall. Higher than Niagara Falls, the cascade is created as the Montmorency River empties out into the St. Lawrence River – a total of 30 m (100 ft) higher than the 56-m (175-ft) plunge of Niagara Falls from the Niagara River to Lake Ontario. The park surrounding the Falls offers several ways to view the cascade; a suspension bridge, an aerial tram, and, for the fit and fearless, a series of trails that climb the surrounding cliffs. A modern bridge nearby crosses the river to the Ile d’Orléans. This richly fertile island is covered with flowers, strawberry fields, and flourishing farmland. Sprinkled with villages, it gives a fascinating look at rural life in Quebec.

UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve because of its fine examples of boreal forest, the area is a slim band of flowery rural beauty on the southern edge of tundra that stretches northward. Gentle valleys protect old towns reaching to the river, with coastal villages sheltering beneath tall cliffs. Lying in a fertile valley is the exceptionally pretty BaieSaint-Paul, its streets lined with historic houses and inns. Just 35 km (21 miles) north of Baie-Saint-Paul lies the Parc des Grands Jardins, a vast expanse of lakes and blackspruce taiga forest with a herd of caribou. Small mountains offer walking and hiking. Farther downstream is the tiny and tranquil island Ileaux-Coudres. The lush, green farmland here is sprinkled with historic farms and a windmill. P Parc des Grands Jardins Rte. 381. Tel (418) 439 1227. # May– Oct: daily; Nov– Apr: Sat & Sun. 7

Charlevoix Coast 4 n 166 Blvd. de Comporte, La Malbaie (418) 665 4454. www.tourisme-charlevoix.com

Basilica interior Lit by sun streaming through the stained-glass windows, the cream and gold interior is decorated in every corner.

The Charlevoix Coast runs 200 km (130 miles) along the north shore of the St. Lawrence River, from Sainte-Annede-Beaupré in the west to the mouth of the Saguenay. A

Moulin de L’lle-aux-Coudres, in the Charlevoix region

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The town of Tadoussac at the confluence of the St. Lawrence and Saguenay rivers

Tadoussac 5 * 850. c g n 197 Rue des Pionniers (418) 235 4977.

Lined with boutiques, the old streets of this little town make a gentle start to exploring the local stretch of the St. Lawrence River. In 1600, French traders picked the village as the site of the first fur-trading post in Canada, noticing that for generations native Indians had held meetings here to trade and parley. In the 19th century, even while the fur trade was still a force, steamships began to transport well-heeled tourists to the village for a taste of its wilderness beauty. Justifying two centuries of tourism, the scenery here is magnificent. Backed by rocky cliffs and towering sand dunes, Tadoussac’s waterfront faces over the estuary at the confluence of the St. Lawrence and Saguenay rivers. In the town, the re-creation of the original 17th-century fur-trading post and the oldest wooden church in Canada, the Petite Chapelle built in 1747, are popular.

However, the main attraction in Tadoussac lies offshore. Whalewatching tours offer trips into the estuary to see many species at close quarters. The thriving natural conditions in the estuary support a permanent colony of white beluga whales, which are joined in summer by minke, fin, and blue whales.

Saguenay River 6 £ Jonquière. c Chicoutimi. n 455 Rue Racine Est (418) 543 9778. www. tourismesaguenaylacsaintjean.net

The Saguenay River flows through the world’s southernmost natural fjord. This was formed from a retreating glacier splitting a deep crack in the Earth’s crust during the last Ice Age, 10,000 years ago. Inky waters, 300 m (985 ft) deep in places, run for 155 km (95 miles) beneath cliffs that average 450 m (1,500 ft) in height. Due to the exceptional depth, ocean liners can travel up to Chicoutimi on the river. Running from Lac St. Jean to the St. Lawrence estuary, the Saguenay is best known for

Waterside view of a section of the deep Saguenay fjord For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp351–2 and pp376–7

its lush borderlands and the wildlife that thrives in its lower reaches. Much of the pretty Bas Saguenay, the southern half of the river, is a federal marine park. Most visitors take a tour to view the colony of a thousand whales that live here. Beautiful views of the length of the fjord are available on the western shore at Cap Trinité, a cliff that rises 320 m (1,050 ft) over the channel, with a wellknown 10-m (33-ft) statue of the Virgin Mary surveying the scenery from the lowest ledge.

Chicoutimi 7 Saguenay. * 64,600. £ Jonquière. c Chicoutimi. n 455 Rue Racine Est (418) 543 9778.

Snug in the crook of mountains on the western shore of the Saguenay, Chicoutimi is one of northern Quebec’s most expansive towns, despite its modest population. The cultural and economic center of the Saguenay region, Chicoutimi’s waterfront district has now been restored. A stroll along the riverside offers good views of the surrounding mountains and the confluence of the Chicoutimi, Du-Moulin, and Saguenay rivers. Once a center for the paper trade, Chicoutimi still features a large pulp mill, the Pulperie de Chicoutimi. Although no longer operational, the plant can be toured, and an adjacent museum shows visitors the intricacies of this long-standing Quebecois industry, which once supplied most of North America’s paper needs. P Pulperie de Chicoutimi 300 Dubuc. Tel (418) 698 3100. # late Jun–Sep: 9am–6pm daily. 7

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A Tour of Lac-Saint-Jean

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In the midst of the rocky, spruce-covered wilderness that characterizes central Quebec, LacSaint-Jean is an oasis of tranquillity. Dairy farms, charming villages such as Chambord, and warm sandy beaches border the lake itself, which covers 1,350 sq km (520 sq miles). The lake and its rolling green landscape fill a crater-sized basin left by advancing glaciers at the end of the last Ice Age. Tiny rivers flow to the lake and tumble dramatically down the basin’s steep walls into the blue waters, to be reborn as the source of the Saguenay River. 0 km

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TIPS FOR DRIVERS Starting point: Chambord. Length: 230 km (144 miles ). Getting around: This is a long, though relaxed drive, and the road is well maintained. Inns and restaurants offer rest on the way in most towns and villages, including Mashteuiatsh. Small side roads make peaceful diversions.

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Sailing and swimming are top activities here, especially for children and families.

Dolbeau 5

Most visitors to Dolbeau arrive in July for the ten-day Western Festival, which features rodeos and cowboys in Stetsons.

Mashteuiatsh, Pointe-Bleu 4

This Montagnais Indian village is open to visitors who can see at first hand age-old methods of carving, hunting, weaving, and cooking. Roberval 3

This little village has a charming waterfront, from which spectators can see the finish of the swimming contest to cross the lake, which has taken place each July since 1946.

Village Historique de Val-Jalbert 2

This outdoor museum is dominated by the 70-m (200ft) Ouiatchouan waterfall, which once acted as power for a pulp mill here in the 1920s.

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Daniel Johnson Hydroelectric Dam, north of Baie-Comeau

Baie-Comeau 9 * 26,700. ~ c g n 337 La Salle (418) 294 2876.

This small town owes its entire existence to the US newspaper, the Chicago Tribune, which in 1936 built a mill near the mouth of the Manicougan River to supply its newspaper presses with paper. Declared a historic district in 1985, Baie-Comeau’s oldest area is the Quartier Amélie, with rows of fine homes and an impressive hotel dating from the 1930s. Paper production remains a vital industry in this area, but Baie-Comeau is most important today as a gateway to the enormous Manic-Outardes hydroelectric power complex, situated along Hwy 389, from 22 km (14 miles) to 200 km (130 miles) north of town. The most spectacular example is Manic-5, 190 km (115 miles) from BaieComeau. Its gracefully arched Daniel Johnson Dam holds back a vast reservoir that fills a crater geophysicists believe might have been created by a meteorite several millennia ago.

companies to use as a base for expanding the iron mining industry in northern Quebec. Now the largest town along the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Sept-Iles has turned into Canada’s second largest port as part of the St. Lawrence Seaway. A boardwalk along the waterfront offers visitors the chance to see the large ships in action, and to observe close-up the workings of a busy modern dock. Although boasting the best of modern marine technology, the town also offers a reminder of its long-standing history. Vieux Poste near the center of the town is a fine reconstruction of a native trading post, where the original inhabitants of the area met to barter furs with French merchants. A small museum with aboriginal art and artifacts sells native crafts. Despite its industrial importance, Sept-Iles is an area of considerable natural beauty.

Sept-Iles 0 * 29,000. £ c g n 1401 Boulevard l’Aure (418) 962 1238.

Until the 1950S, Sept-Iles led a quiet existence as a historic, sleepy fishing village. However, after World War II, the little settlement, set on the shores of a large, circular bay, drew the attention of large

Sept-Iles from the air, showing the bustling dock in action

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp351–2 and pp376–7

Miles of sandy beaches rim the nearby coastline, and the salmon-rich Moisie River flows into the Gulf of St. Lawrence just 20 km (12 miles) east of the town. The seven rocky islands that gave the city its name make up the Sept-Iles Archipelago Park. Ideal for campers and hikers with its beaches and nature trails, one of the seven islands, Ile Grand-Basque, is a popular local camping spot. Another small island, Ile du Corossol, has been turned into a bird sanctuary that teems with gulls, terns, and puffins, and can be toured with a guide. Cruises are available for guided trips between islands.

Mingan Archipelago and Ile d’Anticosti q c Sept-Iles. g Sept-Iles. n 1401 Boulevard l’Aure (418) 962 1238.

Barely visited until recently, this unspoiled and unsettled area is fast gaining in popularity for its harsh landscape, rich wildlife, and untouched ecosystems. In 1984, the Mingan Archipelago islands became Canada’s first insular national park. Puffins, terns, and several gull species find refuge in the Mingan Archipelago Wildlife Park, which comprises all 40 of the Mingan Islands that scatter along the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Gray, harbor, and harp seals all cluster along the tiny coves and bays, and fin whales are occasional visitors. As well as the abundant wildlife, the islands are famous for their bizarre monoliths. Eroded over many centuries by the sea, these limestone carvings have surreal shapes. The bestknown rocks look strikingly like flowerpots, with grasses sprouting from their peaks. Visitors can book a trip to admire this unique manifestation of nature by boat. Until 1974, the Ile d’Anticosti, east of the archipelago, was private property – all 8,000 sq km (3,090 sq miles) of it. The past owner, French chocolate tycoon Henri Menier, bought

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“Flowerpot” limestone monoliths at Mingan Archipelago National Park

the island in 1895 and stocked along hilly streets, and its old 18th-century cottages have an it with a herd of white-tailed e deer for his friends to hunt. appealing French atmosphere. From the peak of the old town, Now numbering 120,000, the n 128 Chemin du Debarcadere, deer herd is firmly ensconced views across the river valley Cap-aux-Meules (418) 986 2245. but can still be hunted. are lovely. Other www.tourismeilesdelamadeleine.com Wildlife abounds; villages in this area feature over 150 species unusual attrac- The few fishing families of bird live in who make their homes on the relatively tions. Farther unspoiled foralong the main this remote archipelago in the Route 32, Trois- middle of the huge gulf of St. est and on the Lawrence have taken to paintPistoles boasts a beaches. The Seal at Ile d’Anticosti history that goes ing their cottages in an assortvillage of Port ment of mauves, yellows, and Menier has 300 residents back to 1580, when Basque reds. The river gives striking and acts as the local ferry whalers arrived. The offshore terminus and lodging center. Ile-aux-Basques was a whaling views of the little communities on their low-lying, windswept station in the 16th century, islands, but the islands themand today can be visited to w tour the nature preserve in its selves have more to offer the visitor who makes the boat place. Toward the region’s trip to see them. As well as £ Rivière-du-Loup. c Rivière-ducommercial center, Rimouski, the charming ancient villages, Loup. g Rivière-du-Loup. n Rivière- lies Parc Bic, a small preserve they are home to what are du-Loup (418) 867 3015, 1 888 825 of 33 square km (13 square reputed to be some of the 9125. www.riviereduloup.ca miles) dedicated to the two most relaxing beaches in Canforest zones, deciduous and ada, celebrated for their fine Communities here can trace boreal, it encloses, and its sand and sheltered position. their roots back to the old varied coastal wildlife. 18th-century settlers of New France. Dotted along the flat, fertile farmland of the south shore of the St. Lawrence River west of Gaspé and inland toward Montreal, the villages cover the area between the region’s largest towns of Montmagny and Rimouski. Rivière-du-Loup, a seemingly unremarkable town in this stretch, provides for many people a taste of true Quebec. Featuring an ancient stone church that rears above the skyline, the old town rambles Painted fisherman’s cottage on L’ Ile-du-Havre-Aubert, Iles-de-la-Madeleine

Iles-de-laMadeleine

South Shore

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Gaspé Peninsula Tour

r

Popularly known as La Gaspésie, the Gaspé Peninsula stretches out north of New Brunswick to offer Quebec’s wildest and most appealing scenery. As the peninsula spreads east, clumps of trees become dense pine forests, and the landscape becomes rough and rocky; cliffs along the northern coast reach 500 m (1,500 ft). The Chic-Choc mountains reach heights of 1,300 m (4,000 ft) and provide some of the province’s best hiking. Shielded by the mountains, the southern coast harbors 18th-century fishing villages, inland fruit farms, exotic gardens, and wilderness national parks.

Parc National de la Gaspésie 3

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Starting at the confluence of two excellent salmonfishing rivers, the picturesque Matapédia Valley is crisscrossed by covered bridges. Concealing longestablished fruit farms, the valley’s elm and maple trees show stunning fall colors.

Founded in 1766 by Acadians fleeing the Great Expulsion in Nova Scotia (see pp62–3), Carleton today is a pleasant, relaxed resort town. Quality hotels and restaurants line the airy streets, and many visitors enjoy the mild coastal climate.

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TIPS FOR DRIVERS The main road on this tour is Hwy 132, which follows the coastline from Grand Métis along the peninsula in a round trip. While too long to complete in a day, the journey can be broken in many of the local villages. Trips into the interior on the secondary road 299 are ideal for seeing the rocky wilderness.

The entrance to Gaspé’s park and the wildlife reserves of the Chic-Chocs, this 19th-century ill

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Situated out to sea south of the small town of Percé, this famous pierced landmark is the result of tidal erosion. In the 1930s, Percé became a popular spot for Canadian artists and still contains many galleries.

Tour route Other roads M Camp grounds n Visitor information J Viewpoint

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SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN QUEBEC

he vast area of land that stretches across Quebec from the Ontario boundary to historic Quebec City is rewarding in its diversity. In the south, the rich hilly farmland of the Appalachians and scarlet forests of maple trees attract many visitors each year, while the stark beauty of Nunavik’s icy northern coniferous forests bursts into a profusion of wildflowers in spring, alongside the

largest hydroelectric projects in the world. The center of the region is Quebec’s natural playground, the Laurentian Mountains, a pristine lake-filled landscape offering fine skiing on ancient mountains. Populated by native people until Europeans arrived in the 16th century, the area was fought over by the French and British until the British gained power in 1759. Today French-speakers dominate.

SIGHTS S AT A GLANCE Nationa nal al Parks

Parc Nat National de laa Mauricie 5 Historic Towns and Cities

Gatineau w Joliette 7 O 9 Oka Rouyn-Noranda ora oranda

Sherbrooke 2 Sainte-Croix 3 Terrebonne 8 Trois is R Rivières viè è 6 Val d d’Or Orr r Historic Sites and Areas of Natural Beauty

Lac Memphrémagog 1 Laurentian Mountains q Nunavik (not shown on map) u Reserve Faunique La Vérendrye e

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Church by Lac Memphrémagog

Lac Memphrémagog 1 c Magog. g Magog. n 55 Cabana St., Magog 1 (800) 267 2744. www.tourismememphremagog.com

This area belongs to the Eastern Townships, or the “Garden of Quebec” that stretches from the Richelieu River valley to the Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont borders in the US. Set among rolling hills, farmland, woods, and lakes in a landscape similar to the Appalachians, the Townships are among Canada’s top maple syrup producers (see pp102–3). Lac Memphrémagog itself is long, narrow, and surrounded by mountains. It even boasts its own monster, a creature named Memphré, first spotted in 1798. The lake’s southern quarter dips into the state of Vermont, so it is no surprise that the British Loyalists fleeing the American Revolution were this region’s first settlers. Their influence can be seen in the late 19th-century redbrick and wood-frame homes of lakeside villages such as enchanting Georgeville and Vale Perkins, and in the resort city of Magog at the northern end of the lake. Benedictine monks from France bought one of the lake’s most beautiful sites in 1912 and established the Abbaye Saint-Benoît-du-Lac. Today the monks produce cider and a celebrated blue cheese called l’Ermite. They are also renowned for Gregorian chant, and visitors can hear them sing mass in the abbey church.

Q U E B E C

Sherbrooke 2

Richelieu Valley 4

* 140,000. ~ c g n 2964 King St. W. 1 (800) 561 8331, (819) 821 1919. www.sdes.ca

n 1080 Chemin des Patriotes Nord, Mont Saint-Hilaire (450) 536 0395, 1 888 736 0395. www.vallee-durichelieu.ca/tourisme

The self-styled “Queen of the Eastern Townships,’’ This fertile valley follows Sherbrooke is indeed this the 130-km (80-mile) Richelieu region’s industrial, commercial, River north from Chambly to Saint-Denis. Fort Chambly, and cultural center. The city lies in a steep-sided valley, also known as Fort St. Louis, with the historic quarter dein the industrial town of lightfully situated among the Chambly along the valley on rolling farmlands of the Saint- the Montreal Plain, is the best François and Magog Rivers. preserved of a series of ancient buildings that The first settlers were British the French erected Loyalists from the New England states. Although to defend this vital their heritage survives waterway from Dutch and British in the fine old homes and garattack. Built from dens of Shersolid stone in brooke’s North Ward 1709 to replace the wooden fortifications and in street names, today the city is overthat the original settlers whelmingly French set up in 1655, the speaking. From the A sign to Fort Chambly fort is well prein the Richelieu Valley town center runs served. A museum the Riverside Trail, in Saint-Denis commemorates Quebecois patriots a lovely waterfront park with 20 km (12 miles) of cycling who fought in the failed 1837 and walking trails along the rebellion against British rule. banks of the Magog River. Today the river flows past attractive villages surrounded by orchards and vineyards; 3 Mont Saint-Hilaire affords fine views of Montreal, and is * 2,600. n 6375 rue Garneau famed for its apple plantations. (418) 926 2620. Its 19th-century church was declared a historic site in 1965 A charming, wooden manor and features paintings by Canhouse with bold sweeping adian Ozias Leduc (see p32). front steps, pillars, and carved P Fort Chambly curlicues is the grandest old 2 Richelieu St., Chambly. Tel 1 (800) house in this pretty riverside 463 6769. # Mar–mid-Jun: 10am– town. It is the centerpiece of 5pm Wed–Sun; mid-Jun–Sep: 10am– Domaine Joly-De-Lotbinière, 5pm daily. ¢ Nov – Feb. & a stunning estate built in 1851 by the local squire (seigneur). The house is surrounded by banks of geraniums and terraces of walnut trees stretching down to the river. Rare plant finds include 20 red oaks estimated to be more than 250 years old. The gardens are best known, however, for cultivating blue potatoes.

Sainte-Croix

P Domaine Joly-De-

Lotbinière Rte. de Pointe-Platon. Tel (418) 926 2462. # Jun–Sep: daily; Oct – May: 11am – 5pm Sat & Sun. & 7 partial.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see p353 and pp377–8

Mont Saint-Hilaire, Richelieu Valley

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Canoeists on Lac Wapizagonke in Parc National de la Mauricie

Parc National de la Mauricie 5 off Hwy 55 N. Shawinigan. Tel (819) 538 3232. £ Shawinigan. # daily. & 7 partial. 8 for a fee. www.parkscanada.pch.gc.ca

Campers, hikers, canoeists, and cross-country skiers love this 536-sq km (207-sq mile) stretch of forest, lakes, and pink Precambrian granite. The park includes part of the Laurentian Mountains (see p151), which are part of the Canadian Shield, and were formed between 950 and 1,400 million years ago. La Mauricie’s rugged beauty is also accessible to motorists, who can take the winding 63-km (40-mile) road between Saint-Mathieu and Saint-Jean-de-Piles. Another great drive starts at Saint-Jean-de-Piles and has good views of the narrow Lac Wapizagonke Valley. With trout and pike in the lake, the area is an angler’s delight. Moose and bear roam wild in the park.

main center of that industry in the province. This fact often hides the rich historical interest that Trois-Rivières has to offer. The first colonists arrived here in 1634 from France and, although not many of the colonial dwellings remain, the city’s charming old section has a number of 18th- and 19th-century houses and shops, many of which have been recently converted into cafés and bars. Ursuline nuns have been working in the city since 1697, and the core of the old city is the Monastère des Ursulines, a rambling complex with a central dome, a chapel, and a little garden that is now a public park. Rue des Ursulines features several little old houses with varying architectural styles.

Trois-Rivières 6 * 52,000. ~ £ c g n 1457 Rue Notre Dame (819) 375 1122, 1 800 313 1123.

Quebec is one of the major paper producers in North America, and Trois-Rivières, a pulp and paper town, is a

The church of the Monastère des Ursulines in Trois-Rivières

Also here is an 18th-century manor house, the 1730 Manoir Boucher-de-Niverville, which contains the local chamber of commerce and rotates displays on the rich history of the area around the Eastern Townships. P Monastère des Ursulines 734 Ursulines. Tel (819) 375 7922. # Mar & Apr: Wed–Sun; May–Oct: Tue –Sun; Nov – Feb: call ahead. &

Joliette 7 * 31,100. c n 500 rue Dollard (450) 759 5013.

Two Catholic priests are responsible for turning the industrial town of Joliette on the Assomption River into a cultural center. In the 1920s, Father Wilfrid Corbeil founded the Musée d’Art de Joliette, whose permanent collection ranges from medieval religious art to modern works. In 1974, Father Fernand Lindsay started the Festival International de Lanaudière, a series of summer concerts by some of the world’s best-known musicians. The nearby town of Rawdon, 18 km (11 miles) west, has a deserved reputation as a place of great natural beauty. Trails wind away from the small town alongside the Ouareau River, leading to the picturesque, rushing Dorwin Falls.

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Terrebonne 8 * 36,680. c g c n 3645 Queen Street (1 866 964 0681).

Just northwest of the outer fringe of Montreal’s suburbs, this historic little town on the Mille-Iles River was founded in 1673, but a fire in 1922 engulfed many of its original buildings. However, some graceful 19th-century homes remain, on rue Saint-FrançoisXavier and rue Sainte-Marie, many of them converted into restaurants and bistros. The town’s real gem is the Ile-desMoulins, a pre-industrial complex of living history in the middle of the Mille-Iles River, with water-powered mills for grinding grain, carding wool, and sawing lumber. One of the biggest buildings on the site is the three-floor factory that was the first largescale bakery in Canada. It was built by the Northwest Company in 1803 to make the saltless ship’s biscuits that sustained the voyageurs who paddled west every year to collect furs for the company. Terrebonne is also the center of Quebec’s horseriding culture. Popular with locals, rodeo and ranching events take place regularly. P Ile-des-Moulins Autoroute 25, exit 22 E. Tel (450) 471 0619. # Jun – Sep:1– 9 pm daily. 7 www.ile-des-moulins.gc.ca

Rue-St-Louis Church in Terrebonne

The Oka ferry as it travels across the Lake of Two Mountains

Oka 9 * 3,840. c g n 183 rue des Anges (450) 479 8337.

Sucrerie de la Montagne 0 10 km South of Rigaud. £ Tel

The prettiest way to approach (450) 451 0831. # year round but call ahead. 7 8 obligatory. & this village north of Montreal www.sucreriedelamontagne.com is on the small ferry that chugs across the Lake of Two This typically Canadian treat Mountains from Hudson. is set in a 50-ha (120-acre) Framed by mountains and maple forest on top of Rigaud orchards, from the water the Mountain near Rang Saintsmall Neo-Romanesque 1878 Georges, Rigaud. It is entirely church is visible through devoted to the many delthe trees. Oka’s bestights of Quebec’s most known religious building famous commodity, the is the Abbaye maple tree and its produce Cistercienne, founded (see pp102–3). The by a group of site features a reconmonks who moved structed 19th-century to Canada from sugar shack, where France in 1881. collected maple The decor of the sap is distilled and abbey church is boiled in large kettles somewhat stark, in to produce the interthe Cistercian tradition, nationally renowned Quebecois Maple Syrup but the Neosyrup. Over 20 rustic Romanesque buildings house a fine architecture is gracebakery, a general store, and fully simple and the comfortable cabins for overgardens peaceful. The night guests. The heart of the abbey shop sells the complex is a huge 500-seat soft Oka cheese that restaurant that serves traditional the monks have devel- banquets of ham, pea soup, oped. Nearby, the Parc baked beans, pork rinds (called d’Oka covers about 20 oreilles du Christ, or Christ’s sq kms (7 sq miles) of ears), and pickles, and dozens of maple-based products, ponds and forests. It features the best beach including syrup, sugar, candies, and campground in the taffy, muffins, f and bread. Folk Montreal area, attractmusic accompanies the nightly ing sports lovers and feast. The tour includes a visitors year-round. thorough explanation of the maple syrup-making process, R Abbaye which is generally thought to Cistercienne have originated with the native 1600 Chemin d’Oka. Tel (450) people. They later imparted 479 8361.# 8am – 8pm their secrets to European Mon –Sat. ¢ lunchtimes; settlers, whose traditional Sun. www.abbayeoka.com methods are still in use today.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see p353 and pp377–8

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Laurentian Mountains Tour This whole region, from the lively resort of Saint-Sauveur-des-Monts in the south to north of Sainte Jovite, is nature’s own amusement park, full of beautiful lakes, rivers, hiking and Cycle sign cycling trails, and ski runs visited all through the year. The mountains are part of the ancient Laurentian Shield and are a billion years old. Dotted with pretty, old French-style towns, this is a superb area to relax in or indulge in some vigorous sports in the many national parks.

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TIPS FOR DRIVERS Although the 175-km round tour of the Laurentian Mountains can be made from Montreal in a day on Hwy 15, the region is best seen and enjoyed by taking advantage of the slower, but more scenic, Hwy 117. There may be traffic congestion at the peak times of July through August and from December to March.

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Plenty of tiny hotels and street cafés add to the charm of this old village.

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he tallest of the Laurentian e with a vertical rise of t 645 m (2,454 ft), his is a popular nternational ur-season resort.

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The largest town the Laurentians pro vides busy café soci all year round. Lac de Sables in town offers beaches and lake cruises. KEY Tour route Other roads

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This enchanting village is a charming introduction to the area, with traditional French homes and churches.

The impressive beauty of Quebec’s thundering Montmorency Falls

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 228,000. k Ottawa International 12 km (8 miles) south of the city. c 200 Tremblay Rd, Ottawa. n La Maison du Tourisme, 103 Rue Laurier (819) 778 2222, 1 800 265 7822. _ Fall Rhapsody (Sep/ Oct). www.outaouais-tourism.ca

Gatineau, until recently known as Hull, is based just across the river from Ottawa in the province of Quebec, and, as a result, many federal bureaucracies have their headquarters here. For years, Gatineau has been a more relaxed and fun-loving counterpart to the capital, Meditation an attitude that reveals itself even in its officialdom – City Hall, for instance, boasts a meditacenter tion center. From Hull’s establishment in 1800, the city’s liquor laws were far more lenient than Ottawa’s, and so this was where Ottawa politicians came to party (the city still has a lower drinking age). Gatineau contains one of Canada’s best museums, the Canadian Museum of Civilization, which provides a fascinating tour of Canada’s history over the past 1,000 years.

to Quebec. From footpaths, drivers’ lanes, and cycle routes, the bridge offers fine views of the river, the Canadian Museum of Civilization, and the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. P Maison du Citoyen 25 Laurier St. Tel (819) 595 7100. # 8:30am–4:30pm Mon–Fri. ¢ public holidays. 7

Y Gatineau Park Hwy 5. Tel (819) 827 2020, 1 800 465 1867. # daily.

P Promenade du Portage

Linked with the city bridges, this main route downtown is a good shopping center with large stores and lively cafés. After dark the area and nearby Place Aubry become the focus of the city’s excellent nightlife.

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Four million visitors a year are lured to this glittering Casino, which is equipped with 1,300 slot machines and 45 gaming

tables. Owned by the Quebec Government, the Casino opened in 1996 and is set in a park full of flowers and fountains.

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1 Casino Blvd. Tel (819) 772 2100, 1 800 665 2274. # 9am–4am daily. 7

Gaming room in the casino

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The heart of this modern complex is a vast atrium, the Agora, meant to serve as an all-weather gathering place for Gatineau’s citizens, as well as an airy meditation center for the city’s workers. Opening from it are City Hall, a library, a theater, and an art gallery.

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This 360 sq km (140 sq miles) oasis of lakes and rolling hills between the Gatineau and Ottawa Rivers is a weekend playground for city residents. The park contains fragments of Gothic buildings, collected by the former Prime Minister, William Lyon MacKenzie-King.

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Canadian Museum of Civilization This museum on the banks of the Ottawa River was built in the 1980s to be the storehouse of Canada’s human history. The architect, Douglas Cardinal, wanted the undulating façades of both buildings to reflect the Canadian landscape. The more curved hall is the Canadian Shield Wing, home to the museum’s offices. The Glacier Wing displays the exhibits. Its entry is stunning; the dramatic interior of the Grand Hall contains a forest of totem poles. Canada Hall traces the progress of the Canadian people from the Vikings through early settlers to the present day. The Children’s Museum is delightfully diverting. A new fourth level is currently being added.

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 100 Laurier St. Tel (819) 776 7000, 1 800 555 5621. # May–mid-Oct: 9am– 6pm daily; mid-Oct–May: 9am–6pm Tue–Sun. & 7 0 - = Δ 4 www.civilization.ca

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. The Grand Hall Lit by Li b windows i d three h stories i high, totem poles from the West Coast line the Grand Hall; each pole tells a native myth in wood carving.

Pacifiic Coast Aboriginal Exhibits W.E. Taylor Salon Grand Hall Gran IMAX/OMNIMAX‘ movie theater

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Rouyn-Noranda t * 26,450. c n 191 Ave. du Lac (819) 797 3195, 1 888 797 3195.

The wildlife preserve of La Vérendrye, seen from the air

Reserve Faunique La Vérendrye e

historic villages from the area’s heritage of lumber trade and mining. Miners have been digging gold, silver, Tel (819) 736 7431. c Maniwaki. and copper out of the ground # summer. 7 partial. around Val d’Or since the 1920s. A climb to the top of the This wildlife preserve is 18-m (60-ft) Tour Rotary on the edge of town shows many stillsituated approximately 471 km (292 miles) to the northwest active mineheads. La Cité de l’Or is a popular of Montreal on Hwy 117. It is celebrated for long, meander- attraction, built around the abandoned Lamaque Golding waterways and streams mine, formerly one of the and, with thousands of kilorichest sources of gold in the meters of canoe trails, is a legend among canoeists. Its area. In its heyrivers are usually g day of the the 13,000 sq km early 20th (5,000 sq miles) century, of wilderness he mine had s very own are home to large mall townnumbers of moose, bear, h a hospital, deer, and ding house single beaver. The land is practically A moose at La Vérendrye workers, and neat streets lined with untouched, but there are several campgrounds little log cabins for married here for those who seek a men and their families. The truly peaceful break. In season, mine managers had more elaborate homes nearby, anglers can try for walleye, pike, lake trout, and bass. and there was a sumptuous guesthouse for visiting Hwy 117 traverses the park, executives. Much of the providing access to many of its lakes and rivers, and is the Village Minier de Bourlamaque remains intact and starting point of hiking trails. was declared a historic site in 1979. Visitors can tour r the village, the old analysis office and laboratories, and * 35,000. c n 1070 3rd Ave. E. the minehead. For an extra (819) 824 9646. fee, fascinating tours in coveralls and helmets are Val d’Or is principally a available down the 90 m mining town and is the major (300 ft) mine shaft. center in the northwestern P La Cité de l’Or part of Quebec. The town 90 Ave. Perrault. Tel (819) 825 7616. sights here are not architec# Jun –Sep: 9am – 6pm daily. & tural but vivid living history 7 partial. attractions of mines and

As with all developed areas in the north of Quebec, towns here are based on heavy industry. Rouyn and Noranda sprang up virtually overnight in the 1920s when prospectors found copper in the region. They merged into one city in 1986 but are quite different places. Noranda on the north shore of Lake Osisko is a carefully planned company town with its own churches and schools, built to house the employees of the now-defunct Noranda copper mine. The lawns and tree-lined streets have an almost English air. Nowadays its residents are likely to be employed in surrounding mines. The Horne Smelter, one of the biggest in the world, is based just outside the center of town and can be visited by arrangement. Rouyn, on the south shore of the lake, is less structured and more commercial. It is also where Noranda residents used to go for recreation, and it is useful as a refreshment and fuel center for those traveling to the northern wilderness. The Maison Dumulon, a reconstruction of Rouyn’s first post office and general store, celebrates its pioneer spirit with displays on the first settlers. P Maison Dumulon 191 Ave. du Lac. Tel (819) 797 7125. # Jun–Sep: daily; Oct–Jun: Mon–Fri. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7

Val d’Or

For hotels and restaurants in this region see p353 and pp377–8

Copper being smelted into huge nuggets for export, Noranda

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Herds of caribou migrate south in summer across the Hudson Bay area into Nunavik

James Bay y n Tourisme Quebec (877) 266 5687.

The thinly populated municipality of James Bay is roughly the size of Germany, which makes it much larger than most other municipalities in the region – about 350,000 square km (135,000 square miles). Its landscape, lakes, scrubby trees, and early preCambrian rock is hardly urban, changing from forest to taiga to tundra and becoming gradually more inaccessible in the frozen northern parts. However, what the region lacks in infrastructure it makes up for amply in power capacity. Its six major rivers, which all flow into the Bay, can produce enough electricity to light up the whole of North America. So far, the Quebec government has spent over Can$20 billion in building a third of the number of dams for what is already one of the biggest hydroelectric projects in the world. Five power plants produce nearly 16,000 megawatts of electricity to power much of Quebec and parts of the northeastern US. Le Grand 2 (known as LG 2) is the biggest dam and underground generating station in the world. The main town in the area is the small settlement of Radisson. A functional but useful tourist center, Radisson

also offers good views of the surrounding country. Not all of the Bay’s 215 dams and dikes can be seen, but the massive dams and series of reservoirs, especially LG 2, which is just east of town, are visible from above.

One of the vast power stations at James Bay

Nunavik u n Association touristique du Nunavik (819) 964 2002, 1 888 594 3424. www.nunavik-tourism.com

In the far north of Quebec, the municipality of Nunavik covers an area slightly larger than continental Spain. Its inhabitants number about 7,000, nearly all of them Inuit, who

live in 14 communities along the shores of Hudson Bay, the Hudson Strait, and Ungava Bay. Nunavik is Quebec’s last frontier, a wild and beautiful land that is virtually inaccessible except by airplane. Caribou herds, polar bears, and musk oxen roam the taiga coniferous forest and frozen Arctic tundra that covers this region. Seals and beluga whales can be found swimming in its icy waters. Kuujjuaq, near Ungava Bay, is Nunavik’s largest district, with a population of just over 1,400. This is a good jumpingoff point for expeditions to the valley of Kangiqsujuaq near Wakeham Bay and the rugged mountains around Salluit. Visitors come to Nunavik and Kuujjuaq to appreciate the many varieties of wildlife which roam freely in their natural setting. Summer is the best time for a trip; temperatures rise, but the ground remains frozen all year round. The region has no railroads (and hardly any roads) and should be explored only in the company of a seasoned and reliable guide. Many Inuit groups and communities offer guide services and the opportunity to experience life on the land with Inuit families. Visitors should be prepared for a very warm welcome and the chance to sample traditional Inuit foods and hospitality.

A man fishing from a small boat in Combermere, Eastern Ontario

Ontario

INTRODUCING ONTARIO 160–165 TORONTO 166–189 OTTAWA AND EASTERN ONTARIO 190–205 THE GREAT LAKES 206–225

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Introducing Ontario The sheer size of Ontario is daunting. It is Canada’s secon largest province, covering over one million square mile stretching all the way from the Great Lakes on the US to the frozen shores of Hudson Bay. Northern Onta relatively inaccessible, but this wild and stunningl beautiful region of turbulent rivers, deep forests Arctic tundra can be reached by air, and by the occasional scenic road and railroad. Much of t north is also sparsely populated, in striking contrast to the fertile lands farther south, a bordering Lake Ontario, which have attra many thousands of immigrants. Both Toronto, Canada’s biggest city, and Niagara Falls, the country’s leadin tourist destination, are here.

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For additional map symbols see back flap

GETTING AROUND Among several highways skirting the northern shore of Lake Ontario, the most important are Hwy 401, heading from Toronto to Montreal in the east and Windsor in the west, and the Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW), running south from Toronto to Niagara Falls. Niagara Falls, Toronto, and Ottawa, are connected by bus and rail. Highway 69/400 runs north from Toronto to the TransCanada Highway at highway 17. Buses also cover northerly routes.

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The Hudson’s Bay Company The Hudson’s Bay Company was incorporated by King Charles II of England on May 2, 1670. His decision was prompted by the successful voyage of the British ship Nonsuch, which returned from the recently discovered The Hudson’s Bay Hudson’s Bay crammed with precious beaver Co. crest furs. The king granted the new company wide powers, including a monopoly of trading rights to a huge block of territory bordering the Bay, then known as Rupert’s Land. The Company was ordered to develop links with the native Americans of Rupert’s Land, and trade took off swiftly. Here fashion played a part the ladies and gentlemen of 18th-century Europe we gripped by a passion the beaver hat, and demand for beav pelts became almost insatiab

European fur couriers rapidly built

up a roaring trade with native fur trappers, which came

LANDS AND TRA From 1670 onward, trading g dispatched from England to the C main trading sites around Hudson Ba stockaded settlements with safe stores merchandise. Larger outposts gradually b self-sufficient, catering to newer, smaller as the Company moved ever westward. B 1750, HBC camps were established at the mouths of all the major rivers flowing into Hudson Bay. James Bay’s Fort Albany had a hospital, a smithy, a cooperage, a canoe-bu jetty, and sheep and cattle barns, while gallan efforts were made to grow crops. Main trading serviced a network of smaller seasonal outposts continued their expansion west until the transfer o land rights to the new country of Canada in 1870. K Trading post Trading route 1670 boundary of Rupert’s Land

The Sevenoaks Massacre of

June 1816 in Ontario occurred when HBC workers clashed with the rival North West Company, and 20 men were killed. The two companies agreed in 1820 to join territories and increased in power.

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English traders assembled a variety of goods to trade with

local tribes in return for the winter’s supply of pelts. Transported by ship in spring, the merchandise ranged from trinkets to antial items including blankets, knives, and guns.

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THE CHANGING FORTUNES OF HBC Until the 1840s HBC reigned supreme in Canada, but civil disobedience led the British to relinquish claims to Washington State and Oregon in 1846, establishing the US border. Unable to continue enforcing its monopoly, HBC sold its land to Canada in 1870, retaining only areas around the trading posts. Since they were in key locations, this boosted HBC’s expansion into real estate and retail in the 20th century. Today HBC is one of Canada’s top companies and chain stores.

The Bay in Vancouver, one of HBC’s modern department stores

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its thickest and most valuable in winter, when the natives ventured out into the ice and snow to trap the animal. In spring Indian trappers delivered bundles of soft pelts to the Company’s trading posts, in exchange for goods.

Company sailboats first carried

materials to trade with native peoples. As the Company grew, it transported building materials, food, and seeds to set up what became sizeable settlements. Ships returned with up to 16,000 beaver pelts.

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The Group of Seven Formed in 1920, the Group of Seven revolutionized Canadian art. Mostly commercial artists working in an Ontario art firm, this small band of painters was inspired by a colleague, Tom Thomson. An avid outdoorsman, Thomson started making trips in 1912 into the wilderness of northern Ontario to produce dozens Tom Thomson, (1877–1917) of brightly colored, impressionistic sketches. His friends realized that he was taking Canadian art in a new direction – these landscapes of their country were largely free of the rigid European focus that had characterized painting until then and a nationalist movement had begun. After World War I and the death of Thomson in 1917, these same friends started the Group and held their first exhibition in Toronto in 1920. Many of the paintings shown depicted Nova Scotian, Ontarian and Quebec wildernesses; a new art was born that forged a sense of national pride between the people and their land in this young country.

Edge of the Forest (1919) by Frank Johnston is just

one of the Group’s works that illustrates their statement: “Art must grow and flower in the land before the country will be a real home for its people.” Using the impressive surroundings of their homeland, the Group painters developed a spontaneous technique. Above Lake Superior was produced by Lawren Harris in 1922. Known for his simple, heroic images, Harris captures the harsh, exhilarating climate of the Great Lakes region in winter, known as “the mystic north.” Harris believed that spiritual fulfillment could best be obtained by studying landscape. The Group also held the ethos that truly meaningful expression was accomplished only when the the subject of the work was one the viewer shared with the artist, in this case local landscape.

The Red Maple is A.Y. Jackson’s

vibrant landmark of 1914, embodying the Group aim of creating a national consciousness.

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Falls, Montreal River

(1920) was painted by J. E. H. MacDonald, who chose Algoma as his work base. Each E of the Group had a preferred individual region in which they found most inspiration, mostly in Ontario. Sketching trips regularly r took place in summer, with painters showing each other favorite areas.

THE GROUP OF SEVEN Based in a converted railway boxcar, the members hiked and boated to favorite places in Algonquin Park, Georgian Bay, Algoma, and Lake Superior to produce new art for their country. Following the 1920 exhibition, entitled The Group of Seven, their striking paintings immediately became popular and the Group went on to exhibit together almost every year. Native inspiration was vital to the Group’s subject and technique. The apparently raw and coarse methods were a rejection of the heavy, realist oils produced in Europe at the time. Luminous colors and visible brushstrokes led one critic to remark that the Group had “thrown [their] paint pots in the face of the public.” The Group held their final show in 1931 and disbanded the following year to make way for a wider group of painters from across Canada, the Canadian Group of Painters. Founders of a distinctive Canadian art movement based on a love of their country’s natural beauty, the Group of Seven painters remain particularly celebrated in Canada and are still given prominence in top galleries across Ontario and the rest of the country today.

AUTUMN, ALGOMA (1920) This richly decorated canvas shows the extraordinary evening colors of the fall in Ontario. Algoma was J.E.H. MacDonald’s chosen region, a Canadian Eden in northern Ontario that acted as his inspiration and where he regularly made sketching trips. MacDonald records uniquely Canadian subjects in this painting; the blazing foliage and looming pines serve to record and thus establish a Canadian identity. Influenced by the stark landscapes produced in Scandinavia from around 1900, MacDonald focuses on the chill drama in this scene to add a grandeur to his beloved landscape.

The photograph below, taken at Toronto’s Arts & Letters Club in 1920, shows, from left to right: V Varley, Jackson, Harris, Barker Fairley (a friend and writer), Johnston, Lismer and MacDonald. Carmichael was not present.

The Group of Seven in 1920

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oronto has shed its prim, colonial image to become one of North America’s most dynamic cities, a cosmopolitan mix of nearly 4 million inhabitants drawn from over one hundred ethnic groups. Reveling in its position as the richest city in the country’s most prosperous region, Toronto is the financial and commercial center of Canada, with fine art museums, suave café-bars, and luxury stores. Toronto is an enterprising city. Located on the banks of Lake Ontario, it was originally a native Indian settlement dating from the 17th century, and, after 1720, a French fur-trading post. Fought over by the US and Britain in the War of 1812 (see p45), Toronto has since been a peaceful city, growing dramatically after World War II with the arrival of over 500,000 immigrants, especially Italians, and, most recently, Chinese. The first place to start a visit must be the CN Tower, the world’s tallest freestanding structure and the city’s most famous tourist attraction. From the top it is easy to pick out the sights of the city, and from the bottom a short stroll leads to the Skydome stadium or the banking district. To the north of downtown is the boisterous street-life of

Chinatown and the superb paintings of the world-renowned Art Gallery of Ontario. Beyond sits the University of Toronto on whose perimeters lies the fine Royal Ontario Museum and also two delightful specialty collections, the historic Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art and the contemporary Bata Shoe Museum. A quick subway ride takes the visitor north to both Casa Loma, an eccentric Edwardian mansion that richly merits a visit, and Spadina House, the elegant Victorian villa next door. Many more attractions are scattered around the peripheries of Toronto, including Toronto Zoo and the Ontario Science Centre. The McMichael Art Collection, in nearby Kleinburg, contains an outstanding collection of paintings by the Group of Seven in a modernist setting.

Toronto’s café society doing what it does best in the downtown area

The spire of the CN Tower rearing above the city reflected in an office building

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Toronto is a large, sprawling city that covers over 259 sq km (100 sq miles) on the north side of Lake Ontario. The center offers a pleasant mix of office blocks, leafy residential streets, and shopping areas, while outer areas, such as North h York and Scarborough, are more residential and spread out. The downtown core, encompassing the business district and Chinatown, is bordered by College and Front on the north and south, and Jarvis and Spadina on the east and west.

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Street-by-Street: Harbourfront

. View from the CN Tower The highest free-standing tower in the world offers views of up to 160 km (100 miles) over Ontario, and a glass floor for those with iron nerves 1

Toronto’s harbourfront has had a varied history. Lake Ontario once lapped against Front Street, but the Victorians reclaimed 3 km (1.5 miles) of land to accommodate their railroad yards and warehouses. Ontario’s exports and imports were funneled through this industrial strip until the 1960s, when trade declined. In the 1980s the harbourfront had a new lease on life, when planners orchestrated the redevelopment of what has now become 10 sq km (4 sq miles) of reclaimed land. It now boasts grassy parks, walkways, smart apartments, many of the city’s best hotels, and a cluster of tourist sights in and around the Harbourfront Centre.

Convention Centre Split into north and south arenas, the center is used for large-scale business shows as well as trade and consumer exhibitions for the public.

. Rogers Centre Using enough electricity to light the province of Prince Edward Island, a performance at the vast Rogers Centre stadium is an unforgettable experience 2 Charter boats Sailing out into Lake Ontario and around the three Toronto Islands provides fine views of the city. Small sailboats, motorboats, and tours are available.

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For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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Toronto Harbourfront The harbourfront is a pleasing and relaxing addition to the city. attractions consolidate Toronto’s standing as the thirdeater and dance center in the world.

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LOCATOR MAP See pp168–9

Molson l Place l Classical and modern performances run through the summer evenings in this open-air concert venue. Part of the Harbourfront Centre arts complex, nearby attractions include theater, dance, and film screenings. diner Expresswa

he city cent and

STAR SIGHTS

. Rogers Centre . CN Tower

n’s Quay is a lively area for visitors. Lined with cafés and restaurants, the walkway offers lakeside views as well as street performers and gift shops.

The Power Plant

Contemporary Gallery hosts nging exhis of major national rtists.

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CN Tower

1

No less than 553 m (1,815 ft) high, the CN Tower is the tallest building in the world. In the 1970s, the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC) decided to build a new transmission mast in partnership with Canadian National (CN), the railroad conglomerate. The CN Tower was not originally designed as the world’s tallest spire, but it so overwhelmed the city’s visitors that it soon became one of Canada’s prime tourist attractions. The tower houses the largest revolving restaurant in the world, which rotates fully every 72 minutes.

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 301 Front St. W. Tel 416 868 6937. # 10am–10pm daily. ¢ Dec 25. & 7 8 0 = www.cntower.ca

The Sky Pod is reached by its

own elevator and is the highest accessible point on the tower at 447 m (1,465 ft).

The 360 Restaurant Award winning cuisine is available as the restaurant revolves, allowing diners a spectacular view while they dine. The interior lookout

level offers visitors the chance to observe the city in comfort, away from the wind; signs identify main Toronto landmarks. The exterior lookout

The CN Tower from the Lake The tower offers fantastic views in every direction. On a clear day it is possible to see as far south as Niagara Falls (see pp212–15). Glass Floor The ground is 342 m (1,122 ft) beneath this thick layer of reinforced glass, and even the courageous may feel a little daunted.

level is protected by steel grilles and illustrates how exposed the tower is, especially in windy weather.

The outside elevators are glass-fronted and

take visitors shooting up the outside of the Tower to the upper levels. Speeds take your breath away and make your ears pop; the elevators can reach the top in under a minute. The inside staircase is the longest in the world, with 1,776 steps. Climbing the steps as part of a charity event is a popular fund-raising activity in Toronto.

View of the City from the Lookout Level At 346 m (1,136 ft) above the city, the Look-out Level provides panoramas of Toronto from interior and exterior galleries.

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Rogers Centre 2 1 Blue Jay Way. Tel 416 341 3034. m Union. # daily. & 7 8 www.rogerscentre.com

Opened in 1989, the Rogers Centre was the first sports stadium in the world to have a fully rectractable roof. In good weather, the stadium is open to the elements, but in poor conditions the roof moves into position, protecting players and crowd alike. This remarkable feat of engineering is based on simple principles; four gigantic roof panels are mounted on rails and take just twenty minutes to cover the playing area. The design is certainly innovative and eminently practical, but the end result looks sort of like a giant hazelnut. However, the building’s looks are partially redeemed by a matching pair of giant-sized cartoon-sculptures on the outside wall showing spectators at an imaginary game, the creation of a popular contemporary artist, Michael Snow. The Rogers Centre is home to two major sports teams, the Toronto Argonauts from the Canadian Football League, and the Toronto Blue Jays of Major League Baseball. The Rogers Centre is also used for special events and concerts. Guided tours allow a close look at the mechanics of the roof and include a 20-minute film outlining the story of its ground-breaking construction.

Lavish interior lobby of the Royal York

Royal York 3

tumbling, irregular façade that resembles a large 100 Front St. W. Tel 416 368 2511. French château. Inside, the m Union. 7 public areas are lavish and ornate with slender galleries Dating from 1929, the Royal providing extra grace and York has long been Toronto’s charm. Recently revamped, the Royal York remains a preeminent hotel, its plush luxury easily outshining its favorite with high-powered visitors, which has rivals. It was built opposite the city’s main included visiting royalty. train station for the Union Station, across the convenience of visiting street from the Royal dignitaries, but for York, was also designed by Ross thousands of immigrants the hotel and Macdonald. The earlier building of the was the first thing two, it shares a similar they saw of their new city, giving it a Beaux Arts style. The landmark resonance long and imposing Doorman off the h beyond its immediate stone exterior is Royal York commercial purpose. punctuated by stone The Royal York was columns, and on the designed by the Montreal inside the cavernous main architects Ross and hall has a grand coffered Macdonald in Beaux Arts ceiling supported by 22 contemporary style with a sturdy marble pillars.

The retractable roof of the Rogers Centre rears above the playing field, site of many famous ballgames For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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Toronto Dominion Gallery of Inuit Art 6 39 Wellington St West. Tel 416 982 8473. m Union Station. # 8am– 6pm Mon–Fri, 10am– 4pm Sat & Sun. 7

Modern exterior of the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts

Hockey Hall of Fame 4 BCE Place, 30 Yonge St. Tel 416 360 7735. m Union Station. # 9:30am–6pm Mon–Sat, 10:30am–6pm Sun. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts 5 145 Queen St. W. Tel 416 363 6671. m Osgoode. 7 www.fourseasonscentre.com

The Toronto Dominion Centre consists of five jet-black skyscrapers, a huge modern tribute to the moneymaking skills of the Toronto Dominion Bank. The southern tower displays a strong collection of Inuit Art on two levels of its foyer. The exhibits were assembled as a centennial project in the 1960s. They bought over 100 pieces in a variety of materials, including caribou antler and walrus ivory, but the kernel of the collection is the stone carving. Soapstone sculptures on display, mostly 30– 60cm (1–2 ft) high, show mythological beasts and spirits as well as scenes from everyday life. Some of the finest were carved by Johnny Inukpuk (b.1911), whose Mother Feeding Child (1962) and Tattooed Woman (1958) have a raw, elemental force.

The Four Seasons Centre for The Hockey Hall of Fame is a the Performing Arts is Canada’s lavish tribute to Canada’s first purpose-built opera and national sport, ice hockey (see ballet house. Completed in p36). Hockey, both ice and 2006, it is home to both the grass, originated in Canada; Canadian Opera Company and the National Ballet of Canada. from its simple winter beginWith the world’s longest nings on frozen lakes and freespan glass staircase and a ponds, the game now ignites Canadian passions like no horseshoe-shaped, European other. The Hall of Fame’s ultra- style auditorium featuring modern exhibition area phenomenal advancements in is inventive and modern engineering resourceful, with and accoustical 7 different sections design, it stages a full range of operatic devoted to particular 260 King St. W. Tel 416 872 1212. repertoires, from aspects of the game. m St. Andrew. v King 504/503. 7 There are displays on chamber pieces by everything from the Mozart and Handel, to jerseys of the great some of the monumen- In the 1960S, the Royal players, including tal 19th- and 20thAlexandra Theatre was Wayne Gretzky and century works, such about to be flattened by Mario Lemieux, to The Stanley Cup at the as Wagner’s Ring modernizing bulldozers when Hockey Hall of Fame Cycle, which a flamboyant Toronto retail a replica of the Montréal Canadiens’ require an orchestra entrepreneur by the name of locker room in the old Forum. of over 100 musicians. Another section traces the The world-class C Opera Company, un development of the goalie’s mask from its beginnings to the directorship of Richard Bradshaw, the elaborately painted versions of today. Interactive the largest produce displays abound, and visitors of opera in Canada The National can stop pucks fired by virtual players. A small Ballet of Canada, with theater shows films of hockey’s most celebrated Karen Kain as games. A separate area at the Artistic Director, front of the Great Hall displays is the country’s a collection of trophies, inclupremiere dance ding the Stanley Cup, hockcompany, with ey’s premier award, donated more than Façade of the Edwardian Royal Alexandra Theatre by Lord Stanley in 1893. 60 dancers.

Royal Alexandra Theatre

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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Toronto’s fashionable café society on Queen Street West

“Honest Ed” Mirvish, the king of the bargain store, came to the rescue. Mirvish saved a fine Edwardian theater, whose luxurious interior of red velvet, green marble, gold brocade, and flowing scrollwork once made it the most fashionable place in Toronto. Nowadays, the Royal Alex plays host to well known plays and big-hit Broadway musicals, which are often held over for months at a time. Evening performances are extremely popular; theater-goers stand in line to admire the interior as much as the show, and booking ahead is required. Early arrivals can enjoy the original Edwardian features in the bar before the show.

First Post Office 8

Remarkably, Toronto’s First Post Office has survived, 9 weathering various municipal attempts by the city to have it demolished. The only remain- m Osgoode. v Queen 501. ing example in the world of a post office dating from the Through the day and into British North American postal the small hours of the era still in operation, the First morning, Queen Street West Post Office functions fully. buzzes. Students and trendVisitors make the trip to write setters reinvigorated this old a letter with a quill pen warehouse area in the and seal it themselves 1980s, but nowadays the street is more with hot wax. Today’s mail, however, is varied, with chic processed by the designer stores, national service, downbeat bars, and Canada Post. After stylish cafés mixed a devastating fire in in with more main1978, the building stream offerings was entirely from the big chain Young visitors on stores. The chief restored and Queen Street West merrymaking is conrefurbished to its former carved and centrated between decorated appearance using University and Spadina, a old documents and historical good place for budget city archive records. restaurants and bars.

Queen Street West

260 Adelaide St. E. Tel 416 865 1833. m King, Queen. v 501, 504. @ Jarvis 141. # 9am– 4pm Mon–Fri, 10am–4pm Sat & Sun. 7 8 by arrangement.

In the early Victorian era, the British Empire needed good communications for all its colonies. In 1829, the British House of Commons founded their colonial postal service and five years later established a post office in a far-flung outpost of the newly created town of Toronto.

Worker at Toronto’s First Post Office stamping mail by hand

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Street-by-Street: Downtown Throughout the 19th century, Yonge Street was the commercial focus of Toronto, lined with scores of shops and suppliers. It also separated the city ethnically. In 1964, with the building of the new City Hall and Nathan Phillips Square just across from Old City Hall, Toronto’s center of gravity shifted to Queen Street. South of Queen Street lay the banking district, where old Victorian buildings were replaced from the 1960s onward by gleaming concrete-and-glass tower blocks. The re-invigorated Harbourfront, with its ya at Ea

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STAR SIGHTS

. Art Gallery of home is a period piece from the days of the Victorian bourgeoisie.

Ontario

. Toronto City Hall

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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Eaton Centre If Toronto has a specific core it would be outside the Eaton Centre shopping mall at the Yonge and Dundas intersection. The Eaton Centre boasts that it sells anything available in the world.

LOCATOR MAP See Toronto Map pp168–9

Church of the Holy Trinity This charming Anglican church was built in the 19th century and feaures an elegant interior.

Nathan Phillips

Square is a center of the town’s activity and is a popular rendezvous for young people.

p p locals, who use the plaza as a skating rink in winter q

Old City Hall In sharp contrast to its ultramodern replacement across the street, the elegant 19th-century Old City Hall now houses Toronto’s Law Courts and the Justice Department.

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Art Gallery of Ontario

Founded in 1900, the Art Gallery of Ontario holds one of Canada’s most extensive collections of fine art and modern sculpture. This modern structure houses European works by Rembrandt, Gainsborough, van Gogh and Picasso, a superb collection of Canadian art, including the Group of Seven work Hina and (see pp164–5), Inuit art, and the world’s Fatu (1892), largest public collection of works by Paul Gauguin British sculptor Henry Moore. The gallery has recently undergone major expansion, designed by architect Frank Gehry, to accommodate an unprecedented gift of 2,000 works from a private collection, and is reopening in mid-2008.

. The West Wind (1917) Tom Thomson’s painting inspired a distinctive Canadian style exemplified i by the “Group of Seven.”

. Henry Moore Sculpture The museum houses the world’s largest public collection of works by Henry Moore, including Draped Reclining Figure (1952 –3).

Floor Burger (1962) Claes Oldenburg’s giant hamburger is made of painted sailcloth and foam rubber and is an iconic work of the Pop Art movement.

GALLERY GUIDE The second floor houses several excellent collections of Canadian painting, with works by the “Group of Seven” (see pp164–5), and Inuit art. It also houses a significant collection of African art and the Henry Moore Centre, which is home to Moore’s sculptures, bronzes, and plaster casts. European art is found mainly on the first floor.

KEY Contemporary art European art Temporary exhibitions Canadian art African art Prints, drawings, and photographs

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. The West Wind . Henry Moore Sculpture

. African Art Collection

Nonexhibition space For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Fourth floor

317 Dundas St. W. Tel 416 979 6648. m St. Patrick. v 505. # Tue–Sun. ¢ Mon. &7 ^ 80-= www.ago.net

Third floor Second floor

Fifth floor

. African Art Collection This late 18th/early 19th-century reliquary figure from Gabon is just one of many exhibits in the new African Art Collection that aims to show the relationships between art and culture in Africa.

First floor/ street level Main entrance

Concourse

Massacre of the Innocents (c. 1609–11) Peter Paul Rubens’s recently discovered early 17th-century masterpiece is a highlight of the European Art collections.

Scene in the Northwest (c. 1845) This painting by Canadian artist Paul Kane shows British surveyor Captain John Henry Lefroy. It is part of the collection of Canadian art from the middle of the 19th century.

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Kensington Market

waves of Chinese migration to e Canada, the first to British Columbia in Baldwin St. & Augusta Ave. the late 1850s durv Dundas 505, College 506, ing the gold rush. Spadina 510. The first Chinese to Kensington Market is one arrive in Toronto of Toronto’s most distinctive came at the end of the 19th century as and ethnically diverse workers on the residential areas. It was foundCanadian Pacific ed at the turn of the 20th cenRailway, settling in tury by East European immigtowns along the rail rants, who crowded into the route. The Chinese patchwork of modest houses found work in the near the junction of Spadina Toronto laundries, Avenue and Dundas Street, factories, and on the and then spilled out into the railways. The last narrow streets to sell their immigration wave wares. The bazaar they Built in the 1960s, the ultra-modern design of saw prosperous established in their small 1930s Toronto City Hall has proved controversial houses has been the main Hong Kong Chinese come to live in feature of the area ever since. Today, Jewish, Polish, and Toronto in the 1990s. Russian stall owners and Chinese Canadians inhabit q shopkeepers rub shoulders every part of the city but are concentrated in four with Portuguese, Queen St. W. & Bay St. Tel 416 392 Jamaican, East Chinatowns, the 8016. m Queen, Osgoode. largest and liveliest Indian, Chinese, and v Queen 501. # 8:30am–4:30pm of which is focused Vietnamese traders Mon – Fri. 7 on Spadina Avenue, in a vibrant street Completed in 1964, between Queen and scene that always Toronto’s City Hall was College streets, and excites the senses. designed by the award-winning along Dundas Street, The focal point of Finnish architect Viljo Revell. west of the Art Gallthis open-air market At the official opening, the is Kensington ery of Ontario. These Prime Minister Lester Pearson few city blocks are Avenue, whose lower half, just off announced, “It is an edifice as immediately differmodern as tomorrow,” but for ent from their surDundas Street, is Vivid restaurant signs crammed with thrift many cityfolk tomorrow had roundings. The in Chinatown come too soon and there were sights, sounds, and shops selling all howls of protests from several smells of the neighmanner of trendy quarters. Even now, after borhood are reminiscent retro bargains, from original nearly 40 years, the building not of Toronto but of Hong punk gear to flares. KensingKong. Stores and stalls spill appears uncompromisingly ton Avenue’s upper half is modern. It is the epitome of over the sidewalks, offering a packed with fresh food stores 1960s urban planning, with bewildering variety of Chinese filled with produce from every corner of the globe, ranging two curved concrete and glass delicacies, and at night bright neon signs advertise dozens from iced fish to stacks of towers framing a central circheeses and exotic fruits. cular building where the of delicious restaurants. Toronto councils meet. Nearby, the Old City Hall is a grand 19th-century neo-Romanesque edifice whose towers and columns are carved with intricate curling patterns.

Toronto City Hall

Chinatown w v Dundas 505, College 506, Spadina 510.

The Chinese community in Toronto numbers around 400,000, nearly ten percent of the city’s total population. There have been several

A Torontonian samples exotic nuts in the bazaar of Kensington Market

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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Façade of the Ontario Parliament Building, home of the provincial legislature since 1893

University of Toronto r 27 King’s College Circle. Tel 416 978 2011. m St. George, Queen’s Park. v College 506. 7

The University of Toronto grew out of a Royal Charter granted in 1827 by King George IV to Toronto’s King’s College. Seen by the church as challenging its control of education, the new institution weathered accusations of godlessness and proceeded to swallow its rivals, becoming in the process one of Canada’s most prestigious universities. This unusual history explains the rambling layout of the present campus, a leafy area sprinkled with colleges. The best-looking university buildings are near the west end of Wellesley Street. Here, on Hart House Circle, lie the delightful quadrangles and ivy-clad walls of Hart House (1919), built in imitation of some of the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge universities in Britain, and the Soldiers’ T Tower, a neo-Gothic memorial to those students who died in both world wars. Nearby, King’s College Circle contains University College, an imposing neo-Romanesque edifice dating from 1859, Knox College with its rough gray sandstone masonry, and the fine rotunda of the university’s

Convocation Hall. A visit to the campus can be peacefully rounded off by a short stroll along Philosophers’ Walk, where the manicured lawns lead to Bloor Street West.

Reminiscent of old British universities, the University of Toronto

Ontario Parliament Building t Queen’s Park. Tel 416 325 7500. m Queen’s Park. v College 506. # 8:30am – 5pm Mon–Fri, 9am– 4:30pm Sat & Sun. 7 8 10am–4pm.

There is nothing modest about the Ontario Parliament Building, a vast pink sandstone edifice opened in 1893 that dominates the end of University Avenue.

Ontario’s elected representatives had a point to make. The province was a small but exceedingly loyal part of the British Empire and clamored to make its mark and had the money to do so. Consequently, the Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs) commissioned this immensely expensive structure in the Romanesque Revival style. Finished in 1892, its main façade is a panoply of towers, arches, and rose windows decorated with relief carvings and set beneath a series of high-pitched roofs. The interior is of matching grandeur. Gilded classical columns frame the main staircase and enormous stainedglass windows illuminate long and richly timbered galleries. The chamber is a lavish affair, with a wealth of fine wooden carving that carries epithets urging good behavior, such as “Boldly and Rightly,” and “By Courage, not by Craft.” In 1909, a fire razed the west wing, which was rebuilt in Italian marble. The stone was very expensive, so the MPPs were annoyed to find that a large amount of the marble was blemished by dinosaur fossils, which can still be seen today in the west hallway. Visitors can sometimes watch the parliament in session.

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George R. Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art u

The Parliament Buildings, viewed from inner-city Queen’s Park

Queen’s Park y College St. & University Ave. Tel 416 325 7500. v College 506. m Queen’s Park. 7

Despite being ringed by a road that links two of downtown's busiest streets, Queen’s Park is a peaceful and pleasant grassy space, perfect for catching your breath when visiting the closely packed sights in the surrounding area. The park is fringed to the west by the 19th-century buildings of the University, while the Royal Ontario Museum and the George R. Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art lie to the north. Since the Legislative Buildings lie right in the middle of the park, its tranquility is occasionally broken by political protesters and special interest groups loudly proclaiming their displeasure with the provincial government.

of commedia dell’arte figures. These are derived from the Italian theatrical tradition of comic improvisation with a set of stock characters, 111 Queen’s Park. Tel 416 586 8080. notably the joker Harlequin. m Museum. # 10am –6pm Mon , Intricately decorated in Wed, Fri; 10am – 8pm Tue & Thu, rainbow colors, these figur10am–5pm Sat & Sun. ¢ Jan 1, ines were placed on dinner Dec 25, 31. & 7 tables by the aristocracy to www.gardinermuseum.on.ca delight, impress, or even to woo their special guests. Opened in 1984, the Porcelain here is stunning, Gardiner Museum of with many examples of Ceramic Art is the only showexquisite Meissen from 1700 case of its kind in North to 1780. Packed in its America dedicated solely own specially made to pottery and porcelain. leather carrying case Skillfully displayed, the to accompany a fine lady owner on her collection traces the history of ceramics, travels, a special with a detailed focus feature is the embellished tea on its principal and chocolate serdevelopmental stages. These start vice dating from with Prethe early 18th Columbian century. Each tiny pottery, and the The Greeting Harlequin cup has individual, Meissen ceramic figure intricate sailing museum has fascinating displays scenes surrounded of ancient pieces from Peru in gold. The porcelain collection also contains over and Mexico that incorporate several grimacing fertility gods. 100 carved or molded scent Examples of brightly colored bottles from all over Europe. maiolica (glazed, porous pottery), includes painted pots made first in Mallorca, then Italy, from the 13th to i the 16th centuries. Cheerfully decorated everyday wares See pp184–85. are complemented by later Renaissance pieces relating classical myths and history. English delftware (tin-glazed o earthenware) is also well represented in the collection. 327 Bloor St. W. Tel 416 979 7799. The Renaissance pieces gathered from Italy, Germany, m St. George. # 10am – 5pm Tue – Sat, noon – 5pm Sun. ¢ Jan 1, and England are superb – Good Friday, Jul 1, Dec 25. & 7 particularly the collection

Royal Ontario Museum

The Bata Shoe Museum

www.batashoemuseum.ca

The modern exterior of the Bata Shoe Museum

The Bata Shoe Museum was opened in 1995 to display the extraordinary range of footwear collected by Sonja Bata, a member of the eponymous shoe manufacuring family, a worldwide concern that sells footwear in 60 countries. To be sure her collection was seen to best effect, Sonja had the prestigious contemporary Canadian architect Raymond Moriyama design the building – an angular modern affair complete with unlikely nooks

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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and crannies created to look like a chic shoebox. The collection is spread over several small floors and features three special exhibitions developing a particular theme, as well as regularly rotated items selected from the museum’s substantial permanent collection. More than a temple to fashion, the museum treats shoes as important enthnological pieces, illustrating not only changes in technology, but also shifting values and attitudes. Entire ways of life can be gleaned from the design of these beautiful objects, from climate and profession to gender and religion. One fixed feature in the museum is the exhibition entitled "All About Shoes," which provides the visitor with an overview of the functions and evolution of footwear. It begins with a plaster cast of the earliest known footprint, discovered 4,000,000 years after it was made in Tanzania, and has an interesting section on medieval pointed shoes. A second permanent feature is the section on celebrity footwear. This displays all kinds of eccentric performance wear, including Marily Monroe’s red stiletto heels, a pair of Elton John’s platforms and Michael Johnson’s gold lamé sprinting shoes. There is also a display of unusual and improbable footwear including unique French chestnut-crushing boots, Venetian platform shoes dating from the 16th

Traditional Indian Paduka footwear, the Bata Shoe Museum

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A lazy Sunday afternoon at Café Nervosa in trendy Yorkville

century, and a pair of US army boots made for use in the Vietnam War, whose sole is shaped to imitate the footprint of an enemy Vietcong irregular.

Yorkville p m Bay.

In the 1960S tiny Yorkville, in the center of the city, was the favorite haunt of Toronto’s hippies. With regular appearances by countercultural figures such as Joni Mitchell, it was similar to London’s Chelsea or New York’s Greenwich Village. The hippies have now moved on, and Yorkville’s modest brick and timber terrace houses have either been colonized by upscale shops and fashionable restaurants, or converted into bijou townhouses. Designer boutiques, specialty bookstores, private art galleries,

fine jewelers, and quality shoe stores all jam into the neighborhood, attracting shoppers in droves. The area is a lovely place to sit at an outdoor café, nursing a cappuccino and watching the crowds. Yorkville and Cumberland Avenues are the center of all this big spending, as are the elegant and discreet shopping complexes that lead off them, especially the deluxe Hazelton Lanes, at the corner of Yorkville Avenue and The Avenue, with its Ralph Lauren and Versace boutiques. The dropout philosophy has been thoroughly replaced by very chic stores – some of the most exclusive retail outlets in the country are found here. Although the recession in the 1990s affected trade somewhat, the area is still prosperous and thriving. Café society really takes off at night, even so Yorkville can be an expensive place to have fun.

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Royal Ontario Museum

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Founded in 1912, the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) holds a vast and extraordinarily wide-ranging collection drawn from the fields of fine and applied art, the natural sciences, and archaeology. Special highlights include the dinosaur gallery, and an Asian Arts gallery featuring Chinese sculpture and architecture and Japanese art and culture. The ROM has recently undergone a major transformation, with the restoration of many galleries due for completion in mid-2008. The new Michael Lee-Chin Crystal addition, a bold chrystalline formation designed by architect Daniel Libeskind, which contains a new main museum entrance and cutting-edge galleries, opened in June 2007.

KEY Samuel Hall Currelly gallery Asian and Middle Eastern Arts Natural History Textiles, costume and glass Canada Galleries World Cultures Michael Lee-Chin Crystal spaces Nonexhibition space

GALLERY GUIDE The museum has an exceptional array of themed galleries, spanning both World Cultures and Natural History. With six million objects in the ROM’s collections, there is something new to discover around every corner. All of the Natural History galleries are housed on the second floor, while World Cultures are on the third floor. The Canada galleries are on the first floor. The futuristic new look Royal Ontario Museum

The Green Room This elegant English parlour dates from the1750s. One of several room settings featured in the European galleries, it boasts the original green panelled walls popular among the gentry of the time. Learning Centre & Library Digital Gallery

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Canada Gallery: First Peoples This spacious gallery celebrates Canadian culture, with a dynamic approach to the country’s aboriginal traditions. Many of the unique and vibrant aboriginal artefacts are displayed for the first time.

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Garfield Weston Exhibition Hall

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Fifth floor Restaurant Lounge

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 100 Queen’s Park. Tel 416 586 8000. m Museum. # 10am– 6pm Daily; until 9.30pm Fri. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 8 7 0 - = www.rom.on.ca

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. Galleries of Africa: Egypt With a large collection of mummies, burial masks, and domestic artifacts, the Egyptian collection contains the remains of a buried court musician, in a painted golden coffin so intricate that scholars dare not open it.

Second floor

Stuffed Albatross This huge bird has a wingspan of 3 m (9 ft). It is a main feature of the bird gallery, which offers interactive exhibits.

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Museum Store First floor (street level) Main entrance

Bat Cave Painstakingly reconstructed from a 4-km (2-mile) long Jamaican bat cave, some 3,000 wax and vinyl bats fly to greet the visitor in this eerie darkened cavern.

. Dinosaur Gallery The most popular gallery in the ROM is now on the second floor of the Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, with dinosaur skeletons set in simulations of the Jurassic Age and animation techniques as used in the 1990s blockbuster Jurassic Park.

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Spadina Museum, Historic House & Gardens a 285 Spadina Rd. Tel 416 392 6910. @ 77+, 127. m Dupont. # Jan – Apr: noon–5pm, Sat & Sun; May–Aug: noon–5pm, Tue–Sun; Sep – Dec: noon – 4pm, Tue – Fri; noon–5pm, Sat & Sun. ¢ Mon; Dec 25, 26, Jan 1. & 7 8 obligatory.

James Austin, first president of the Toronto Dominion Bank, had this elegant Victorian family home built on the bluff overlooking Spadina Avenue in 1866. The last of the Austins, Anna, moved out in 1982. She left the building, its contents and gardens to the Historical Board of Toronto. This authentic family home illustrates the decorative tastes of four gen-

Casa Loma

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This unusual Gothic revival h designed by E.J. Lennox, the for Toronto’s Old City Hall. W combination of architectural house is a remarkable tribut Pellatt (1859–1939), one of t tial industrialists of early 20th He made a fortune in hydro during the early 1900s, harne the strength of Niagara Falls electricity. In 1906, Pellatt dec to build himself a castle. Thre years and Can$3.5 million la construction was halted due the outbreak of WWI.

. The Great Hall Oak beams support a ceiling 18-m (60-ft) high, in a hall featuring a 12-m (40-ft) tall bay window. For hotels and restaurants in this regio

erations of well-to-do Canadians. The general ambience appeals, but there are several enjoyable features, notably the Art Nouveau frieze in the Billiard Room and a trap door in the Palmroom that allowed gardeners to tend to the plants unseen by the family.

The front door of Spadina House with garlanded Victorian columns

Fort York d 100 Garrison Rd. Tel 416 392 6907. v 511, 509. # daily. ¢ Good Fri, Dec 18 – Jan 2 approx. & 7 8

The British built Fort York in 1793 to reinforce their control of Lake Ontario and, from this, Toronto grew. The weaknesses of the fort were exposed when the Americans overran it after a long battle in the War of 1812 (see p47). After the war, the British strengthened the fort, and its garrison gave a boost to the local economy. The military compound has been painstakingly restored, and its barracks, old powder magazine, and officers’ quarters make for a pleasant visit. It is the largest collection of War of 1812 buildings in Canada.

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Fresh vegetables on sale in Little Italy

Little Italy f St. Clair Ave. W. v 512. n 207 Queen’s Quay W. 416 203 2500.

There are half a million people of Italian descent resident in Toronto. The first major wave of Italian migrants arrived between 1885 and 1924. Italians have been in Toronto since 1830, and their sense of community, together

with the instability of Italy after World War II, led to another large influx in the 1940s and 1950s. Italians live and work in every corner of the city, but there is a focus for the community in the lively “Corso Italia,” or Little Italy, whose assorted stores, cafés, and restaurants run along St. Clair Avenue West. Though the architecture is at best unremarkable, many houses are brightly painted in the traditional colors of red, green, and white. More European touches appear in the proliferation of espresso bars, and cinemas showing Italian films. The typically Mediterranean food offered by the many sidewalk cafés is terrific.

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Ontario Place g 955 Lakeshore Blvd. W. Tel 416 314 9900. £ Union Station. v 509, 511. # mid-May – Sep:10am – midnight. & 7 www.ontarioplace.com

This excellent theme park will appeal to families with young children. Built over Lake Ontario on three artificial islets, the clean and fairly tame fun is largely waterbased with paddle boats, log flumes, water slides, and splash ponds. The atmosphere changes at night when large pop concerts are staged at the Molson Amphitheatre. The globular Cinesphere houses the first ever permanent IMAX theater. This large format cinema technology was developed in Toronto by the IMAX Corporation in 1967. VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 1 Austin Terrace. Tel 416 923 11 71. m Dupont. # 9:30am–4pm. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 9 7 0 = www.casaloma.org

. Conservatory White walls offset f the Victorian stained-glass dome. The marble r flowerbeds conceal steam pipes for the rare plants.

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. The Great Hall . Conservatory

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picnics and beach trips. Layers of sediment from five different geological periods can be seen in the rocks around the park.

Toronto Zoo k 361A Old Finch Ave., Scarborough. Tel 416 392 5900. m Kennedy, then @ 86A (in summer). # May–Sep: 9am–7pm daily; Sep–Apr: 9am–6pm daily. ¢ Dec 25. & 7 8 www.torontozoo.com

Visitors on the bicycling paths on the Toronto Islands

The Toronto Islands h g Queen’s Quay. n 207 Queen’s Quay W. 416 203 2500. www.torontoisland.org

In Lake Ontario, just offshore from the city, the three lowlying Toronto Islands, connected by footbridges, shelter Toronto’s harbor and provide easy-going recreation in a carfree environment. Here, amid the cool lake breezes, visitors can escape the extremes of the summer heat, which can reach up to 35°C (95°F). In good weather there are views of the top of the CN Tower (see p172). It takes about half an hour to walk from one end of the islands to the other. In the east is Ward’s Island, a sleepy residential area with parkland and wilderness; Centre Island, home to the Centreville Amusement Park for children, is in the middle, and to the west lies the isle of Hanlan’s Point with the Islands’ best beach.

The Beaches and Scarborough Bluffs j Beaches v Queen 501. Bluffers Park m Victoria Park, then @ Kingston Rd 12+. n 207 Queen’s Quay W. 416 203 2500.

The Beaches is one of Toronto’s most beguiling neighborhoods, its narrow leafy streets running up from the lakeshore and lined by

Toronto can claim to have one of the world’s best zoos. It occupies a large slice of the Rouge River Valley, and is easily accessible by public transportation and car. The animals are grouped according to their natural habitats, both outside, amid the mixed forest and flatlands of the river valley, and inside within a series of large, climate-controlled pavilions. Visitors can tour the zoo by choosing one of the carefullymarked trails, or hop aboard the Zoomobile, a 30-minute ride with commentary, which gives an excellent overview. It takes about four hours to see a good selection of animals, including such Canadian species as moose, caribou, and grizzly bear. Splash Island provides a spot for young visitors to cool off in the water, amid walrus and beaver sculptures.

attractive brick houses with verandas. The area lies to the east of downtown between Woodbine Avenue and Victoria Park Avenue. Queen Street East, the main thoroughfare, is liberally sprinkled with excellent cafés and designer clothes shops. Until very recently, the Beaches was a restrained and quiet neighborhood, but its long sandy beach and boardwalk have made it extremely fashionable – real estate prices have risen dramatically in recent years. Rollerblading and cycling are popular here – a 3-km (2-mile) path travels through the area and is very busy in summer, as is the large public swimming pool. The polluted waters of Lake Ontario are not ideal for swimming, but many take the risk and windsurfing boards can be rented easily. At its eastern end, the Beaches borders Scarborough, the large suburb whose principal attraction is also along the rocky lakeshore. Here, the striking Scarborough Bluffs, outcrops of rock made from ancient sands and clay, track along Lake Ontario for 16 km (10 miles). A series of parks provides access: Scarborough Bluffs and the Cathedral Bluffs parks offer great views of jagged cliffs, and Bluffers A mother and baby orangutan at Toronto Zoo Park is ideal for

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp354–5 and pp378–81. For transport information see pp418–19

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189

McMichael Art Collection x 10365 Islington Ave., Kleinburg. Tel (905) 893 1121. m Islington, then @ 37, then @ 13 (limited service). # Tue–Sun. ¢ Dec 25. & 7 www.mcmichael.on.ca

On the edge of Kleinburg, about 30 minutes’ drive north of downtown Toronto, Robert and Signe McMichael built themselves a fine log-andstone dwelling overlooking the forests of the Humber River Valley. The McMichaels were also avid collectors of Canadian art, and in 1965 they donated their house and paintings to the government. Since then, the art collection A tinsmith takes a break outside his store in Black Creek Pioneer Village has been greatly increased and is now one of the most from other parts of Ontario. extensive in the province, Inevitably, the end result is with over 6,000 pieces. l not entirely realistic – no Most of the McMichael is devoted to the work of the Ontario village ever looked 770 Don Mills Rd. Tel 416 696 3177. quite like this – but this living Group of Seven (see pp164– m Eglinton or Pape, then @ 5), with a whole string of history showpiece is still great Eglinton 100 or Don Mills 25. rooms devoted to an eclectic fun. Staff in period costume # 10am–5pm daily. ¢ Dec 25. demonstrate traditional skills selection of their works. The & 7 www.osc.on.ca such as candlemaking, bakkeynote paintings are charing, and printing. Among the acteristically raw and forceful One of Toronto’s most more interesting landscapes illustrating popular sights, the Ontario buildings are the the wonders of the elegant Doctor’s Canadian wilderScience Centre attracts ness. Each of the children in droves. They come House from 1860, for the center’s interactive dis- and the Lasky group has been plays and hands-on exhibits Emporium general allocated a separexploring and investigating all store, which is ate area, and both Tom Thomson (a manner of phenomena, which open and trading, are divided into 11 categories. selling baking Bill Vazan’s “Shibagau famous precursor Shard” at the McMichael These include the Living Earth, products to visiof the group) and tors. The Tinsmith talented Group of Science Arcade, the Information Highway, and Sport. Visi- Shop is manned by skilled Seven member Lawren Harris, tors can land on the moon, craftsmen, and there is a Mas- are well represented. There travel to the end of the unionic Lodge meeting room too. are also fascinating sections verse, or have hair-raising fun Four buildings are credited to devoted to contemporary Inuit on a Van de Graaff generator. Daniel Stong, a 19th-century and Native American art, inclupioneer; his pig house, smoke ding the sculpture Bases Stolen house, and two contrasting from the Cleveland Indians homes – the first and earlier and a Captured Yankee

Ontario Science Centre

Black Creek Pioneer Village z

cnr Steeles Ave. W. & Jane St. Tel 416 736 1733. m Finch, then @ 60. # May & Jun: 9:30am–4:30pm Mon–Fri, 10am–5pm Sat & Sun; Jul– Sep:10am–5pm daily; Oct–Dec: 9:30– 4pm Mon–Fri, 10am– 4:30pm Sat & Sun. ¢ Jan–May; Dec 25. & 7

Over the years, some 40 19th-century buildings have been moved to historic Black Creek Pioneer Village in the northwest of the city

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The log and stone façade of the McMichael Art Collection building

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OTTAWA AND EASTERN ONTARIO ne of the most visited regions in Canada, Eastern Ontario is justly famous for its history and natural beauty. The myriad lakes and waterways that dominate the landscape here once served as trade highways through the wilderness for native people and explorers. Today they form a beautiful natural playground, with spectacular opportunities for outdoor activities such as boating, fishing, hiking, and skiing. The St. Lawrence is one of the world’s great waterways and has its

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source in the historic small city of Kingston. North of Lake Ontario lies the Canadian Shield, with the ancient lakes, rocks, and forest that epitomize Canada. A big favorite with many Canadian vacationers, Algonquin Provincial Park is one of the country’s most famous wilderness areas. Also popular is the picturesque Kawartha Lakes region. Rising majestically over the Ottawa River, Canada’s capital is a storehouse of national history and stately architecture that attracts over five million visitors each year.

SIGHTS AT A GLANCE Historic Towns nss and Citi Cities

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Islands and Waterways

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Pleasure boats on the Rideau Canal at night overlooked by Ottawa’s imposing Parliament Buildings

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Street-by-Street: Ottawa

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Ottawa was a compromise choice for Canada’s capital, picked in part because of the rivalry between the English and French and the cities that grew into today’s urban giants, Toronto and Montreal. This compromise has from its foundation in 1826, grown into a city with an identity all its own. Named capital of the Dominion of C fine setting on the b rivers. Far more than has grown into a mix and historic and mo attractions to keep it

. Parliament Buildi The Changing of the G place outside daily fro August. The spectacul mony adds to the gra of this seat of governm

Rideau Canal Built in the early 19th the Canal is now a pl visitors, its banks line cycling and walking p

National War Memo Annually, on November 11, a memorial service takes place here to honor Canada’s war verterans

Canada’s most famous. It has offered sumptuous accommodation to Canada’s great and good since it was built in 1912.

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Nepean Point This stunning viewpoint is marked by a statue of a native Canadian at the foot of a monument to Samuel de Champlain (see p45). From here, the whole of central Ottawa can be seen.

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 785,000. k 18 km (12 miles) south of the city. @ 265 Catherine St. c 200 Tremblay Rd. n Canada’s Capital Information Centre, 14 Metcalfe St. (613) 239 5000._ Winterlude (Feb), Canadian Tulip Festival (May). www.canadascapital.gc.ca

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fine arts, housed in this outstanding granite and glass building.

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Exploring Ottawa

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Cash register from a 19th-century shop at the Bytown Museum

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The core of the capital is relatively contained, and many of the top sights can be easily accessed on foot. Traveling south through the city, the Rideau Canal is Ottawa’s recreation ground year round, from boating and strolling during summer to skating across its icy surface in the freezing Canadian winter. The National Arts Centre is a focus for theater, opera, Antique doll’s dress, Bytown and ballet; history and art buffs can spend days visiting museums and galleries, both large and small. Ottawa is a city of festivals too; notably Winterlude, a three-weekend February celebration, while in spring the Canadian Tulip Festival transforms the city into a sea of flowers. Canada Day celebrations, on July 1, also attract thousands of visitors. Away from downtown, it sometimes seems that the suburban National Capital Region is overflowing with museums for every enthusiast. Attractions include the Central Experimental Farm and the Canada Aviation Museum.

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the Bytown Museum is a well-appointed place to learn more about local history. Colonel John By, the officer in charge of building the Rideau Canal, set up his headquarters here in 1826. While work was underway, the building, also known as the Bytown, was used to store military equipment and cash. The ground floor houses an exhibit on the construction of

The elegant Zoë’s Lounge bar at the Château Laurier Hotel

the Rideau Canal. Also very enjoyable is the focus on domestic life of the early 19th century, with a wide variety of homey artifacts on display.

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celebrities and government mandarins. Zoë’s Lounge, a restaurant with soaring columns, chandeliers and palms, lit by an atrium, is a wonderful place for lunch, as is the larger restaurant, Wilfred’s. E Canadian War Museum 1 Vimy Pl. Tel (819) 776 8600, 1 800 555 5621. # May 9–Oct 11: 9am– 6pm daily (to 9pm Thu; also to 9pm Fri from Jul 1–Sep 6). & free Jul 1. 7 www.warmuseum.ca

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Canadians may have a reputation as a peaceful people U but they have seen their share S T Laurier La er yWard BE EA EE D R Hou ou e 7 Mark ST of the world’s battlefields. RI T T AR E RE EW This museum, housed in a ST ST OD ST stunning modern building BR IL EA W E close to Parliament Hill, looks ET NU RE E T S at the country’s military AV E OD R O E I G history and at how this history OS UR tional LA A Centre has shaped the nation and its people. Exhibits range from q QU E 9 CO P Fairmont Château the earliest wars fought on EN ation m of R B Y DL O N Sci nce logy R IV Confederation Con tio io n Laurier Hotel La Canadian soil between the EL E IZA Tra rk k BE £ 3 km (1 1 Rideau St. Tel (613) 241 1414. French and the British, to the TH DR . Fax (613) 562 7031. 7 American invasion of 1812, 0 Ce This wonderful stone replica of the Boer War of 1899, and erim mental a French château is a fine Canada’s role in the two Farm ar example of the establishments world wars. The LeBreton SIG I HTS AT A GLANCE built by railroad companies in Gallery houses an extensive the early 1900s. It has attracted collection of military techBytown Museum 2 both the great an nd nology including veh hicles, ByWard Market 7 the good since it artillery, and Cathédrale Nôtre Dame 6 opened as a other arttefacts. Central Experimental Farm 0 hotel in 1912. There is also Fairmont Château Laurier Centrally located at a collecttion of Hotel 3 the foot of war art rrepresentLaurier House 8 Parliament Hill, itts ing both h world National Arts Centre q interior features wars. Th he h large rooms with museum m’s National Currency high ceilings, Regenerration Museum w decorated with Lo ouis Hall, with h its National Gallery of Canada XV-style reproductions. tightly fram med view pp198–9 4 The hotel attractss an of the Peace Tower Parliament Buildings 1 upscale clientele,, and on Parliam ment Hill, Rideau Canal 9 it is well worth a visit Demob sign at the represents hope Royal Canadian Mint 5 to rub shoulders with War Museum for a better future. G

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P Royal Canadian Mint 320 Sussex Dr. Tel (613) 993 8990. # daily. & 7 8 obligatory.

Founded in 1908 as a branch of the British Royal Mint, this no longer produces regular Canadian cash currency. Instead, it strikes many specialedition coins and Maple Leaf bullion investment coins. The mint also processes about 70 percent of the country’s gold in its refinery, which is among the largest in North America. The building was refurbished fully in the 1980s and now offers guided tours. These are available daily, but coinage fanatics must make reservations in advance to see the process that turns sheets of metal into bags of shiny gold coins.

Mackenzie King. Beautifully furnished throughout, it houses memorabilia, papers, and personal possessions of both former national leaders. Rideau Canal n 1 (800) 230 0016.

Byward Market is known as a lively area of Ottawa

P ByWard Market Byward St. Tel (613) 244 4410. # daily. ¢ Dec 25, 26, Jan 1. 7 limited.

This neighborhood bustles all year round; outdoors in the summer, inside in winter. The area is located just east of Parliament Hill, across the Rideau Canal, and offers a colorful collection of craft shops, cafés, boutiques, bistros, nightclubs, and farmers’ market stalls. Special attractions include the food market in the Byward Market Building on George Street, and the cobblestoned Sussex Courtyards. The cafés are among Ottawa’s most popular places to lunch. The façade of Ottawa’s imposing Cathédrale Notre Dame

R Cathédrale Notre Dame Cnr Sussex Dr. & St. Patrick St. Tel (613) 241 7496. # daily. 7

Built in 1839, Notre Dame, with its twin spires, is Ottawa’s best-known Catholic church. It is situated in the Byward Market area and features a spectacular Gothic-style ceiling. The windows, carvings, and the huge pipe organ are also well worth seeing (and hearing). Philippe Parizeau (1852–1938) carved the woodwork in mahogany. In niches around the sanctuary, there are wooden etchings of prophets and apostles, crafted by Louis-Philippe Hebert (1850– 1917), now painted to look like stone. Joseph Eugene Guiges, the first bishop of Ottawa, oversaw the completion of Notre Dame, and his statue is outside the basilica.

+ Laurier House 335 Laurier Ave. E. Tel (613) 992 8142. # 9am –5pm Tue –Sat; 2pm –5pm Sun. ¢ Mon. & 7

Now a national historic site, Laurier House, a Victorian town house built in 1878, served as the chief residence of two notable Canadian prime ministers, Sir Wilfrid Laurier and

Built in the mid-19th century, the Rideau Canal is a manmade construction that travels through lakes and canals from Ottawa to the city of Kingston (see p200). The canal flows through the capital, providing an attractive pastoral sight with its walking and cycling paths bordering the water. Once used for shipping, the canal is now a recreational area. In summer visitors stroll along its banks, while through Ottawa’s freezing winter the canal turns into the city’s skating rink, popular with locals during the winter festival. O Central Experimental

Farm Experimental Farm Dr. Tel (613) 991 3044. # 9am – 5pm daily. ¢ Dec 25. & 7 8

The CEF is a national project researching all aspects of farming and horticulture. It also offers some of the best floral displays in the country, including a spectacular chrysanthemum show every November. There is also an ornamental flower show and an arboretum with over 2,000 varieties of trees and shrubs. The farm’s livestock barns and show cattle herds are especially popular with children, and everybody loves the tours of the 500-ha (1,200-acre) site in wagons drawn by huge, magnificent Clydesdale horses.

Children can get close to animals at the Central Experimental Farm

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp356–7 and pp381–2. For transport information see p420

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The waterside restaurant at the National Arts Centre, seen from the Rideau Canal

E National Arts Centre 53 Elgin St. Tel (613) 947 7000. # daily. & 8 obligatory. 7 www.nac-cna.ca

Completed in 1969, the National Arts Centre has three stages, an elegant canal-side restaurant, and a summer terrace. The building, designed by noted Canadian architect Fred Neubold, comprises three interlocking hexagons opening onto good views of the Ottawa River and the Rideau Canal. Many exponents of Canadian and international dance, theater, and musical forms, including the National Arts Centre Orchestra, perform here regularly. The center’s Opera auditorium seats 2,300; the Theatre, with its innovative apron stage, seats 950; the Studio, a marvelous venue for experimental productions, comfortably seats 350. The center is extremely popular and reserving well in advance is recommended. E National Currency

Museum 245 Sparks St. Tel (613) 782 8914. # 10:30am–5pm Mon–Fri; 1–5pm Sun. www.currencymuseum.ca

Based in the Bank of Canada building, the National Currency Museum features displays that trace the history of money through the ages. This is a fascinating place to learn about the unusual variety of things used as Canadian currency over the years, including whales’ teeth, glass beads, grain, paper, and metal. The emphasis of the

exhibition is on Canadian currency in all its forms. Visitors can also see the workings of the National Bank. E National Museum of

Science and Technology 1867 St. Laurent Blvd. Tel (613) 991 3044. # May –Sep: 9am–6pm daily; Oct –Apr: 9am –5pm Tue –Sun. & www.sciencetech.technomuses.ca

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E Canada Aviation Museum Aviation & Rockcliffe Parkways. Tel (613) 993 2010. # May –Sep: daily; Oct – Apr: Wed–Sun. & www.aviation.technomuses.ca

This huge building near Rockcliffe Airport houses over 100 aircraft, which have flown both in war and peace. The famous 1909 Silver Dart, the first aircraft to fly in Canada is here as is

Model of a rocket at the National Museum of Science and Technology

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National Gallery of Canada Opened in 1988, the National Gallery of Canada provides a spectacular home for the country’s impressive collections of art. Located near the heart of the capital, architect Moshe Safdie’s memorable pink granite and glass edifice is architecture as art in its own right. The National Gallery is one of the three largest museums in the country, and is Canada’s top art gallery, with excellent collections of both national and international exhibits. The museum is a short stroll from the Rideau Canal and Major’s Hill Park.

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. Rideau Street Chapel Set in a peaceful inner courtyard, this 1888 chapel was saved from bulldozers nearby and moved here for safety.

gallery houses the world’s largest collection of Canadian art. It also features international displays and major traveling exhibitions. The second level contains the European and American Galleries and the gallery of prints, drawings, and photographs. Visitors can relax in the two courtyards or in the fine café. m7

KEY Special exhibition space Canadian gallery

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. Rideau Street Chapel

. The Jack Pine by Tom Thomson

Contemporary art European and American galleries Prints, drawings, and photographs Inuit art Nonexhibition space

Inuit sculpture This is represented in ancient and modern forms; Aurora Borealis decapitating a young man dates from 1965.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp356–7 and pp381–2. For transport information see p420

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National Gallery façade In addition to displays of painting, prints, architecture, and photography, the gallery holds regular events for the performing arts, including movies, lectures, and concerts.

380 Sussex Dr. Tel (613) 990 1985. @ 3. # May– Sep: 10am–5pm Fri–Wed, 10am–8pm Thu; Oct – Apr: 10am – 5pm Wed, Fri –Sun, 10am – 8pm Thu. ¢ Jan 1, Good Friday, Dec 25. & for special exhibitions. 8 11am & 2pm. ^ - = www.national.gallery.ca

. The Jack Pine (1916) In many ways the father of Canada’s nationalist art movement of the early 20th century, the Group of Seven, Tom Thomson first attracted notice with his vivid, sketchy, impressionist paintings of Ontario landscape, here shown with a brightly colored oil of a provincial tree framed in wilderness.

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Upper Canada Village 2 £ Cornwall. @ n Morrisburg 1 (800) 437 2233. www.upper canadavillage.com

This recreated 19th-century town is made up of 40 authentic pre-Confederation (1867) buildings, relocated from the surrounding area to save them from flooding during construction of the St. Lawrence Seaway in the 1950s. Today, it is preserved as a tourist attraction and is a colorful reminder of the province’s social history. Costumed villagers work in the blacksmith’s forge and the sawmill while tinsmiths and cabinetmakers employ the tools and skills of the 1860s. A bakery, cheese factory, and general store are in operation. History is also reflected in nearby Battle of Crysler’s Farm Visitor Centre, a memorial to those who died in the War of 1812. P Battle of Crysler’s Farm

Visitor Centre Exit 758 off Hwy 401. Tel (613) 543 3704. # mid-May – mid-Oct: 9:30am – 5pm daily. & 7

Prescott 3 * 4,000. c n 360 Dibble St. (613) 925 1861.

The major attractions in this 19th-century town are its architecture and access to the St. Lawrence River. Prescott’s recently refurbished waterfront area and its busy marina make for a pleasant waterside stroll.

The 1838 lighthouse overlooks the pleasure boats of Prescott’s marina

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The Shakespearean Festival here attracts visitors from around the world, as does the excellent scuba diving. There are 22 wrecks that sank between the late 19th- and mid20th-centuries within a one hour drive. Fort Wellington National Historic Site,

east from the center of town, attracts many visitors. Originally built during the War of 1812 and rebuilt in 1838, four walls and some buildings remain. These include a stone blockhouse which is now a military museum, incorporating refurbished officers’ quarters.

A sailboat travels the Thousand Islands

P Fort Wellington Prescott. Tel (613) 925 2896. # late May – mid-Oct: daily. 7

The Thousand Islands 4 n 2 King St. East, Gananoque (613) 382 3250.

from the Thousand Islands Parkway, which runs from the pretty town of Gananoque to Mallorytown Landing.

Kingston 5 * 141,000. ~ £ @ g n 209 Ontario St. (613) 548 4415. www.tourism.kingstoncanada.com

The St. Lawrence River, Once a center for ship one of the world’s great waterways, is a gateway for building and the fur trade, ocean-going vessels traveling Kingston was briefly (1841–44) through the Great Lakes. Few the capital of the United Prostretches of the trip compare vince of Canada (see pp49). Constructed by generations of in charm or beauty to the Thousand Islands, an area shipbuilders, the city’s handthat contains a scattering e limestone buildings of over a thousand tiny ect a dignified lineage. islands, stretching from he host of the 1976 Olympic Games just below Kingston downriver to the waterregatta, Kingston is side towns and cities of still one of the freshwater sailing capitals Gananoque, Brockville, Ivy Lea, and Rockport. of North America Cruising opportunities and the embarkation point for many local abound from the Kingston boarding site. ruises. It is also home River sights include the o more museums than other town in Ontario. curious Boldt’s Castle, a folly built on one of the iversally popular, the Guard at Old restored British bastion islands by millionaire hotelier Boldt and aband- Fort Henry Old Fort Henry National Historic Site of oned in grief when his wife died in 1904. It was Canada is a living military Oscar, Boldt’s head chef museum brought to life by guards in bright scarlet period at the Waldorf Astoria who, entertaining summer guests at uniforms who are trained in the castle, concocted Thousand drills, artillery exercises, and Island salad dressing. Landtraditional fife and drum lubbers will enjoy the scenery music of the 1860s. Canada’s

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp356–7 and pp381–2

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top Army Training University is also based in the city and The Royal Military College Museum, housed in a 1846 Martello Tower, tells the story of today’s cadets and their forebears. West of the downtown area lies the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes. There are displays on the history of the Great Lakes and the ships that sailed on them, including the first ship built for the Lakes here in 1678. The museum also contains a 3,000-tonne icebreaker, now a delightfully appointed bed-and-breakfast. Modern-day technology is explored at Kingston Mills, the lock station at the southern end of the Rideau Canal, where boats are lifted 4 m (13 ft). P Old Fort Henry Kingston. Tel (613) 542 7388. # mid-May– late Sep: daily. & 7 www.forthenry.com E Marine Museum of the

Great Lakes 55 Ontario St. Tel (613) 542 2261. # Apr–Oct: 10am–5pm daily; Nov– May: 10am – 4pm Mon – Fri. & 8 www.marmus.ca

Rideau Canal 6 n 34a Beckwith St. South, Smiths Falls (613) 283 5170.

The Rideau Canal, originally a defensive barrier protecting Canada against the Americans and finished in 1832, stretches for 200 km (125 miles). The best way to enjoy this sparkling necklace of scenic waterway is by boat. A great feat of 19th-century

A view of the Rideau Canal as it travels through Westport village

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Historic house along the main street of Picton in peaceful Quinte’s Isle

engineering, which includes 47 locks and 24 dams, the system allows boaters to float through tranquil woods and farmland, scenic lakes, and to stop in quaint villages, as well as visit the Canal Museum at Smith’s Falls. The canal north of Kingston also contains a number of provincial parks which offer canoe trails. Also popular is the 400-km (250-mile) Rideau Trail, a hiking system linking Kingston and Canada’s capital city, Ottawa. E Canal Museum 34 Beckwith St. S. Tel (613) 284 0505. # mid-Jun–mid-Oct: daily; mid-Oct–mid-Jun: Sat–Sun. & 7

Prince Edward County 7 n 116 Main St., Picton. Tel (613) 476 2421. www.pec.on.ca

Charming and known for its relaxed pace and oldfashioned hospitality, Prince Edward County is surrounded by Lake Ontario and the Bay of Quinte, and is sometimes referred to as Quinte’s Isle. The island is renowned for its two camping and sunbathing beaches in Sandbanks Provincial Park. There, mountains of fine sand reach 25 m (82 ft) and are considered one of the most significant fresh-water dune systems in the world. United Empire Loyalists (see p46) settled in the County following the American Revolution (1775), founding engaging small towns and a strong farming industry.

Visitors can absorb the local historic architecture by traveling along the country roads and the Loyalist Parkway, either cycling or by car, pausing to appreciate the island’s charming views.

Serpent Mounds Park 8 Rural route 3. Tel (705) 295 6879. £ Coburg. c Peterborough. # mid-May – mid-Oct: 9am – 8pm daily. & 7

Situated on the shore of Rice Lake, Serpent Mounds is a historic native Indian burial ground. A grove of aging oak encloses nine burial mounds of an ancient people who gathered here more than 2,000 years ago. The only one of its kind in Canada, the largest mound has an unusual zigzag appearance, said to represent the shape of a moving snake. The site is still sacred to native people. Rice Lake, which offers shady picnic spots and excellent fishing, provides a pleasant backdrop. On the tiny Indian River 9 km (5 miles) away, Lang Pioneer Village is a more traditional representation of Canada’s past, featuring 20 restored 19th-century buildings, heritage gardens, and farmyard animals. Visitors can watch an ancient restored grist mill in action, and workers in period costumes display ancient skills. Blacksmiths and tinsmiths ply their trade in an authentic smithy and will give lessons.

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protect them from frost. The stones remain respectfully regarded to this day as a sacred site by native peoples. Y Petroglyphs Provincial

area. This spot is a fantastic viewing point for the myriad colors of Ontario’s fall trees with their lovely bright red and orange shades.

Park Northey’s Bay Rd. off Hwy 28. Tel (705) 877 2552. # May – Oct: 10am – 5pm daily. & 7

The Haliburton Highlands 0 n Haliburton (705) 286 1777. www.haliburtoncounty.ca Lush bullrushes surround a pond in Petroglyphs Provincial Park

Kawartha Lakes 9 n Peterborough (705) 742 2201. c Peterborough. £ Cobourg. www.thekawarthas.net

The Kawartha Lakes are part of the 386-km (240-mile) Trent–Severn Waterway that runs from Lake Ontario to Georgian Bay and was originally built in the 19th century. Today the area is a playground for vacationers, with waterbased activities including cruises and superb fishing. Renting a houseboat from one of the coastal villages is a popular way of exploring the locality. At the center of the region lies the friendly city of Peterborough, notable for its university, pleasing waterfront parks, and the world’s largest hydraulic liftlock. Thirty-four km (21 miles) north lies the Curve Lake Indian Reserve’s famous Whetung Gallery, one of the best places locally for native arts and crafts.

Combermere q * 250. n Ottawa Valley Tourist Association, 9 International Dr., Pembroke (613) 732 4364. www.ottowavalley.org

The village of Combermere is a central point for people heading to a number of provincial parks in Eastern Ontario, including Algonquin (see pp204–5), Carson Lake, and Opeongo River. It is a good tourist center for fuel and refreshments. A few kilometers south of Combermere lies the Madonna

The Haliburton Highlands are one of Ontario’s year-round outdoor destinations, renowned for their forests, lakes, and spectacular scenery. In the summer, thousands of visitors enjoy boating, fishing, House Pioneer Museum. and swimming in this region. In fall, Founded by busloads of tourists Catherine Doherty, travel to appreciate this Catholic lay the celebrated seacommunity has sonal colors; others grown to have come for the deer mission outposts hunting. Winter around the world. brings skiers and It is managed by The Madonna at Pioneer snowboarders. volunteers, who surMuseum vive from its cooperThe village of Haliburton is found ative farm, and who along scenic Highway 35, dedicate themselves to fundwhich winds its way through raising. Since 1963, a recycling exceptional scenery from program has been raising Minden north to the considmoney for the world’s poor. erable charms of Dorset. The E Madonna House Pioneer fire tower atop a rock cliff Museum overlooking the village gives Hwy 517. Tel (613) 756 3713. # midspectacular views of the Lake May–mid-Oct: 10am–5pm Tue–Sat. of Bays and the surrounding

Petroglyphs Provincial Park, 30 km (19 miles) to

the north of Peterborough, is better known to locals as the “teaching rocks” for the 900-plus aboriginal rock carvings cut into the park’s white marble outcrops. Rediscovered in 1954, these wonderfully preserved symbols and figures of animals, boats, spirits, and people were made by spiritual leaders to record their dreams and visions. Today the stones are housed in a huge glass building, built around them in 1984 to

Golfers taking a break between games to enjoy the Haliburton scenery

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp356–7 and pp381–2

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Farm cottages outside Barry’s Bay, home to many Ontarian craftspeople

Eganville w * 1,300. n Ottawa Valley Tourist Association, 9 International Dr., Pembroke (613) 732 4364.

This highway 60 village with its little restaurants and gas station provides a handy tourist center for visitors to this picturesque region. Local attractions include the Bonnechere Caves, 8 km (5 miles) away. The caves were at the bottom of a tropical sea 500 million years ago. Gradually raised over millennia from the ocean bed, they are covered with fossils of primitive life forms. The privately owned site is open for tours in summer. T Bonnechere Caves Tel (613) 628 2283. # May–early Sep: daily; late Sep–Oct: Sat & Sun. &

high on a hill, nearby Wilno overlooks scenic river valleys and boasts the fine church and grotto of St. Mary’s.

Algonquin Provincial Park r See pp204–205.

North Bay t * 56,000. ~ £ c n 1375 Seymour St. (705) 472 8480.

Billing itself as the Gateway to the Near North, North Bay sits at the eastern end of Lake Nippissing, 350 km (217 miles) north of Toronto. The

region’s most famous natives are undoubtedly the Dionne quintuplets. Born in 1934, the Quints’ original modest family homestead has been relocated and now forms the town’s popular Dionne Homestead Museum. Lake Nippissing nearby is famous for its fishing and wilderness scenery. Boat cruises across the lake follow the old French explorers route. North Bay is a good starting-point for trips to the area’s many vacation camps. E Dionne Homestead

Museum 1375 Seymour St. Tel (705) 472 8480. # mid May – mid-Oct: daily. &7

Barry’s Bay e * 1,250. n Ottawa Valley Tourist Association, 9 International Dr., Pembroke (613) 732 4364.

An attractive little town, Barry’s Bay has a sizeable Polish population, as does its neighbor Wilno, site of the first Polish settlement in Canada. The area is home to many craftspeople and artisans, who sell their wares in the local villages. Barry’s Bay is also popular for stores selling outdoor gear and watersport equipment. Yearround sports facilities can be found at nearby Kamaniskeg Lake and Redcliffe Hills, both of which are popular places for renting cottages. Perched

THE DIONNE QUINTS The hamlet of Corbeil experienced a natural miracle on May 28, 1934: the birth of the Dionne quintuplets; Annette, Emilie, Yvonne, Cecile, and Marie, the five identical girls born to Oliva and Elzire Dionne. The Quints’ combined weight at birth was only 6.1 kg (13 lbs 5 oz), and the babies’ lungs were so tiny that small doses of rum were required daily to help them breathe. Experts put the chances of giving birth to identical quintuplets at 1 in 57 million. The girls became international stars, attracting countless visitors to North Bay during the 1930s. A Quint industry sprang up with curiosity-seekers flocking to watch the young girls at play. The Dionne homestead was moved to North Bay in 1985, and visitors can travel back over 60 years to marvel anew at the birth of the Quints in this small farmhouse.

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Algonquin Provincial Park

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To many Canadians, Algonquin, with its lush maple and fir woods, sparkling lakes, and plentiful wildlife, is as familiar a symbol of Canada as is Niagara Falls. Founded in 1893, this is the oldest and “Moose most famous park in Ontario, stretching Crossing” across 7,725 square km (3,000 square miles) of wilderness. Wildlife abounds; visitors have a chance to see beavers, moose, and bear in their natural habitats, and the park echoes with the hauntingly beautiful call of the loon, heard often in northern Ontario. Every August, on Thursday evenings, “wolf howls” are organized whereby visitors attempt to elicit answers from these native anima cries. Opportunities for outdoor most visitors like to try one of th of canoe routes through the fore

Killarney Lodge One of the park’s rental lodges, these rustic buildings are popular places to stay during their summer and fall season.

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exhibits various international art displays, with a focus on nature and wildlife. Painters featured have included Tom Thomson, precursor of the famous Group of Seven (see pp164–5).

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwy 60. Tel (705) 633 5572. # daily. c from Toronto in summer. & for camping. 0 some lodges. 8 www.algonquinpark.on.ca

Lake Opeongo With over 1 000 lakes Algonquin is justly celebrated for its

itor Centre to celebrate s centenary, e contains a with displays ark’s wildlife ural history.

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THE GREAT LAKES he varied charms of the Canadian Great Lakes region, from the sleepy little farming towns bordering Lake Erie to the islandstudded bays of Lake Huron and the wilderness encircling Lake Superior, tend to be obscured by the fame of Niagara Falls. One of the world’s most famous sights, the falls occur where the Niagara River tumbles 50 meters (164 ft) between Lakes Erie and Ontario. Native tribes once lived on the fertile land around the area’s lakes and rivers, but fur traders used the lakes as a vital waterway.

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The War of 1812 resulted in British Canada securing trade rights to the northern lakeshores. Between 1820 and 1850 settlers established farms, and mining and forestry flourished in Canada’s then richest province. Today, the Trans-Canada Highway follows the northern shores of Lakes Huron and Superior for over 1,000 km (620 miles), traveling through the untamed scenery of Killarney Park, past picturesque old towns such as Sault Ste. Marie, and eventually reaching the bustling port of Thunder Bay.

SIGHTS AT A GLANCE National and Provincial Pa arks

Geeorgi Bay Islands Georgian National al Park r Killarney Provincial Killar al Par Park s Point Pelee National Park 6 Historic Town ns and Cities ns

Brantford Goderich h Hamilton on n Kitchener-Waterloo er-Wate er er-W Wate W ate 0 London Niagara-on-the-Lake e-La e-Lak Thunder hu Bay

Sainte-Marie among the Hurons y Sault Ste. Marie f Stratf atford 9 atfo Temagam gam ami d Thunder Bay h Orillia w Windsor 7 Areas of Natural Beauty

Bruce Peninsula p Lake Erie 5 Lake Huron no Lake Superior g Manitoulin Island a Muskoka e Niagara Falls

Notta N No o ottawasaga Bay otta Sauble uble ble B Beach Welland aan and the Welland d Canal 4 KEY EY k International airp port Highway Major road Major rail routes routes

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The imposing façade of Dundurn Castle in Hamilton

Hamilton 1 * 324,000. ~ k £ c n 34 James St. S. (905) 546 2666, 1 800 263 8590. www.hamilton undiscovered.com

E Dundurn Castle 610 York Blvd. Tel (905) 546 2872. # mid-May–early Sep: 10am– 4pm daily; late Sep–mid-May: noon– 4pm Tue–Sun. & 7 partial. Y Royal Botanical Gardens 680 Plains Rd. West. Tel (905) 527 1158. # daily. & 7 partial.

The city of Hamilton sits at the extreme western end of Lake Ontario, some 70 km (44 miles) from Toronto. Its 2 specialty is steel, and the city’s mills churn out around 60 per * 13,000. g n 26 Queen St. cent of Canada’s total pro(905) 468 4263. www.niagraon duction. Despite the town’s thelake.com industrial bias, it possesses some enjoyable attractions. Dundurn Castle is a Regency Niagara-on-the-Lake is a villa dating from the 1830s, charming little town of whose interior holds a fine col- elegant clapboard mansions lection of period furnishings. and leafy streets set where the It was built for the McNabs, mouth of the Niagara River one of the most influential fam- empties into Lake Ontario. The ilies in Ontario, who included town was originally known as in their number Sir Allan Newark and under this name Napier McNab, Prime Minister it became the capital of Upper Canada (as Ontario was then of Canada from 1854–6. Another sight is the Royal known) in 1792. It was to be Botanical Gardens, comprisa temporary honor. Just four ing forests, marshes, and small years later, the British decided to move the capital lakes over some 1,093 ha farther away from the (2,700 acres) on the north side of US border, and chose Hamilton harbor. York (now Toronto) Among the notable instead. It was a wise gardens here are a decision. In 1813, the fine Rose Garden, Americans crossed Rose in the Royal the Laking Garden the Niagara River and Botanical Gardens with its peonies destroyed Newark in the War of 1812 (see and irises, and the heavily perfumed Lilac pp46–7). The British returned Garden. The Mediterranean after the war to rebuild their Garden occupies a large conhomes, and the Georgian town they constructed has servatory and contains plants found in this climate zone. survived pretty much intact. Also in town, the Canadian Today, visitors take pleasure Warplane Heritage Museum in exploring the town’s lovely has a display of more than 30 streets, but there is one major operational aircraft dating from attraction, Fort George, a carefully restored British World War II to the jet age.

Niagara-on-theLake

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

stockade built in the 1790s just southeast of town. The earth and timber palisade encircles ten replica buildings including three blockhouses, the barracks, a guard house, and the officers’ quarters. There is also a powder magazine store, where all the fittings were wood or brass, and the men donned special shoes without buckles to reduce the chance of an unwanted explosion. Guides in old-style British military uniforms describe life in the fort in the 19th century. Niagra-on-the-Lake is also home to the annual Shaw Festival, a prestigious theatrical season featuring the plays of George Bernard Shaw and other playwrights, which runs from April to November. E Fort George Queen’s Parade, Niagara Pkwy. Tel (905) 468 4257. # 10am– 5pm daily. & 7

Gardens in front of an early 19thcentury inn at Niagara-on-the-Lake

Niagara Falls 3 See pp212–15.

Welland and The Welland Canal 4 * 48,000. ~ c n Seaway Mall, 800 Niagara St. (905) 735 8696. www.wellandcanal.com

An important steel town, Welland is bisected by the famous Welland Canal, which was built to solve the problem of Niagara Falls. The Falls

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Aerial view of the small village of Long Point on the shore of Lake Erie

presented an obstacle that made it impossible for boats to pass between lakes Ontario and Erie. Goods had to be unloaded on one side of the Falls and then carted to the other, a time-consuming and expensive process. To solve the problem, local entrepreneurs dug a canal across the 45-km (28-mile) isthmus separating the lakes early in the 19th century, choosing a route to the west of the Niagara River. The first Welland Canal was a crude affair, but subsequent improvements have created today’s version, which has eight giant locks adjusting the water level by no less than 99 m (324 feet). A remarkable feat of engineering, the canal is capable of accommodating the largest of ships. It is possible to drive alongside the northerly half of the canal, on Govern-

ment Road from Lake Ontario to Thorold, where seven of the eight locks are situated. The viewing platform at Lock No.3 provides a great vantage point and has an information center detailing the canal’s history. Welland boasts another eyecatching attraction: 28 giant murals decorate some of the city’s downtown buildings.

Lake Erie 5 n 660 Garrison Rd., Fort Erie (905) 871 1332, 1 888 270 9151.

Lake Erie is named after the native peoples who once lived along its shores. The Erie, or cat people, were renowned for their skills as fishermen. Some 400 km (249 miles) long and an average of 60 km (37 miles) wide, Lake Erie is the

A merchant ship on the Welland Canal near the town of Welland

shallowest of the Great Lakes and separates Canada from the US. Its northern shore is one of the most peaceful parts of Ontario, with a string of quiet country towns and small ports set in rolling countryside. Three peninsulas reach out from the Canadian shoreline, one of which has been conserved as the Point Pelee National Park, home to a virgin forest and, during spring and summer, thousands of migrating birds. About 30 km (19 miles) south of Niagara Falls, the small town of Fort Erie lies where the Niagara River meets Lake Erie, facing its sprawling US neighbor, Buffalo. The massive Peace Bridge links the two, and most people cross the border without giving Fort Erie a second look. They miss one of the more impressive of the reconstructed British forts that dot the Canada-US border. Old Fort Erie is a replica of the stronghold, destroyed by the Americans in the War of 1812. Entry is across a drawbridge, and the interior holds barracks, a powder magazine, officers’ quarters, and a guard room. The fort’s battlefield is the site of one of the War of 1812’s bloodiest battles, fought here during the siege of the fort in 1814. E Fort Erie 350 Lakeshore Rd. Tel (905) 871 0540. # mid-May–Sep: daily. & 7 partial.

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Point Pelee National Park 6 Tel (519) 322 2365. £ Windsor. c Windsor. # daily. & 7 8

A long, fingerlike isthmus, Point Pelee National Park sticks out into Lake Erie for 20 km (12 miles) and forms the southernmost tip of Canada’s mainland. The park has a wide variety of habitats including marshlands, open fields, and ancient deciduous forest. These woods are a rarity, as they are one of the few places in North America’s Water cascades at the main entrance of Windsor’s fashionable Casino Carolinian Life Zone where many of the trees have never Walker Distillery: during 7 been logged. The profusion Prohibition millions of bottles of species creates a junglelike * 191,450. k ~ £ c n 333 of alcohol were smuggled from Windsor into the US across atmosphere, with red cedar, Riverside Drive W. (519) 255 6530, the Detroit River. black walnut, white sassafras, 1 800 265 3633. hickory, sycamore, and sumac, From Windsor, it is an easy A car manufacturing town, 20-km (12-mile) drive south all struggling to reach the along the Detroit River to the just like its American light. This varied vegetation attracts thousands of birds, neighbor Detroit, Windsor and British-built Fort Malden at which visit on their spring and its factories produce hundreds Amherstburg. Not much is left fall migrations. Over 350 of US-badged vehicles every of the fort, but there is a neatly day. Windsor has clean, restored barracks dating from species have been sighted here, and they tree-lined streets and 1819, and the old laundry now can be observed from a riverside walkway, holds an interpretation center. lookout points and This relates the fort’s role in but its most noted forest trails. Every attraction is a trendy the War of 1812 (see pp46–7), fall, hosts of orangeriver-side Casino that where the English plotted with draws thousands of the Shawnee to invade the US. and-black monarch visitors. The city butterflies can also E Art Gallery of Windsor Contemporary painting has many lively be seen here. A 401 Riverside Dr. W. Tel (519) 977 at Windsor Art Gallery marshland boardbars and cafés, the 0013. # Tue–Sun. & donation. 7 walk trail winds best of which are through Point Pelee and has along the first three blocks of good observation spots along the main street, Ouellette. Also of interest, the nearby Art Galthe way. Bikes and canoes 8 lery of Windsor, is noted for can be rented at the start of the boardwalk, and there is a its excellent visiting exhibitions. * 350,000. k ~ £ c n 267 It is possible to relive the concession stand here. Dundas St. (519) 661 5000, 1 800 Farther into the park, the days when the town was a 265 2602. www.londontourism.ca visitor center features displays bootleggers’ paradise by taking Likeable London sits in the of local flora and fauna. a guided tour of the Hiram middle of one of the most fertile parts of Ontario and is the area’s most important town. It is home to the respected University of Western Ontario, which has a striking modern art gallery and a campus with dozens of Victorian mansions. In addition, the few blocks that make up the town center are notably refined and well tended. The finest buildings in the center are the two 19thcentury cathedrals, St. Paul’s, a red-brick Gothic Revival edifice built for the Anglicans in 1846, and the more ornate, Kayakers alongside the boardwalk at Point Pelee National Park St. Peter’s Catholic Cathedral

Windsor

London

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

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erected a few years later. In the northwest of the city, the London Museum of Archeology focuses on the 1,100-year history of the settlement of the area. The Lawson Indian Village here is a reconstruction of a 500-year-old r village, once occupied by the Neutral Indians, with elm longhouses and cedarwood palisades.

Reconstruction of a 500-year-old house at Lawson Indian Village

Stratford 9 * 28,000. c n 88 Wellington St. (519) 271 5140. www.stratfordfestival.on.ca

In 1830, an innkeeper called William Sargint opened the “Shakespeare Inn” beside one of the rough agricultural tracks that then crisscrossed southern

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THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD Neither underground nor a railroad, the name “Underground Railroad” (UGRR) was founded by abolitionists in the 1820s. The UGRR helped slaves from the southern United States to escape to both Canada and the free northern states. It was a secretive organization, especially in the South where the penalties for helping a slave to escape were severe. Slaves were moved north from safe house to safe house right up to the end of the American Civil War in 1865. Reverend Josiah Henson was one of those who escaped on the UGRR, and later founded a school for ex-slaves. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s 1851 abolitionist novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin was based on his life story. Reverend Josiah Henson Ontario. The farmers who settled nearby called the local river the “Avon” and named the town that grew up here “Stratford,” after William Shakespeare’s home town. In 1952 Tom Patterson, a local journalist, decided to organize a Shakespeare Festival. This first event was a humble affair held in a tent, but since then the festival has grown into one of Canada’s most important theatrical seasons, lasting from May to early November and attracting over half a million visitors. The leading plays are still Shakespearean, but other playwrights are showcased too, including modern works.

Stratford is an attractive town with plenty of green lawns, riverside parks, and swans. The town is geared to visitors, offering over 250 guesthouses and several good restaurants. The visitor center produces a book with information and photographs of all the town’s bedand-breakfasts. They also organize heritage walks through the town, which pass its many historic buildings. One of the town’s architectural highlights is the Victorian town hall with its turrets. Stratford has a plethora of art galleries, and the central Gallery Indigena features an interesting collection of native works.

The Shakespearean Gardens along Ontario’s River Avon, overlooked by Stratford’s distinctive courthouse

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Niagara Falls

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Although the majestic rumble of the falls can be heard from miles away, there is no preparation for the sight itself, a great arc of hissing, frothing water crashing over a 57-m (188-ft) cliff amid dense clouds of drifting spray. There are actually two cataracts to gaze at as the speeding river is divided into twin channels by Goat Island, a tiny spray-soaked parcel of land. On one side of Goat Island is the Canadian Horseshoe Falls, and on the far side, across the Falls. Stunning close-u from the vantage poin Even better is the walk tunnels that lead behin the noise from the cra

American Falls The Niagara River tumbles

Rainbow Bridge From the elegant span o Rainbow Bridge there a panoramic views over th falls. The bridge itself crosses the gorge betwee Canada and the US. Her on sunny days, rainbow rise through the spray.

Customs

Niagara Falls Aviary

is Canada’s only indoor aviary and features over 300 exotic birds.

STAR SIGHTS

attractions. Ripley’s Believe it or Not Museum features a dog with human teeth as just one of its offerings. For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

. Horseshoe Falls . Maid of the Mist boat trip

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 130 km (84 miles) SW of Toronto. £ from Toronto. c from Toronto. n Niagara Falls Tourism, 5515 Stanley Ave., Niagara Falls (905) 356 6061 or 1 (800) 563 2557. www.discoverniagara.com

e, of falls me and

on f the ecks

250 250

alls rseshoe y a ake f water ylight.

These intrepid vessels gets very close to the foot of the falls. Raincoats are supplied as passengers can expect to get wet on this thrilling trip.

ion deck, which gives a bird’seye view of the falls. It is also open at night so visitors can see the floodlit waters.

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Exploring Niagara Falls Niagara Falls is a welcoming little town that stretches along the Niagara River for about 3 km (2 miles). Renowned as a honeymoon destination, the town is well equipped to satisfy the needs of the 14 million people who visit the falls each year. It is divided into three main sections: to the south are the falls themselves, and these are flanked by a thin strip of parkland that stretches out along the river bank as far as Clifton Hill, the glitziest street in Ontario, lined with garish amusement park attractions. To the west is the main motel strip, Lundy’s Lane. To the north, on Bridge Street, lies the business district and the train and bus stations.

Clifton Hill and head upriver to the crashing waters under the falls. Raincoats are provided on this invigorating and wet trip.

A wax museum and an array of other attractions at Clifton Hill

Clifton Hill Horseshoe Falls

Named for their shape, the 800-m (2,625-ft) wide and 50-m (164-ft) high Horseshoe Falls are formed by the turbulent waters of the Niagara River roaring over a semicircular cliff to plunge into the bubbling cauldron below. By these means the Niagara River adjusts to the differential between the water levels of lakes Erie and Ontario, which it connects. The falls remain an awe-inspiring sight, despite the fact that the flow of the river is regulated by hydroelectric companies, which siphon off a substantial part of the river to drive their turbines. One result has been a change in the rate of erosion. By the 1900s, the falls were eroding the cliff beneath them at a rate of 1 m (3 ft) a year. Today, the rate is down to 30 cm (1 ft) a year.

The Maid of the Mist pleasure trip

4 Maid of The Mist River Rd. Tel (905) 358 5781. # mid-May– Oct: daily. & 7 www.maidofthemist.com

The best way to appreciate the full force of the falls is to experience the Maid of the Mist boat trip. Boats depart from the jetty at the bottom of

The dramatic arc of thundering waters at Horseshoe Falls For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

This short, steep street runs up from the edge of the Niagara River gorge and is lined with a string of fast food restaurants and gaudy tourist attractions. The flashing lights and giant advertising billboards point the way to such sights as the Guinness Book of World Records, House of Frankenstein, That’s Incredible Museum, Houdini’s Museum and Ripley’s Believe it or Not! Museum, where visitors can speak to a genie in a crystal bottle and see oddities such as a man with a greater-than-usual number of pupils in his eyes. White Water Walk 4330 River Road. Tel (905) 374 1221. # daily. & 7 www.niagaraparks.com

The great force of the Niagara River’s torrent is best admired from down at the bottom of the canyon. The Great Gorge

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designed cable car that crosses the gorge high above the river. A different perspective of the falls can be seen from here. O Niagara Parks Botanical

Gardens and Butterfly Conservatory 2565 River Road. Tel (905) 358 0025. # daily. & for conservatory. 7 www.niagaraparks.com

The Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens are located 9 km (6 miles) downstream from the falls and comprise over 40 ha (99 acres) of beautifully maintained gardens divided into several different zones. One of the prettiest areas in summer is the rose garden, which Wooden boardwalk along the Niagara River at the Great Gorge Adventure displays over 2,000 different varieties. The extensive annual Adventure provides this close- trails lead past boulders, caves, garden, which houses many and wild flowers. The walks rare species imported from all up view by means of an elevator and a tunnel, which lead are easy on the way down but parts of the globe, puts on a from the top of the gorge to a a steep climb on the way up. year-round show. The gardens riverside boardwalk. The whirlalso include an arboretum that pools and rapids here are Whirlpool Aerocar has examples of many different 3850 River Road. Tel (905) 354 5711. types of trees from beech and some of the most spectacular, yet treacherous, in the world. # daily, weather permitting. & mulberry to magnolia and yew. www.niagaraparks.com The butterfly conservatory The Old Scow The Niagara River makes a is even more popular. At the Just above the falls, stranded dramatically sharp turn about beginning of a visit, a video on the rocks in the middle of 4.5 km (3 miles) downis shown in the theater. the river, is the Old Scow, a stream from the The film explains flat-bottomed barge that was falls, generating the life cycle of a vicious raging a butterfly, from shipwrecked in August 1918. It was being towed across the whirlpool, one of egg and larvae Niagara River by a tugboat the most lethal through to the Butterfly fl at the h Botanic when the lines snapped. The stretches of water emergence of the Gardens and Conservatory adult. Several scow hurtled towards the falls, in the whole of getting within 750 m (2,460 ft), North America. thousand butterof the brink, and the two-man The effect is created when the flies are housed in a huge crew appeared to be doomed. river pushes against the north- heated dome where they fly free – one of the largest collecLuckily the boat grounded west side of the canyon, only itself on this rocky ledge just to be forced to turn around in tions in the world. A series of the opposite direction. The pathways pass through the in time. The crew’s ordeal was, however, far from over: most stunning view of the dome, leading past the lush they had to wait another 29 tropical flora on which the whirlpool rapids is from the hours before being finally Spanish Aerocar, a specially butterflies make their homes. winched to safety. The Old Scow has been rusting away on the rocks ever since. O Niagara Glen Nature

Reserve 3050 River Road. Tel (905) 358 8633. # daily.

The small Niagara Glen Nature Reserve lies 7 km (4 miles) downriver from the falls. This segment of the gorge has been preserved in pristine condition, with bushes and low trees tumbling down the rocky cliffside. This is how it may have looked before the coming of the Europeans. Seven different hiking

The Whirlpool Rapids are best seen from the Spanish Aero Car

Tourists get a close-up view of the magnificent frothing waters of Niagara’s Horseshoe Falls

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Orillia w * 29,000. c n 150 Front St. S. (705) 326 4424.

Alexander Graham Bell’s study at the Bell Homestead in Brantford

settled here in 1784. He soon decided that the interests of his people lay with the British, and his braves fought along* 300,000. £ c n 185 King side the Redcoats during the Street W. (519) 745 3536, 1 800 265 American War of Independ6959. www.kw-visitor.on.ca ence (1775–83). Sadly, he had chosen the losing side and, Originally called Berlin by after the war, his band was forced to move north to the German immigrants who settled here in the 1820s, the Canada, where the British ceded the natives a piece town was renamed Kitchener of land at Brantford. The (after the British Empire’s Iroquois still live in this area, leading general) during World War I. Today, the and host the Six Nations town is a supply Pow Wow, featuring tradicenter for the tional dances and crafts, surrounding and held here on tribal farming comland every August. munities including Brantford is also known religious groups such as for its association with the telephone. In the Mennonites (see box). Visitors 1876, the first ever long-distance call was can see the fascinating sight made from Brantford t of traditionally to the neighboring dressed MenFruit seller in Brantford village of Paris by nonites in their Alexander Graham horse-drawn buggies around Bell (1847–1922), who had town. Every year, these desemigrated from Scotland to cendants of German immiOntario in 1870. Bell’s old grants organize r the nine-day home has survived and, conOktoberfest, a celebration of served as the Bell Homestead German culture, with everyNational Historic Museum, is thing from sausages with sauer- located in the countryside on kraut to lederhosen and lager. the outskirts of town. The site has two buildings: Bell’s homestead is furnished in period q style and houses displays on his inventions as well as telling * 86,000. ~ £ c n 399 Wayne the story of the telephone; the Gretzky Parkway (519) 751 9900. other, containing the first Bell company office, was moved Brantford is an unassuming here from Brantford in 1969. manufacturing town that P Bell Homestead takes its name from Joseph National Historic Museum Brant (1742–1807), the leader 94 Tutela Heights Rd. Tel (519) 756 of a confederacy of tribes 6220. # 9:30am–4:30pm Tue–Sun. called the Six Nations. An ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7 Iroquois chief himself, Brant

KitchenerWaterloo 0

Brantford

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

Orillia is a pleasant country town that was the home of the novelist and humorist Stephen Leacock (1869–1944). Leacock’s tremendously popular Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town poked fun at the vanities of provincial Ontario life in the fictional town of Mariposa. His old lakeshore home has been conserved as the Stephen Leacock Museum, containing original furnishings as well as details of his life. Orillia lies along a narrow strip of water linking Lake Couchiching to Lake Simcoe (once a Huron fishing ground) and is a good base from which to cruise both lakes. On the shore, Orillia’s Centennial Park has a marina and a long boardwalk that stretches all the way to Couchiching beach. E Stephen Leacock Museum 50 Museum Drive, Old Brewery Bay. Tel (705) 329 1908. # daily. & 7

Bethune Memorial House in the town of Gravenhurst, Muskoka

Muskoka e * 55,000. £ Gravenhurst. c Huntsville. n 1342 Hwy 11 North RR #2, Kilworthy (705) 689 0660, 1 800 267 9700.

Muskoka comprises an area north of Orillia between the towns of Huntsville and Gravenhurst. In summer, city folk stream north to their cottages here. The center of this lake country is Gravenhurst, a resort at the south end of

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Lake Muskoka. Here, a small museum is devoted to the life and work of Doctor Norman Bethune (1890–1939), who pioneered mobile blood transfusion units during the Spanish Civil War. Bethune Memorial House is the doctor’s birthplace, and it has been restored in late 19th-century style.

Windsurfing off Turgean Bay Island in Georgian Bay

Georgian Bay Islands National Park r Tel (705) 526 9804. c Midland. # daily. & summer. 7 8 www.pc.gc.ca

The deep-blue waters of Georgian Bay are dotted with thousands of little islands, often no more than a chunk of rock guarded by a windblown pine. The bay is large, beautiful, and flows into Lake Huron. Sixty of its islands have been incorporated into the Georgian Bay Islands National Park. The park’s center is Beausoleil

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THE MENNONITE RELIGIOUS COMMUNITY The Mennonite Christian sect was founded in Europe in the early 16th century. The Mennonites were persecuted because they refused to swear any oath of loyalty to the state or take any part in war. In the 17th century, a group split off to form its own, even stricter, sect. These Ammanites (or Amish) emigrated to the US and then to Ontario in 1799. The Amish own property communally and shun modern machinery and clothes, traveling around the back lanes in distinctive horsedrawn buggies and dressed in traditional clothes. Amish couple driving a buggy Island, the hub of the area’s wide range of facilities. Beausoleil is also crossed by scenic hiking trails, but it is important to come properly equipped since it is a remote spot. The only way to reach the island is by water taxi from the hamlet of Honey Harbour. The journey takes about forty minutes. Day trips around the islands are also available from the “Day-Tripper’s Ferry.”

Nottawasaga Bay t £ Barrie. c Wasaga Beach. n 550 River Rd. W., Wasaga Beach (705) 429 2247. www.wasagabeach.com

Part of scenic Georgian Bay, Nottawasaga Bay is one of the region’s most popular vacation destinations. The Wasaga Beach resort has miles of golden sandy beach and many chalets and cottages. As well as swimming and sunbathing there is the curious Nancy Island Historic Site,

Discovery Harbour, Nottawasaga Bay’s restored British naval base

behind Beach Area 2. The site has a museum which houses the preserved HMS Nancy: one of few British boats to survive the War of 1812 (see pp46–7). There are more naval relics in Penetanguishene, just to the east of Nottawasaga Bay, where Discovery Harbour is a superb reconstruction of the British naval base that was established here in 1817. Along the inlet are replicas of the barracks, blacksmiths’ workshops, houses, and the original 1840 Officers’ Quarters. The harbor holds a pair of sailing ships, the Tecumseh and the Bee, built to 19th-century specifications. In the summer, volunteers organize sailing trips for visitors, who are expected to lend a hand during the voyage. To the west of Nottawasaga Bay lies Owen Sound. Once a tough Great Lakes port, this is now a quiet place with a Marine-Rail Museum devoted to the town’s past. Displays include photographs of Victorian ships and sailors.

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Sainte-Marie among the Hurons

y

Sainte-Marie among the Hurons is one of Ontario’s most compelling attractions. Located 5 km (3 miles) east of the town of Midland, the site is a reconstruction of the settlement founded here among the Hurons by Jesuit priests in 1639. The village is divided into two main sections, one 17th-century Iroquoian jug for Europeans (complete with a chapel and workshops), the other for Hurons, with a pair of bark-covered longhouses. Marking the boundary between the two is the small church of Saint Joseph, a simple wooden building where the Jesuits set about trying to convert the Huron to Christianity. Their efforts Exterior of Longhouse met with a variety of reactions, and the complex relation- The exterior of the longhouse ship between the two cultures is explored here in detail. had bark-covered walls built over a cedar pole frame that bent to form an arch.

In the hospital

used French medicines w success. The Huron had no resist European diseases such as influenza and me

Church of Saint Joseph This is the grave site of two Jesuit priests, Jean de Brébeuf and Gabriel Lalement, who were captured, bound to the stake, then tortured to death by the Iroquois.

. Fireside Gathering Inside the longhouse, fish, skins, and tobacco were hung from the ceiling to dry. An open fire burned through the winter. The smoke caused health problems to the Huron.

STAR FEATURES

. Fireside Gathering in Longhouse

. Traditional Crafts

Ojibway Wigwam by the Palisades This wigwam is built to Ojibway design and lies next to the wooden palisade which encloses the mission. It is believed that the Jesuits built these to make visiting Ojibway feel at home.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwy 12 (5 km, 3 miles east of Midland). Tel (705) 526 7838. # May-Oct: 10am–5pm daily. & 7 = 8 0 - www.hhp.on.ca

. Traditional Crafts The costumed guides here have been trained in the traditional crafts employed by both the Huron and the French, including 17th-century cooking and blacksmith’s work. The blacksmith’s shop was

The carpenter’s shop

important as Sainte-Marie needed essential items such as hinges and nails, often de by using recycled iron.

had an abundant supply of local wood, and craftsmen from France were employed by the priests to build the mission.

Interior of Chapel The old chapel has been carefully re-created r and, with the light filtering in through its timbers, it is easy to imagine what it was like for the ests as they gathered to say h day before dawn.

Entr 0 meters 0 yards

Bastions helped de

the mission from atta Built of local stone to ward off arrows and musket balls, they also served as observation towers.

The Cookhouse Garden At Sainte-Marie, care is taken to grow crops the Huron way, with corn, beans, and squash planted in rotation. This system provided a year-round food supply, which was supplemented with meat and fish.

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Goderich u * 7,500. ~ n cnr Hamilton St. & Hwy 21. Tel (519) 524 6600, 1 800 280 7637.

Goderich is a charming little town overlooking Lake Huron at the mouth of the River Maitland. It was founded in 1825 by the British-owned Canada Company, which had persuaded the Ontario government to part with 1 million ha (2.5 million acres) of fertile land in their province for just twelve cents an acre, a bargain of such proportions that there was talk of corruption. Eager to attract settlers, the company had the Huron Road built from Cambridge, in the east, to Goderich. The town was laid out in a formal manner, with the main streets radiating out from the striking, octagon-shaped center. Goderich possesses two excellent museums. The first, the Huron County Museum, houses a large collection of antique farm implements, as well as a military gallery and a reconstruction of a 19th century town street, with store fronts and a real locomotive. There is also a huge, steam-driven thresher. The Huron Historic Jail, built between 1839 and 1842, is an authentically preserved Victorian prison. Fascinating tours are available of its dank cells, the original jailers’ rooms, and the Governor’s 19th-century house. The town is also renowned for its sunsets, particularly as viewed from the shore of Lake Huron.

The golden sands of Sauble Beach on the shore of Lake Huron

P Huron Historic Jail 181 Victoria St. N. Tel (519) 524 2686. # May –Sep: 10am– 4:30pm Mon–Sat, 1pm– 4:30pm Sun. & E Huron County Museum 110 North St. Tel (519) 524 2686. # May –Sep: 10am– 4:30pm Mon– Sat, 1pm– 4:30pm Sun. & 7

The quiet back streets of the village also offer friendly guesthouses and bed-and-breakfasts. The most attractive and tranquil camping is at Sauble Falls Provincial Park, north of the beach.

Lake Huron o Sauble Beach i c Owen Sound. n RR1, Sauble Beach (519) 422 1262, open May –Sep. www.saublebeach.com

One of the finest beaches in the whole of Ontario, the golden sands of Sauble Beach stretch for 11 km (7 miles) along the shores of Lake Huron. Running behind this beach is a long, narrow band of campsites, cabins, and cottages. The center of the resort is at the pocket-sized village of Sauble Beach, with a population of only five hundred.

Historic storefront in the charming town of Goderich For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

n Sarnia, Southern shore (519) 336 3232. n Barrie, Georgian Bay (705) 725 7280, 1 800 263 7745. www. georgianbaytourism.on.ca n Sault Ste. Marie, North shore (705) 945 6941.

Of all the Great Lakes, it is Lake Huron which has the most varied landscapes along its shoreline. To the south, the lake narrows to funnel past the largely industrial towns of Sarnia and Windsor on its way to Lake Erie while its southeast shore is bounded by a gentle bluff, marking the limit of one of Ontario’s most productive agricultural regions. Farther north, the long, thin isthmus of Bruce Peninsula stretches out into Lake Huron, signaling a dramatic change in the character of the lakeshore. This is where the southern flatlands are left behind for the more rugged, glacier-scraped country of the Canadian Shield. This transition can be seen clearly in the area of Georgian Bay. This is an impressive shoreline of lakes, forests, beaches, and villages that attracts large numbers of visitors. The lake’s island-sprinkled waters are a popular area for water sports. Outdoor activities here include swimming, hiking, and fishing.

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The 100-km (62-mile) Bruce Peninsula divides the main body of Lake Huron from Georgian Bay and also contains some of the area’s most scenic terrain. Bruce Peninsula National Park lies along the eastern shore and boasts craggy headlands and limestone cliffs with several hiking paths. Beyond the port of Tobermory, at the peninsula’s tip, Fathom Five Marine National Park comprises 19 uninhabi-

Tour Route: The route follows Route 9 and Hwy 6. It can be reached from Owen Sound in the south, or Tobermory in the north. Length: 100 km (62 miles). Stopping-off points: Diving trips and tours to Flowerpot Island leave fromTobermory, which also has good accommodation.

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Manitoulin Island a * 5,000. c n Little Current (705) 368 3021.

Hugging the northern shores of Lake Huron, Manitoulin Island is, at 2,800 sq km (1,100 square miles), the world’s largest freshwater island. A quiet place of small villages, rolling farmland, woodland, and lakes, its edges are fringed by long, deserted beaches. The lake’s North Channel separates Manitoulin from the mainland, Reflections in George Lake, Killarney Provincial Park its waters attracting summer between a week and ten days sailors, while hikers come to explore the island’s trails. to complete and attracts nums bers of serious hikers to its The Ojibway people first occupied the island more than stunning views of the mounTel (705) 287 2900. £ Sudbury. tains and of Georgian Bay. 10,000 years ago, naming it Canoeists can paddle on the after the Great Spirit – Manitou, # daily. & for some facilities. (Manitoulin means God’s park’s many lakes and rivers Killarney Provincial Park is by following a network of Island). First Nations peoples still constitute over a quarter a beautiful tract of wilderness well-marked canoe routes. with crystal-blue lakes, pine of the island’s population. Every August they celebrate and hardwood forests, boggy d their culture in one of Canada’s lowlands, and the spectacular largest powwows, La Cloche * 1,000. £ c n Chamber of Comthe Wikwemikong Mountains, which (Bay of the Beaver). are known for merce, Lakeshore Rd. (705) 569 3344. On the north shore, their striking white Gore Bay houses quartzite ridges. This The tiny resort of T Temagami five tiny museums magnificent scenery and its wild surroundings has inspired many have long attracted fur traders that focus on the artists, particularly and trappers, painters, and island’s early settlers. Nearby, the island’s members of the writers, most famously Grey Group of Seven Owl (see p250), the remarklargest settlement is Little Current, a quiet (see pp164–5), one able Englishman who posed of whom, Franklin as a Native Canadian and town with a handful Gore Bay on of motels and restaurCarmichael, saw the achieved celebrity status as a Manitoulin Island park as Ontario’s ants. From May to naturalist and conservationist most “challenging in the 1930s. The resort sits September the Chi Cheemaun car ferry connects and gratifying landscape.” The on the distinctively shaped Tobermory on the Bruce park’s 100-km (62-mile) La Lake Temagami, a deep lake Peninsula to Manitoulin Island. Cloche Silhouette Trail takes with long fjords and bays as

Killarney Provincial Park

Temagami

One of Lake Temagami’s numerous canoe routes For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp358–9 and pp383–4

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well as 1,400 islands, which are crisscrossed by numerous scenic canoe routes, hiking and mountain bike trails. Even more remote is the Lady Evelyn Smoothwater Wilderness Park, farther to the west. The only way in is by canoe or float plane from Temagami, but the reward is some of Ontario’s most stunning scenery. Much more accessible is the 30-m (98-ft) high Temagami Fire Tower lookout point, which provides panoramic views of the surrounding pine forests, and the charming Finlayson Provincial Park, a popular place to picnic and camp; both are located on Temagami’s outskirts.

Sault Ste. Marie f * 81,500. ~ £ c n cnr Huron St. & Queen St. W. (705) 945 6941.

Where the rapids of St. Mary’s River link Lake Superior to Lake Huron sits the attractive town of Sault Ste. Marie, one of Ontario’s oldest European communities. The town was founded as a Jesuit mission and fur trading post by the French in 1688. Called the “Sault” (pronounced “Soo”) after the French word for “rapids,” the trading station prospered after 1798 when the rapids were bypassed by a canal. Since then, the canal has been upgraded time and again, and today transports the largest of container ships to the interior, thereby maintaining a thriving local economy. Although there are regular boat trips along the canal, visitors are drawn to Sault Ste. Marie’s main tourist attraction, the Algoma Central Railway, which offers day-long rail tours from the city into the wilderness. The train weaves north through dense forest, past secluded lakes and over yawning ravines to reach the spectacular scenery of Agawa Canyon where there is a twohour break for lunch. In town, the Roberta Bondar Pavilion is a huge tentlike structure decorated with murals depicting Sault’s history. Named after Canada’s first female astronaut, who

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dominated by dramatic granite outcrops and seemingly limitless forest. This challenging area is best experienced in Pukaskwa National Park and Lake Superior Provincial Park, both reached via the TransCanada Highway (Hwy 17) as it cuts a dramatic route along the lake’s north shore.

Thunder Bay h Canal locks at Sault Ste. Marie

was on the Discovery mission in 1992, the pavilion is also the venue for concerts, exhibitions, and a summer farmers’ market. } Algoma Central Railway 129 Bay St. Tel (705) 946 7300. # Jun–mid-Oct: once daily. & 7

Lake Superior g n Ontario Travel Information Centre, Sault Ste. Marie (705) 945 6941.

The least polluted and most westerly of the Great Lakes, Lake Superior is the world’s largest body of freshwater, with a surface area of 82,000 sq km (31,700 sq miles). It is known for sudden violent storms, long a source of dread to local sailors. The lake’s northern coast is a vast weather-swept stretch of untamed wilderness

* 114,000. k ~ c n Terry Fox Information Centre, Hwy 11/17 E. (807) 983 2041, 1 800 667 8386.

On the northern shore of Lake Superior, Thunder Bay is Canada’s third-largest freshwater port, its massive grain elevators dominating the city’s waterfront. Grain is brought to Thunder Bay from the prairies farther west before being shipped to the rest of the world via the Great Lakes. The town was originally established as a French trading post in 1679. These early days are celebrated at Old Fort William, a replica of the old fur trading post, with costumed traders, French explorers, and natives. Fort William was amalgamated with the adjacent town of Port Arthur to form Thunder Bay in 1970. P Old Fort William Off Broadway Ave. Tel (807) 473 2333. # mid-May – mid-Oct: 9am – 6pm daily. & 7

Lake Superior, the world’s largest freshwater lake Hoodoos near Drumheller

Central Canada

INTRODUCING CENTRAL CANADA 228–233 CENTRAL CANADA 234–253

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Exploring Central Canada Central Canada covers the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and eastern Alberta and encompasses the most productive agricultural and energy-rich part of the country. The region is dominated by prairie, (often associated with borderless fields that stretch to t of the wes Mexico. Th variety of l parkland t to the tund rocky dese

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GETTING AROUND Winnipeg, Edmonton, Regina, and Saskatchewan, the four main cities of the region, are well served by public transportation, with regular air, train, and bus connections from British Columbia and other provinces. All four cities also have international airports. From Winnipeg, the Trans-Canada Highway follows the route established in the 19th century by the Canadian Pacific Railway, going 1,333 km (828 miles) west to Calgary. The more

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Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Canada It is easier to imagine gunslingers and coyotes in the desert-like badlands of the Red Deer River Valley in Central Canada than it is to envisage the dinosaurs who once lived in this region. Over 75 million years ago the area was a tropical swamp, similar to the Florida Everglades, and the favored habitat of these huge reptiles, which dominated the Earth for some 160 million years. All the dinosaur specimens found here originate from the Cretaceous period (144–65 million years ago). Dramatic changes in the region’s weather patterns, from wet and tropical to dry desert, helped to preserve an incredible number of dinosaur remains in the area. Today, the Dinosaur Provincial Park is a UN World Heritage Site.

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This Triceratops skull shows the

dinosaur’s flaring bony frill, which protected its neck from attack. Its two horns were an awesome 1 m (3 ft) long. More types of horned dinosaurs have been found here in Alberta than anywhere else.

Trained staff carefully dig out a groove

around the bone while it is still in the ground. Once removed it will be carefully matched to its adjoining bone. The Magnolia is thought

to be one of Earth’s first flowering plants, or angiosperms, and became widespread during the Cretaceous period.

Joseph Burr Tyrrell found the

first important dinosaur skeleton sections in the Red Deer River Valley, Alberta, in 1884. A geologist, Tyrrell stumbled across the skull of a 70 millionyear-old Albertosaurus while surveying coal deposits. Subsequently, palaeontologists rushed here to search for fossils. Drumheller’s l Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology is named after him (see p248).

An artist’s re-creation of the Cretaceous

landscape depicts the types of flora living at the time. Tree ferns dominated the country, and grew in large forests to heights of 18 m (60 ft). Some species still grow in the tropics.

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Horseshoe Canyon lies along the Red Deer

River, its high, worn hills visibly layered with ancient sediments. Ice Age glaciers eroded the layers of mud and sand that buried the remains of dinosaurs and plants. Erosion continues to form this barren, lunar landscape, exposing more bones, petrified wood, and other fossils.

This dinosaur nest on display at the Royal

Tyrrell Museum was discovered at Devil’s Coulee, Alberta, in 1987, and contains several embryos and eggs of the plant-eating Hadrosaur. The Royal Tyrrell

Field Station in the Dinosaur Provincial Park opened in 1987, and offers visitors interpretive displays explaining the history of the area’s dinosaurs.

SIMULATED DINOSAUR DIG The Royal Tyrrell Museum offers the chance to experience the thrill of excavation on a realistic dinosaur dig, designed for ages 10 and older. Using the real tools and techniques of palaeontology, and with Museum science educators as guides, visitors can uncover casts of dinosaur bones, map the quarry, make a field jacket, and learn how to read fossils. There is also a 90-minute hike through the Badlands where visitors can prospect for fossils and investigate real dinosaur remains. The leg bone of a duck-billed

dinosaur is revealed to be complete. Beneath it another piece of bone has been covered with strips of plaster of Paris to protect it during transportation to a laboratory. The reconstructed skeleton of an Albertosaurus towers over the Dinosaur Hall at the Royal Tyrrell Museum. The first dinosaur discovered in the area, Albertosaurus was a fierce meat-eating predator. Despite being eight meters (26 ft) long and weighing some two tons (2,032 kg), this dinosaur was capable of reaching speeds of 40 km/h (25 mph).

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Canadian Mounties The Royal Canadian Mounted Police are a symbol of national pride. Canada’s first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, founded the North West Mounted Police in 1873 in Ontario after violence in the west of the country (between illicit liquor dealers and local natives) reached a climax with the Cypress Hills Massacre (see p247). Marching west, the Mounties reached the Traditional Oldman River, Alberta, 70 km (43 miles) Mountie west of the Cypress Hills, where they built The lush Cypress Hills were the site of a gruesome massacre Fort Macleod in 1874. The principal aims led to the founding of of the Mounties were to establish good relations with which the North West Mounted Police. the aboriginal peoples of the Prairies and to maintain order over new settlers in the late 1800s. The Mounties won respect for their diplomacy, policing the Canadian Pacific Railroad workers and the Klondike Gold Rush in the Yukon during the 1890s. In recognition of their service they gained the Royal prefix in 1904.

The march west covered 3,135 km (1,949 miles)

from Fort Dufferin, Manitoba to southern Alberta. A force of 275 men, 310 horses, and cattle, was sent to catch the illicit whiskey traders operating in the west. Battling with extreme temperatures, plagues of insects, and lack of supplies, the Mounties arrived at the Oldman River in 1874.

THE LONG MARCH

Sioux Chieff Sitting Bull

Inspector James M. W Walsh sealed the Mounties’ reputation for bravery when he took only six men on a parley with Sioux Chief Sitting Bull. The Sioux had retreated to the area after their defeat of US General Custer at the Battle of the Little Big Horn in 1876. Although the Sioux were the traditional enemies of the local Blackfoot and Cree Indians, there was no fighting after the arrival of the Mounties. Walsh’s force succeeded in enforcing law and order across mid-west Canada, winning respect for their diplomacy. Blackfoot native chief Crowfoot praised their fairness saying, “They have protected us as the feathers of a bird protect it from winter.” James M. Walsh

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The adventures of the pioneering

Mounties have long been a source of inspiration to countless authors and filmmakers. Square-jawed and scarlet clad, the Mountie was the perfect hero. Perhaps the bestknown “Mountie” film was the 1936 “Rose Marie” starring crooner Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald.

The skilled horsemen of the

Musical Ride are selected after two years on the force. The officers then begin seven months of intensive training.

THE MUSICAL RIDE The Musical Ride is a thrilling spectacle of 32 riders and horses performing a series of traditional cavalry drills set to music. The drills have not changed since their original use in the British army over a century ago. Staying in tight formation, the horses do the trot, the canter, the rally, and the charge. Every summer the Ride is performed in different venues across Canada and the US.

As an enduring symbol of Canada the

image of the Mounties has adorned everything from postage stamps and currency to this 1940s promotional tourist poster for Lake Louise in Banff National Park. 32 specially bred

horses take part in the Musical Ride. A mixture of thoroughbred stallion crossed with black Hanoverian mare, the horses train for two years. Today’s Mounties are a 20,000 strong police force responsible for the enforcement of federal law across Canada. Their duties range from counting migratory birds to exposing foreign espionage. Jets, helicopters, and cars are all used by modern Mounties.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 670,000. k 12 km (8 miles) NW of city. £ cnr Main St. & Broadway. c Greyhound Canada Station, cnr Portage Ave. & Colony St. n Destination Winnipeg, 285 Portage Ave. Tel (204) 943 1970, 1 800 665 0204. _ Red River Exhibition (Jun); Winnipeg Intl Children’s Festival (Jun); Folklorama (Aug); Festival Voyageur (Feb).

Cruise boats and canoes can be hired from The Forks harbor

P Dalnavert 61 Carlton St. Tel (204) 943 2835. # Tue –Thu, Sat, Sun. ¢ Mon, Fri.

a tower for a spectacular six-story-high view of the Winnipeg skyline. The riverde w wa ay views he St. on ce

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The Legislative Building is built of a rare and valuable limestone complete with the delicate remains of fossils threaded through its façade. The building is set in 12 ha (30 acres) of beautifully kept gardens dotted with statues of poets such as Robert Burns of Scotland, and Ukrainian Taras Ahevchenko, which celebrate the province’s ethnic diversity. E Winnipeg Art Gallery 300 Memorial Blvd. Tel (204) 786 6641. # Tue –Sun. & but free Sat.

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This gallery boasts the largest collection of contemporary Inuit art in the world, with over 10,000 carvings, prints, drawings, and textiles. Especially striking is the large four-panel fabric collage wallhanging, “Four Seasons of the Tundra” by Inuit artist Ruth Qaulluaryuk. The Gallery also contains Gothic and Renaissance altar paintings and tapestries donated by Irish peer Viscount Gore.

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P Exchange District and

Market Square Albert St. Tel (204) 942 6716. www.exchangedistrict.org

When the Canadian Pacific Railway decided to build its transcontinental line through Winnipeg in 1881, the city experienced a boom that led to the setting up of several commodity exchanges. Named after the Winnipeg Grain Exchange, this district was soon populated with a solid array of handsome terracotta and cut stone hotels, banks, warehouses, and theaters. The Exchange District is now a National Historic Site and has been restored to its former glory. It now houses boutiques, craft stores, furniture and antique stores, galleries, artists’ studios, and residential lofts. The center of the district is Old Market Square, a popular site for staging local festivals and outdoor concerts.

Original 19th-century walls enclose the buildings at Lower Fort Garry

P Lower Fort Garry 5981 Hwy 9. Tel (204) 785 6050, 1 877 534 3678. # May – Sep: 9am– 5pm daily. & 7 www.pc.gc.ca

mint produces more than four billion coins annually for Canadian circulation, as well as for 60 other countries including Thailand and India.

Located 32 km (20 miles) north of Winnipeg on the banks of the Red River, Lower Fort Garry Y Assiniboine Park is the only original stone fur2355 Corydon Ave. Tel (204) 986 trading post left standing in 5537. # daily. 7 Stretching for 153 ha (378 Canada. The Fort was established in 1830 by George acres) along the south side Simpson, the governor of the of the Assiniboine Hudson’s Bay Company’s River, Assiniboine northern division, whose Park is one of the large house is now one largest urban parks E Ukrainian Cultural and in central Canada. of the fort’s major Educational Centre One of the park’s attractions. 184 Alexander Ave. E. Tel (204) 942 best-loved attractions is A film about the 0218. # 10am – 4pm Mon –Sat, fort and its fur is the Leo Mol Sculpture 2pm – 5pm Sun. 7 shown at the reGarden which has Housed in an attractive 1930s ception center. some 50 bronze building in the Exchange Inside, several sculptures by the District, this institute was foun- buildings have celebrated local Sculpture in the Leo Mol ded to celebrate the history been restored, artist. The park’s garden, Assiniboine park and culture of Canada’s Conservatory offers including the second-largest ethnic grouping. clerk’s quarters and the store a tropical palm house which The center’s museum, with its stacks of furs. has seasonal displays of a gallery, and research library wide range of flowers and are known for their collection E Royal Canadian Mint shrubs. The park also features of wood carvings, vibrant 520 Lagimodière Blvd. Tel (204) 983 an English garden, a miniature 6429, 1 866 822 6724. # Sep–May: railroad, and a fine example textiles, and collection of elaborately decorated, often 10am–2pm Mon–Sat; May– Aug: of a French formal garden. hand-painted, pysanky 9am – 5pm Mon – Fri. & 7 8 The old refreshment pavilion (Easter eggs). It is hoped The Royal Canadian Mint is is now the Pavilion Gallery, housed in a striking building which focuses on local artists. that new displays will soon open to the public. of rose-colored glass. The A large outdoor bandshell houses live music. The Assiniboine Park Zoo contains 275 different species, specializing in cold-hardy animals from the northern latitudes and mountain ranges such as polar bears, cougars, elk, and bald eagles. The zoo houses a large statue of Winnie the Bear, thought to be modeled on the Winnie the Pooh of the A.A. Milne books. The park’s numerous cycling and walking trails are popular in summer, as is cross-country skiing, skating, A pink glass pyramid houses Canada’s Royal Mint and tobogganing in winter.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5. For transport information see pp420–21

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The Manitoba Museum Outstanding displays of the region’s geography and people are imaginatively presented at this excellent museum, which opened in 1970. The visitor proceeds through chronologically organized galleries with displays that range from pre-history to the present day. Each geographical area also has its own gallery: from the Earth History Gallery, which contains fossils up to 500 million years old, to the re-creation of Winnipeg in the 1920s, including a cinema, and a dentist’s office. One of the museum’s biggest draws is a full-size replica of the Nonsuch, a 17th-century ketch.

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 190 Rupert Ave. Tel (204) 956 2830. c 11. # May–Sep: 10am– 5pm daily; Oct– Apr: to 4pm Tue– Fri & 5pm Sat, Sun. & 7 = 8 www.manitobamuseum.ca

KEY Orientation gallery Earth History gallery

Moose Diorama A moose and her calf among the conifers of the Boreal Forest are part of a display that includes a group of Cree people rock painting and gathering food before the harsh winter sets in.

Arctic/Sub-Arctic gallery Boreal Forest gallery Grasslands gallery Discovery room Urban gallery Nonsuch gallery Hudson’s Bay Company gallery Parklands/mixed Wood gallery Temporary exhibits

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Main entrance

Nonsuch Gallery This two-masted ketch, built in England in 1968, is a replica of the Nonsuch that arrived in Hudson Bay in 1688 in search of furs.

The galleries are arranged on two levels with steps connecting to mezzanines in the Earth History and Boreal Forest galleries. Part of a three-story addition built in 1999 houses the museum’s Hudson’s Bay Company collection.

Buffalo Hunt A Métis hunter chasing buffalo symbolizes the museum’s focus on man’s relationship with his environment. Prairie fields bloom with color across Central Canada during summer

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Lake Winnipeg 4 £ Winnipeg. c Winnipeg. n Travel Manitoba (204) 945 3777, 1 800 665 0040. www.travelmanitoba.com

Ploughing with horses at the Mennonite Heritage Village, Steinbach

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* 11,350. ~ c n Hwy 12N. (204) 326 9566.

* 9,800. c n Red River Tourism, 18 Main St. (204) 482 2022, 1 800 894 2621. www.interlaketourism.com

About an hour’s drive Named after the fifth Earl of southeast of Winnipeg, Selkirk, Thomas Douglas, Steinbach is a closely knit whose family had an interest community with impressive businesses in trucking, in the Hudson’s Bay Company, Selkirk was estabprinting, manufaclished in 1882 turing, and especially car dealerwhen settlers ships. These are arrived along the shores of run largely by the Red River. the Mennonites, members of a Today, on Main Steam Engine at the Protestant religStreet, a 7.5-m Mennonite Heritage Village (25-ft) high statue ious sect who are noted for of a catfish protheir fair dealing. claims Selkirk as the “Catfish capital of North America.” The Mennonites arrived in Steinbach on ox-drawn carts in Sport fishing is a year-round 1874, having fled from religious activity, attracting enthusiasts persecution in Russia. Despite from across North America. not having a rail link, the town The city’s Marine Museum thrived as the Mennonites were of Manitoba displays six regood farmers and, later, car stored historic ships, including dealers (despite preferring not the 1897 S.S. Keenora, Manitoba’s oldest steamship. to use cars themselves). The nearby Mennonite Heritage Village re-creates a 19thcentury Mennonite settlement with some original 100-year-old buildings and a church and school furnished to the period. Its restaurant serves homemade meals such as Mennonite borscht, a soup made with cabbage, and cream according to a traditional recipe. The store offers locally crafted items, including Victorian candy.

Lake Winnipeg is a huge stretch of water some 350 km (217 miles) long that dominates the province of Manitoba, connecting the south of the province to the north at Hudson Bay via the Nelson River. Today, the resorts that line the lake are popular with locals and visitors alike. Numerous beaches line the southeastern coast of the lake, including Winnipeg Beach, with one of the best windsurfing bays on the lake. An impressive carving of an Indian head by native artist Peter “Wolf” Toth stands in the local park. Called Whispering Giant, the wood sculpture honors the Ojibwa, Cree, and Assiniboine First Nations people of Manitoba. Grand Beach in the Grand Beach Provincial Park has long powdery-white sand beaches and huge grasstopped dunes over 8 m (26 ft) high. Stretching back from the beach, the marsh, which is also known as the lagoon, is one of the park’s treasures, and supports many species of birds, such as the rare and endangered Piping Plover. Moving west from the lake, Oak Hammock Marsh

provides an important habitat for some 280 species of birds and animals. The marsh’s tall grass prairie, meadows, and aspen-oak bluffs house birds

P Mennonite Heritage

Village Hwy 12 North. Tel (204) 326 9661, 1 866 280 8741. # May–Sep: daily. & 7 www.mennoniteheritage village.com Historic ships outside the Marine Museum of Manitoba in Selkirk For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5

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the habitat of thousands of red-sided garter snakes that can be seen here during the summer, on a specially designated short trail. E New Iceland Heritage

Museum Betel Waterfront Centre, Unit 108, 94 First Ave. Tel (204) 642 4001. # 9am–5pm Wed–Fri, 11am–5pm Sat & Sun. & 7

Portage la Prairie 6 * 13,400. £ c n 11 Second St. NE (204) 857 7778.

Portage la Prairie lies at the center of a rich agricultural area growing wheat, barley, Carved cedar sculpture in the park at Winnipeg Beach and canola. The town is named after the French term for an such as the ruff (a shorebird), nearby Willow Creek in 1875. overland detour, as Portage la the garganey (a duck), and They soon proclaimed an inde- Prairie lies between Lake the sharp-tailed sparrow. pendent state, which lasted Manitoba and the Assiniboine Farther north, Hecla until 1897 when the governRiver, which formed a popular Provincial Park occupies a ment insisted that other waterway for early travnumber of islands in the lake. immigrants be allowed to elers. Today, this thriving A causeway links the mainsettle in Gimli. Today, the farming community land to Hecla Island, which New Iceland Heritage contains the Fort La was originally inhabited by Museum tells the Reine Museum and the Anishinabe (Ojibwa) story of the town’s Pioneer Village, on people. The first European unusual history. the site of the origisettlers here were Icelanders Gimli has a nal fort built by the who arrived in 1875. Today, distinctly nautical French explorer, La the seaside village of Hecla atmosphere, with Vérendrye, in 1738. is a pretty open-air museum cobbled sidewalks The museum offers featuring several restored 19th- leading down to a exhibits of tools and Statue off a Viking in photographs detailcentury buildings. From Hecla picturesque harbor the village of Gimli there are many hiking and and a wooden pier. ing 19th-century biking trails that lead to view- At the Icelandic prairie life. The points for sightings of waterFestival of Manitoba, held popular railroad display feafowl such as great blue herons every August, visitors can play tures a caboose, a watchman’s at being Vikings, participate shack, and the cigar-stained and the rare western grebe. in games, listen to folk music, business car of Sir William Van Y Grand Beach and eat Icelandic specialties. Horne, founder of the CanaProvincial Park About 25 km (15 miles) dian Pacific Railroad. Pioneer Hwy 12, nr Grand Marais. Tel (204) west of Gimli, the Narcisse Village successfully re-creates 754 5040. # daily. & 7 partial. Wildlife Management Area a 19th-century settlement with Y Hecla Provincial Park authentic stores and a church. has been set up to preserve Hwy 8, nr Riverton. Tel (204) 378 2945. # daily. 7

Gimli 5 * 2,100. c n Centre St. (204) 642 7974.

Located on the western shores of Lake Winnipeg, Gimli is the largest Icelandic community outside Iceland. The settlers arrived, having gained the rights to land, at

Pioneer Village, part of the Fort La Reine complex at Portage la Prairie

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Riding Mountain National Park 7 Hwys 10 & 19. Tel (204) 846 7275. # daily. & 7 partial. www.pc.gc.ca

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trapper’s birchbark canoe and several early pioneer buildings, including a school, church, and blacksmith’s store. Today, the town’s distinctive onionshaped dome of the Church of the Resurrection is a tribute to Dauphin’s Ukrainian immigrants who began to arrive in 1891. A The elegant façade of Motherwell Homestead traditional Ukrainian 0 meal, including savory stuffed dumplings (piroggi), forms part of a tour of the church. * 2,000. n Regina (306) 789 5099.

One of western Manitoba’s most popular attractions, Riding Mountain National Park is a vast 3,000 sq km (1,160 sq miles) wilderness. The best hiking trails and some of Manitoba’s most beautiful scenery are to be found in the center of the park, where a highland plateau is covered by forests and lakes. To the east, a ridge of evergreen forest including spruce, pine, and fir trees houses moose 9 and elk. A small herd of some 30 bison can also be * 17,000. ~ c n Jct Hwy 9 & found in the park near Lake Hwy 16 (306) 783 8707, 1 877 250 Audy. Bison were 6454. www.tourismyorkton.com reintroduced here in the 1930s after they had been Yorkton was founded as hunted out at the end of the 19th century. The most devel- a farming community in 1882, and is located in central oped area here is around the small settlement of Wasagam- Saskatchewan. The striking architecture of its ing where information on churches, particthe park’s network of trails for ularly the Catholic Church of St. cycling, hiking, and horseback Mary’s, reflects the town’s riding is Ukrainian available. Canoes are heritage. The also available church was to rent for built in 1914. One of a small herd of bison at exploring the Its 21-m (68-ft) Riding Mountain National Park high dome, park’s biggest lake, Clear Lake. icons and paintWasagaming is the park’s ings are stunning. The Yorkton main settlement, and its branch of the Western Development Museum (one of four facilities include hotels, restaurants, and campgrounds. in the province) tells the story of immigrants to the region.

Yorkton

Dauphin 8 * 8,800. ~ £ c n 3rd Ave. (204) 622 3140.

A pleasant tree-lined town, Dauphin was named after the King of France’s eldest son by the French explorer La Vérendrye. Located north of Riding Mountain National Park, Dauphin is a distribution-andsupply center for the farms of the fertile Vermilion River valley. The Fort Dauphin Museum in town is a replica of an 18th-century trading post. Exhibits include a

E Western Development

Museum Yellowhead Hwy. Tel (306) 783 8361. # May – mid-Sep: daily. & 7

Fort Qu’Appelle

Named after an 1864 Hudson’s Bay Company fur trading post, the picturesque town of Fort Qu’Appelle is located between Regina and Yorkton on Highway 10. The Fort Qu’Appelle Museum is built on the site of the old fort and incorporates a small outbuilding that was part of the original structure. The museum houses native artifacts such as antique beadwork and a collection of pioneer photographs. The 430-km (267-mile) long Qu’Appelle River stretches across two-thirds of southern Saskatchewan. At Fort Qu’Appelle the river widens into a string of eight lakes bordered by several provincial parks. Scenic drives through the countryside are just one of the attractions of the valley. About 30 km (19 miles) east of Fort Qu’Appelle is the Motherwell Homestead National Historic Site. This

gracious stone house with extensive ornamental gardens was built by politician William R. Motherwell. r Motherwell introduced many agricultural improvements to the area and was so successful that, after living in poverty for 14 years, he rose to become agriculture minister of Saskatchewan between 1905 and 1918. E Fort Qu’Appelle Museum cnr Bay Ave. & Third St. Tel (306) 332 6033. # May– Jun: Mon–Fri; Jul–Aug: daily; Oct–Apr: by appointment only. & 7 limited.

The magnificent Dome at Saint Mary’s Catholic Church, Yorkton

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5

P Motherwell Homestead Off Hwy 22. Tel (306) 333 2116. # May – Oct: daily. & 7 limited.

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Regina q * 300,000. k ~ c n Hwy 1 E (306) 789 5099, 1 800 661 5099. www.tourismregina.com

Regina is a friendly, bustling city and the capital of Saskatchewan. The city was named for Queen Victoria by her daughter, Princess Louise, who was married to the Governor General of Canada. Regina was established in 1882 after starting life as a tent settlement One of several murals on downtown buildings in Moose Jaw called Pile O’Bones. This is a derivation of “oskana” (a Cree The original headquarters for w word meaning buffalo bones), the North West Mounted Police from the piles of bones left * 34,500. ~ c n 99 Diefenbaker lies west of the city center. behind after hunting. Today, the Royal Canadian Dr. (306) 693 8097, 1 866 693 8097. Today, Regina is a thriving Mounted Police Barracks trains modern city whose highrise all Canada’s Mounties and is The quiet town of Moose also the site of the RCMP Jaw was established as skyline contrasts with the 350,000 trees of the Centennial Museum. Here, a railway terminus by the man-made W Wascana the story of the Mounties is Canadian Pacific Railroad Centre, a 930-ha in 1882. A terminus for the told from their begin(2,298-acre) urban nings following the American Soo Line from park containing a Cyprus Hills Minneapolis, Minnesota soon vast man-made lake. Massacre in 1873 followed. Today, a series of The lake’s Willow Island (see p247). Among murals celebrates the lives is a popular site for the highlights are the of the early railroad pioneers Canadian goose in picnics and can be ceremonies and drills and homesteaders, decorating Wascana Centre Park that are regularly reached by ferry. 29 buildings around downperformed by special town’s 1st Avenue. Nearby, The park is also a haven for some 60 species of trained groups of Mounties, River Street has a concenwaterfowl, including Canada including the Sergeant Major’s tration of 1920s hotels and geese. The Royal SaskatcheParade, the Musical Ride, and warehouses that reflect Moose wan Museum is housed in the Sunset Retreat Ceremonies. Jaw’s time as “sin city” during park and focuses on the story the 1920s – when Prohibition E Royal Saskatchewan of the area’s First Nations in the United States meant Museum peoples from earliest times that illegally produced liquor Cnr Albert St. & College Ave. Tel (306) to the present day. There are was smuggled from Canada 787 2810. # daily. ¢ Dec 25. 7 lectures by tribal elders on to Chicago, by gangsters such www.royalsaskmuseum.ca the land and its precious as the infamous Al Capone. E RCMP Centennial Museum resources, as well as murals, The Moose Jaw branch of Dewdney Ave. W. Tel (306) 780 the Western Development sculptures, and paintings by 5838. # daily. 7 www.rcmp contemporary Saskatchewan Museum focuses on transportamuseum.com native and non-native artists. tion, particularly the railroad.

Moose Jaw

Cadets of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Academy in Regina are put through their paces

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Grasslands National Park

Traditional powwow dancer in Wanuskewin Park, Saskatoon

Saskatoon e * 231,420. k ~ £ c n 6306 Idylwyld Dr. N. (306 ) 242 1206, 1 800 567 2444. www.tourismsaskatoon.com

Founded in 1882 by Ontario Methodist John Lake as a temperance colony, Saskatoon is located in the middle of prairie country. Today, the city is an agricultural and commercial hub, and a busy regional center for cattle ranchers and wheat farmers from surrounding communities. The region’s history is told in Saskatoon’s branch of the Western Development Museum, which focuses on the town’s boom years in the 1900s, re-creating the bustling main street of a typical prairie

town, including its railroad station and a hotel. r The South Saskatchewan River meanders through the Jct Hwys 4 & 18. n Val Marie (306) city and is bounded by many 298 2257. c Val Marie. # daily. lush parks, including the out7 partial. www.pc.gc.ca standing 120-ha (290-acre) Wanuskewin Heritage Park. Situated in the southwest The park is devoted to First corner of Saskatchewan, Nations history, with archaeo- Grasslands National Park was logical sites that confirm the set up in 1988 to preserve existence of hunter-gatherer one of the last original prairie grasslands in North America. communities some 6,000 years ago. Some of the digs The park is an area of climaare open to the public, and tic extremes where summer the excellent park interpretive temperatures can be as high center has an archaeological as 40 °C (104 °F), and winter lab explaining current ones as low as -40 °C (-48 °F). research. The park’s ironment supports a wooded hills and f rare wildlife, includmarshy creeks are stil ort-horned lizards and held to be sacred uginous hawks. The lands by the Northern gged landscape along Plains peoples who the Frenchman River valley is the act as interpretive guides. Easy-toonly remaining follow trails lead habitat of the blackthe visitor past tipi Black-tailed prairie dog tailed prairie dog rings, buffalo trails, in Canada. Visitors and a buffalo jump (see p296). may hike and camp in the The riverbank also houses park, but facilities are basic. two museums, The Ukrainian East of the park is the strikMuseum of Canada with its ing, glacially formed landscape brightly colored traditional of the Big Muddy Badlands. textiles, and the Mendel Art In the early 1900s, caves of Gallery, with First Nations and eroded sandstone and deep Inuit pottery and glassware. ravines provided hideouts for cattle thieves such as Butch Y Wanuskewin Heritage Cassidy and Dutch Henry. Park

Off Hwy 11. Tel (306) 931 6767. # daily. ¢ Good Fri, Dec 25. & 7 limited. www.wanuskewin.com

} Big Muddy Badlands Off Hwy 34. Tel (306) 267 3312. Tours in summer from Coronach. &

Buttes (isolated flat-topped hills) in the Big Muddy Badlands seen from Grasslands National Park For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5

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Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park t Hwy 41. n (403) 893 3777. c Maple Creek. # daily. 7 partial. www.cypresshills.com

Crossing the border between Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park offers fine views of the plains from its 1,400-m (4,593ft) high peaks. The park’s landscape is similar to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, with its lodgepole pine forests and abundant wild flowers. Walking trails through the park offer the visitor the chance to see moose, elk, and whitetailed deer, as well as the 200 or more species of bird that stop here during migration, such as the rare trumpeter swan and mountain chickadee. In the eastern section of the park, in Saskatchewan, Fort Walsh National Historic Site houses a reconstruction

of Fort Walsh, which was built in 1875 by the Mounties to keep out the illicit whiskey traders who were causing trouble among the natives. Nearby, the trading posts involved in the illegal liquor trade, Farwells and Solomons, have been reconstructed. Costumed guides tell the story of the Cypress Hills Massacre. P Fort Walsh National

Historic Site Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park. Tel (306) 662 2645. # May – Oct: 9am – 5pm daily. &

Iron Bridge over the Oldman River, Lethbridge

lobby. The oldest museum in the province, the Saskatchewan Old Timers’ Museum, boasts an excellent collection of pictures and artifacts telling the story of the NWMP, the natives, and the early settlement of the area.

Medicine Hat u * 52,000. ~ c n 8 Gehring Rd SW (403) 527 6422, 1 800 481 2822. www.tourismmedicinehat.com

The south Saskatchewan River Valley is the picturesque setting for the town of Medicine Hat, the center of Alberta’s gas industry. Founded in 1883, Medicine Hat is noted for Seven Persons Coulee, once a substantial native camp and buffalo jump and now one of the most important archaeological sites of the northern plains. Evidence that aboriginal peoples lived here over 6,000 years ago has been garnered from finds including bones, tools, and arrowheads. Tours of the site are available.

Maple Creek y * 2,300. c n Hwy 1 West (30 662 2244

Located on the edge of the Cypress Hills, Maple Creek is affectionately known as “Ol cow town,” and was established as a ranching center in 1882. The town still has a look of the Old West with trucks, trailers, and Stetson-wearing ranchers filling the downtown streets. Maple Creek’s many original 19th-century storefronts include the elegant Commercial Hotel with its marble-floored

Two Assiniboine Indians from an engraving made in 1844

Lethbridge i * 72,000. ~ c n 2805 Scenic Dr. S. (403) 331 0022, 1 866 213 4070. www.lethbridgecvb.com

Coal, oil, and gas are the basis of Lethbridge’s success. Alberta’s third-largest city was named after mineowner William Lethbridge in 1885, but First Nations peoples such as the Blackfoot Indians have inhabited the area since prehistoric times. Lying on the banks of the Oldman River, Lethbridge is home to the notorious Fort Whoop-up, established in 1869 by whiskey traders John Healy and Alfred Hamilton for the sole purpose of profiting from the sale of illicit, and often deadly, whiskey. Many Indians, drawn by the lure of the drink, were poisoned or even killed by the brew, which was made with substances such as tobacco and red ink. Today, a replica of Fort Whoop-up has a visitor’s center that describes the history of the trading post. S MASSACRE 1873 a group of whiskey acked an Assiniboine camp, several women, children, raves in retaliation for the ed theft of their horses by es. Many native people had dy died from drinking the ders’ liquor, which was octored with substances uch as ink and strychnine. The massacre led to the ormation of the North West Mounted Police. Their first ost at Fort Macleod in 1874, d another at Fort Walsh in 75, marked the end of the whiskey trade and earned the Mounties the natives’ trust.

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Royal Tyrrell Museum

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The outstanding Royal Tyrrell Museum was opened in 1985 and is the only museum in Canada devoted to 4.5 billion years of the Earth’s history. The layout of the The museum’s Albertosaurus logo exhibits enables visitors to follow the course of evolution through displays of dinosaurs and fossils from different ages. The museum uses interactive computers, videos, and three-dimensional dioramas to re-create distinct prehistoric landscapes, bringing the age of the dinosaurs and the study of palaeontology to life.

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwy 838, 6 km NW of Drumheller. Tel (403) 823 7707, 1 888 440 4240. c Calgary. # May–Oct: daily; Nov –Apr: Tue –Sun. & 7 www.tyrrellmuseum.com

KEY Cretaceous Alberta gallery Lords of the Land Discoveries Burgess Shale Dinosaur hall

Dinosaur Hall In Dinosaur Hall, a T-rex towers over a display of some 35 complete dinosaur skeletons.

Bearpaw sea Age of reptiles Age of mammals Cretaceous garden Terrestrial Palaeozoic Discovery room Ice Ages gallery Nonexhibition space

The Ice Ages gallery displays

skeletons and fossils of the giant woolly mammoths, mastodons, bison, and sabre-toothed tigers that inhabited North America.

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The collection is housed on several levels reached by a series of ramps. Each area contains a display on an era of geological time. Introductory exhibits on fossils and dinosaurs are followed by displays on prehistoric mammals and the Ice Ages. The largest and most popular part of the museum is the Dinosaur Hall.

Visitors on a trek through the Badlands

Most of the Royal Tyrrell Museum’s dinosaur remains have been found in the Alberta Badlands, a barren landscape of fluted gullies and steep bluffs. The museum organizes guided tours where visitors can learn about the creatures and landscapes of ancient Alberta. Participants can have a go at excavating at a simulated dig site.

Black Beauty Skull This T-rex was found in the Crowsnest Pass area of southwestern Alberta. The black discoloration was the result of a chemical reaction as the skeleton fossilized.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5

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Elk Island National Park’s largest lake, Astotin Lake, is skirted by a popular hiking trail

Dinosaur Provincial Park p Rte 544. Tel (403) 378 4342. # daily. & 7 partial.

Two hours’ drive southeast of the town of Drumheller, the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Dinosaur Provincial Park, established in 1955, contains one of the world’s richest fossil beds. Located along the Red Deer River Valley, the park includes dinosaur skeletons mostly from the late Cretaceous Period, about 75 million years ago (see pp230–31). More than 300 mostly intact finds have been made here and more than 30 institutions worldwide have specimens from this valley on display. From the town of Drumheller it is possible to tour the 48-km (30-mile) loop Dinosaur Trail, through the “Valley of the Dinosaurs” and features fossils and displays relating to pre-

historic life, as well as stunning views of the strange badlands landscape from highpoints such as Horseshoe Canyon. Calling ahead for bus tours and hikes is recommended. } Dinosaur Trail n Drumheller (403) 823 1331.

Red Deer a * 72,000. c n Sports Hall of Fame, Hwy 2: (403) 346 0180. www.tourismreddeer.net

Located midway between Calgary and Edmonton, this bustling city was founded in 1882 by Scottish settlers as a stopover point for travelers. A modern city with good cultural and recreational facilities, Red Deer is the hub of central Alberta’s rolling parkland district. The city has some interesting buildings, such as the award-winning St. Mary’s Church, and the landmark Water Tower, known as the “Green Onion.” The city’s beautiful reserve of Waskasoo Park is located along the Red River.

Hoodoos, towers of rock sculpted by glacial erosion, near Drumheller

Elk Island National Park s Hwy 16. Tel (780) 992 5790. # daily. & 7 partial. www.pc.gc.ca

Established in 1906 as Canada’s first animal sanctuary, Elk Island became a national park in 1913. It offers a wilderness retreat only half-an-hour’s drive from Edmonton. This 194 sq km (75 sq miles) park provides a habitat for large mammals such as elk, the plains bison, the rarer, threatened wood bison, and moose. The park’s landscape of transitional aspen parkland (an area of rolling meadows, woodlands, and wetlands) is, according to the World Wildlife Fund for Nature, one of the most threatened habitats in North America. Aspen trees grow mostly on the hills, while balsam, poplar, and white birch grow near wet areas. Plants such as sedges and willows also thrive in the wetlands alongside a host of birds such as the swamp sparrow and yellow warbler. Elk Island is a popular day trip from Edmonton as well as being a picturesque weekend picnic spot for locals. There are 13 hiking trails of varying difficulties and lengths. During the summer a wide range of activities is available in the park including swimming, canoeing, and camping. Cross-country skiing is the most popular winter activity.

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Ice Palace at West Edmonton Mall

Edmonton d * 900,000. k ~ £ c n 9797 Jasper Ave. (780) 496 8400, 1 800 463 4667. www.edmonton.com/tourism

Edmonton spans the valley of the North Saskatchewan River and sits in the center of Alberta province, of which it is the capital. Established as a series of Hudson’s Bay Company trading posts in 1795, this city is now the focus of Canada’s thriving oil industry. Edmonton’s downtown area is centered on Jasper Avenue and Sir Winston Churchill Square, where modern glass high-rises sit among shops and restaurants. The gigantic West Edmonton Mall contains over 800 stores and services, an amusement and water park, over 100 restaurants, a golf

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course, a bowling center, an ice rink, and 27 movie theaters. In contrast is one of Alberta’s oldest buildings, the delightful Alberta Legislature, opened in 1913. Overlooking the river, on the site of the old Fort Edmonton, the building has beautiful landscaped grounds. Southwest of downtown, Fort Edmonton Park re-creates the original Hudson’s Bay Company fort with reconstructions of street areas in 1885 and 1920. Here visitors can experience past times, wandering around original shops and businesses, as well as taking rides on a horse-drawn wagon, steam train, or street car. West of downtown is the Royal Alberta Museum with natural history displays; to the northwest is the Odyssium which boasts an IMAX theatre, Observatory, and Star Theatre.

Easter eggs (or pysanki). Visible from the road is a giant pysanka covered with intricate bronze, gold, and silver designs that tell the story of the region’s Ukrainian settlers, and celebrates their religious faith, bountiful harvests, and the protection they received from the RCMP. The egg is 7 m (23 ft) high, and is made of over 3,500 pieces of aluminum.

P West Edmonton Mall 170th St. & 87th Ave. Tel (780) 444 5200. # daily. 7

Vegreville f * 5,300. c n at giant Pysanka (780) 632 6800 or (780) 632 3100.

Along the Yellowhead Hwy, heading eastward from Edmonton, lies the predominantly Ukrainian town of Vegreville. Its community is famous for producing traditionally Ukrainian, highly decorated

THE GREY OWL STORY Long before conservation became popular, the renowned naturalist by the name of Grey Owl, took up the cause. Inspired by his Mohawk wife, Anahareo, he wrote the first of several best-selling books, Men of the Last Frontier, in 1931, the same year he became the official naturalist of Prince Albert National Park. He built a cabin on the peaceful shores of Lake Ajawaan from where he ran a beaver protection program. When Grey Owl died of pneumonia in 1938, there was uproar when a newspaper discovered that he was really an Englishman. Born in Hastings in 1888, Archibald Stansfield Belaney took on the identity of Grey Owl when he returned to Canada after World War I. He wore buckskins and wore his hair in Apache-style braids. A generation later Grey Owl’s legacy remains the protection of Canada’s wildlife. Grey Owl feeding a beaver For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5

A giant decorated Easter egg made by Ukrainians at Vegreville

Wood Buffalo National Park g main access: Fort Smith, NWT. Tel (867 872 7900). # daily. & www.pc.gc.ca

The largest national park in Canada, Wood Buffalo is about the size of Denmark, covering an area of 44,807 sq km (17,474 sq miles). The park was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983 because of the range of habitat it offers for such rare species of animal as the wood bison or buffalo. There are three different environments here: fire-scarred forest uplands; a large, poorly drained plateau filled with streams and bogs; and the Peace-Athabasca delta, full of sedge meadows, marshes, and shallow lakes. Sightings of such birds as peregrine falcons and bald eagles are common, and the park is the only natural nesting site of the rare whooping crane in the world.

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Prince Albert National Park

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Established in 1927, Prince Albert National Park covers 3,875 sq km (1,500 square miles) of wilderness, which changes from the gently rolling terrain of aspen parkland in the south to the spruce and fir trees of the northern boreal forest. These distinct environments house different wildlife populations, with moose, wolf, and caribou in the forests, and elk, bison, and badger in the parkland. The center of the park, and the most accessible areas for visitors, are the hiking and canoeing trails around the Kingsmere and Waskesiu Lakes. The townsite of Waskesiu is the best place from which to begin exploring the park.

off Hwy 2. Tel (306) 663 4522. & Nature center open: Jul – Aug: 10am – 5pm daily; Jun & Sep: 12am–4pm Sat & Sun; Victoria Day weekend. www.parkscanada.gc.ca

KEY Major road Minor road Hiking route

Grey Owl’s cabin by Ajawaan Lake A popular 40 km hike leads to Grey Owl’s log cabin, “Beaver Lodge.”

Rivers

M Camping Δ Picnic area n Visitor information

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Batoche National Historic Site of Canada k Rte 225 off Hwy 312. Tel (306) 423 6227. # May – Oct: daily. & 7

Gun with carriage at Fort Battleford National Historic Site

North Battleford and Battleford j * 19,500. c n Visitors’ center, jct Hwys 16 & 40 (306) 445 2000, 1 800 243 0934. www.tourism. battlefords.com

North Battleford and Battleford, together known as The Battlefords, face each other across the North Saskatchewan River Valley. Named after a ford in the Battle River, the area was the site of age-old conflicts between the Blackfoot and Cree. An important early settlement in the West, Battleford was chosen as the seat of the North-West Territories government from 1876 to 1882. Today, the communities are thriving industrial centers, although the North Battleford branch of the Western Development Museum focuses on rural life. The Allan Sapp Gallery displays works by Allan Sapp,

one of Canada’s best-loved contemporary artists. His simple, delicately colored paintings and drawings celebrate the traditions of the Northern Plains Cree community. Between the Saskatchewan and Battle rivers is the Fort Battleford National Historic Site containing a well-restored

North-West W Mounted Police post. The stockade has original buildings, including the lookout point in the commander’s residence, officers’ quarters, and restored barracks now housing a museum. Costumed guides tell the story of the time when 500 settlers took refuge in the stockade during the North-West Rebellion. E Allan Sapp Gallery 1 Railway Ave. Tel (306) 445 1760. # 1pm–5pm daily. 7 P Fort Battleford National

Historic Site Off Hwy 4. Tel (306) 937 2621. # mid-May – mid-Sep: daily; Oct– Apr: by appointment. & 7

St. Antoine de Padou Church and Rectory at Batoche National Historic Park For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp359–60 and pp384–5

The original village of Batoche was the site of the Métis’s last stand against the Canadian Militia, led by Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont in 1885 (see p49). From the 17th century, white fur traders in the west had married Indian wives and adopted tribal languages and customs. The resulting mixed raced peoples, the Métis, had originally rebeled in 1869 in the Winnipeg area in defense of their land rights. When history began to repeat itself in 1885, Métis rebels recalled Riel from exile in Montana to declare a provisional government at Batoche. Violence erupted on May 9, 1885 into what was to become known as the North-West Rebellion. Riel surrendered, was tried for treason, and hanged in Regina. Today, the Batoche National Historic Site of Canada occupies the site of the village and battlefield. The 648-ha (1,600-acre) park houses the bullet-ridden St. Antoine de Padou Church and Rectory as well as the cemetery where the Métis leaders are buried. An interpretive center features an audio-visual presentation telling the history of Batoche and the rebellion through the eyes of the Métis.

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system, has been a trade route for centuries, used by both natives and, later, European explorers and fur traders to travel from the northern forests to the prairies. Today, visitors may follow the historic route on guided canoe tours as well as fishing for northern pike, lake trout, turbot, and perch.

POLAR BEARS Known as the “Lord of the Arctic,” the magnificent polar bear can weigh as much as 650 kg (1,433 lb). In the fall the bears begin to congregate along the bay east of Churchill waiting for ice to form in order to hunt seals. Their acute sense of smell can detect a scent up to 32 km (20 miles) away and pick up the presence of seals under 1 m (3 ft) of snow and ice. Up to 150 bears pass by and through Churchill during the season. The best way to view them is in a tundra buggy, a large buslike vehicle that is warm, safe, and elevated over 2 m (6.5 ft) from the ground.

Churchill c * 1,100. ~ £ n 211 Kelsey Blvd. (204) 675 2022.

The majestic polar bear

Duck Lake l

Flin Flon x

* 670. c n 301 Front St. (306) 467 2057. www.louisrieltrail.com

* 7,200. ~ c n Hwy 10A (204) 687 4518.

A little to the west of the small farming village of Duck Lake lies a plaque commemorating the first shots fired in the North-West Rebellion. On March 26, 1885, a police interpreter and a Cree emissary scuffled during a parley, and the officer was killed. During the ensuing battle, 12 NWMP officers and six Métis died. The Battle of Duck Lake is depicted in a series of murals at the town’s visitors’ center.

Steep hilly streets reflect the fact that Flin Flon lies on Precambrian rock (as old as the formation of the Earth’s crust itself, roughly 3.8 billion years ago), and the area is famous for its distinctive greenstone. The town bears the name of a fictional character of a popular novel, The Sunless City by J.E.P. Murdock. The book was read by a prospector at the time he staked his claim here in 1915. Copper and gold are still mined in Flin Flon, but visitors mostly come to experience the vast wilderness of the nearby Grass River Provincial Park. The distinctive Grass River, where strings of islands dot the countless lakes of the river

The Pas z * 15,000. £ c n 324 Ross Ave. (204) 623 7256.

Once a key fur-trading post dating back some 300 years, The Pas is now a major industrial distribution and transportation center for Manitoba’s northwest. Nearby Clearwater Lake Provincial Park is named for the lake itself, which is said to be so clear that it is possible to see the bottom at 11 m (35 ft). The park also offers a walking trail through “the caves,” a geological phenomenon where rock masses split away from cliffs to create huge crevices that provide shelter for a number of animals, including black bears, moose, wolves, and foxes.

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Located at the mouth of the Churchill River on Hudson Bay, the town retains the look of a basic pioneer town, with no luxury hotels, no paved roads, and few trees. This vast Arctic landscape is snow-free only from June through to the end of August. Churchill has no road access and can be reached only by plane or train from Winnipeg, Thompson, and The Pas. Despite its remote situation, Churchill was an important point of entry into Canada for early European explorers and fur traders arriving by boat in the 18th century. The Hudson’s Bay Company established an outpost for furtrading here in 1717. Today, visitors come to see the polar bears, beluga whales, and the splendid array of tundra flora in this region. In the spring and fall the tundra’s covering of moss, lichens, and tiny flowers bursts into an array of reds, violets, and yellows. In the summer beluga whales move upriver to the warmer waters and can be seen from boat trips or on scuba dives.

Polar bear warning sign near Churchill Lake Louise, Alberta

British Columbia and the Rockies

INTRODUCING BRITISH COLUMBIA AND THE ROCKIES 256–263 VANCOUVER AND VANCOUVER ISLAND 264–289 THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS 290–313 SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA 314–321

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Introducing British Columbia and the Rockies The dramatic beauty of British Columbia and the Rockies’ mountain ranges, forests, and lakes make it a much visited area. There is a wide variety of landscapes available here, from the northern Rockies with their bare peaks, to the south’s Okanagan Valley with its orchards and vineyards. The region’s temperate climate means that BC has more species of plant and animal than anywhere else in the country. Millions of visitors come here every year, drawn by a wide range of outdoor activities. To the west, Vancouver Island offers ancient rainforest and the impressive coastal scenery of the Pacific Rim National Park. Lying between the Pacific Ocean and the Coast Mountains, Vancouver is a stunningly attractive city, with good transportation links to the rest of the region, including Calgary in the ea

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Centuries-old rainforest in th Park on the Queen Charlotte

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Snow-covered peaks reflected in the waters of Emerald Lake in the Rockies’ Yoho National Park

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GETTING AROUND The Trans-Canada Highway (Hwy 1) is the only major highway that leads to the rest of the province from Vancouver, passing through the gold rush route along the Fraser Canyon, then on to Alberta. From Hope, there are three roads leading to the interior: the Coquihalla Highway travels to Kamloops, and Hwy 99 connects to Hwy 97, which runs north to south through the Okanagan Valley; V Hwy 3 runs east and west through BC. VIA Rail runs a scenic route from V Vancouver to Jasper. Bus routes cover most destinations.

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The Rocky Mountains The Canadian Rocky Mountains are a younger section of the Western Cordillera, a wide band of mountain ranges that stretch from Mexico to Canada. Formed between 120 and 20 million years ago, they include some of Canada’s highest peaks, the 389-sq Orchid h d found f d in the Rockies km (150-sq mile) Columbia Icefield, and glacial lakes. In summer wild flowers carpet the alpine meadows; in winter both visitors and locals take advantage of the snow-covered slopes to indulge in winter sports. The flora and fauna of the Canadian Rockies are protected within several National Parks; the most noted being Banff, Jasper, and Yoho (see pp300–311), which houses the renowned Burgess Shale fossil beds.

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are located along the famous Alaska Highway (see pp262–3). They are the result of surface water trickling down through cracks and fissures to the superheated rocks of the Earth’s crust, which reach temperatures of 1,000 ºC (1,832 ºF). Steam is then released and rises to the surface where it condenses as water.

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mushroom-shaped pedestals of rock, sculpted by wind and san These are found among the bare peaks of Muncho Lake Provincial Park, at the northern end of the Canadian Rockies.

From the Icefields Parkway (Hwy 93),

a scenic route that runs from Lake Louise in Banff National Park to Jasper, it is possible to view the saw-toothed appearance of the youngest peaks in the range. These were formed during the last episode of uplift, about 20 to 15 million years ago. Older ranges such as the Appalachians (see p23) have rounded tops formed by long-term erosion.

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Maligne Canyon is a

50-m deep (164-ft), limestone gorge in Jasper National Park. The canyon was formed by the meltwaters of a glacier that once covered the valley. Today, the Maligne River rushes through this narrow channel, which also drains a series of underground caves.

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THE FORMATION OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS There are three main forces responsible for the formation of the Rocky Mountains. First, large areas of the Earth’s crust (known as tectonic plates), constantly moving together and apart, created uplift. Second, the North American plate was subducted by the Pacific plate, which caused a chain of volcanoes to form from the molten rock of the oceanic crust. Third, erosion caused by the Ice Ages, as well as rivers and wind, deposited sedimentary rocks on the North American plate, which was then folded by more plate movement between 50 and 25 million years ago. The Rockies’ jagged peaks reflect their recent formation. Volcanoes

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The Lewis Overthrust in Waterton Lakes National

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The Burgess Shale fossil beds in Yoho National Park are a UN World Heritage Site and ontain fossils dating from the Cambrian to the Permian ages some 570 –290 million years ago. There are two main fossil beds; Walcott’s Quarry, and Mt. Stephen, known for its wealth of trilobite (Cambrian marine animal) fossils.

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Forestry and Wildlife of Coastal British Columbia From its southern border with the United States to the northern tip of the Queen Charlotte Islands, the coastal region of British Columbia ranks as the richest ecological region in Canada. The warm waters of the north Pacific Ocean moderate the climate, creating a temperate rainforest teeming with life such as the black tail deer, black bear, and cougar. Dense forest still covers many islands, bays, and inlets along the coast, and is home to a large number of plant and animal species, including some of the tallest trees in Canada. Douglas Fir and Sitka Spruce can grow as high as 91 m (300 ft).

TEMPERATE RAINFOREST HABITAT High rainfall and a mild climate have created these lush forests of cedar, spruce, and pine, with their towering Douglas Firs and Sitka Spruces. Housed beneath the dripping forest canopy is a huge variety of ferns, mosses, and wild flowers, including orchids. Today, environmentalists campaign to protect these ancient forests from the threat of logging.

Trumpeter swans are

so-called for their distinctive brassy call. They are found on marshes, lakes, and rivers.

Bald eagles, with their distinctive white heads, can be seen in large numbers diving for fish in the ocean near the Queen Charlotte Islands. The area is noted for having the largest r bald eagle population in BC.

The white black bear

is unique to coastal British Columbia. It is related to the common black bear, and is an agile salmon catcher.

Harlequin ducks are small a

shy, and the males have striking markings. A good swimmer, the harlequin enjoys fast-flowing rivers and the strong surf of the Pacific.

Black tail deer are found only on

the north Pacific coast. They are the smallest member of the mule deer family and are preyed on by cougars in the area.

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SALMON The coastal waters of BC are home to five species of Pacific salmon: pink, coho, chinook, sockeye, and chum. Together they support one of the most important commercial food fisheries in the world. All Pacific salmon spawn in freshwater streams only once in their adult life, then die. Their offspring migrate downstream and out to sea where they feed and grow to adults ranging in size from 7 kg (15 lb) to over 45 kg (100 lb). At maturity they swim long distances upstream in order to return to the waters of their birth.

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Chinook Salmon leaping while

swimming upstream to spawn.

Sockeye Salmon are highly

prized in BC’s fishing industry for their firm, tasty flesh.

COASTLINE HABITAT The warm waters of the north Pacific Ocean provide a habitat for more species of wildlife than any other temperate coastline. This distinctive region is characterized by having thousands of islands and inlets, which provide a home for a range of animals. Mammals such as gray, humpback, and orca whales can be seen here, as can sea otters, seals, and sea lions.

Northern sea lions live in

colonies along the rocky BC coast. Large, lumbering animals, they have short “forearms” that enable them to move on land.

The glaucous gull is a

large, gray-backed sea gull, which nests along coastal cliffs, and on the numerous small islands here.

Killer whales (or orcas) are found off the sheltered eastern coast of Vancouver Island and up BC’s mainland coast. They are known as “killer” because they feed on other mammals.

Sea otters were hunted, almost to

extinction, for their thick fur coats. Today, these playful creatures are numerous off the coast of mainland BC and Vancouver Island.

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ALASKA

The building of the Alaska Highway was an extraordinary achievement. Winding through 2,451 km (1,523 miles) of wilderness, mountains, muskeg (mosscovered bog), and forest, the first road was completed in 1942, only eight months and twelve days after construction began. Linking the United States to Alaska through British Columbia, it was built after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, as a military supply route and to defend the northwest coast of Alaska. Today, the original gravel road has been replaced by a two-lane, mostly asphalt highway. The highway’s many curves are gradually being straightened, shortening its total length, and the present road now covers 2,394 km (1,488 miles).

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most dramatic scenery to be seen along the highway. The Kluane Mountains are among the highest in Canada, and icefields cover around half of the park’s area.

Whitehorse is the capital of the Yukon and the center of the province’s forestry and mining industries. The town, at mile 910 of the highway, retains a frontier atmosphere, and it is still possible to hear coyotes at night.

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marks the site of the Canol Project. This oil pipeline was built alongside the highway, to aid the military effort. The pipe runs an incredible 965 km (600 miles) to an oil refinery at Whitehorse. Teslin Lake derives its name from the

Tlingit language, meaning “long and narrow waters.” The highway follows the 130-km long (80-mile) stretch of water, lined by snow-capped peaks. Today, the area attracts anglers eager to catch the plentiful trout, grayling, and pike, and hunters looking for game.

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CONSTRUCTION OF THE HIGHWAY The Alaska Highway was built in under nine months by US army engineers and Canadian construction workers. The recruiting poster for workers warned: “This is no picnic... Men will have to fight swamps, rivers, ice, and cold. Mosquitoes, flies, and gnats will not only be annoying but will cause bodily harm. If you are not prepared to work under these... conditions, DO NOT APPLY.” The workers shared mobile army camps that were moved along the route as construction progressed. If a company got stuck in one of many dismal swamps, they employed such techniques as laying corduroy – where whole trees were laid side by side, then spread with gravel. In some places en route as many as five layers were required.

The Alaska Highway in winter is often

covered in snow and affected by frost heave. Since it was opened to the public in 1949, teams of maintenance workers have ensured that the road is open year round.

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Bogged-down truck waits for corduroy to be laid

The Peace River Valley

section of the highway winds through fertile farmland, between Dawson Creek and Fort St. John. Before the Peace River suspension bridge was built in 1943, travelers crossed the river by ferry.

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Street-by-Street: Waterfront and Gastown One of Vancouver’s oldest areas, Gastown faces the waters of Burrard Inlet and lies between Columbia Street in the east and Burrard Street in the west. The district grew up around a saloon, opened in 1867 by “gassy” Jack Deighton whose statue can be seen on Maple Tree Square. Today, Gastown is a charming mix of cobblestone streets, restored 19th-century public buildings, and storefronts. Chic boutiques and galleries line Powell, Carrall, and Cordova streets. Delightful restaurants and cafés fill the mews, courtyards, and passages. One popular café occupies the site of the city’s first ja the corner of Water and Cambie stre visitors can hear the musical chimes steam clock every 15 minutes, as w be entertained by local street perfor

. Canada Place Canada Place is a waterside architectural marvel of white sails and glass that h h t l t ti t

The SeaBus Stunning views of the harbor can be seen from the SeaBus, a catamaran th ferries passengers across Burrard Inlet between the central Waterfront Station and Lonsdale Quay in North Vancouv

STAR SIGHTS

. Canada Place is possible to see as far as Victoria on Vancouver Island.

. Harbour Centre Tower

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Water Street Much of the quaint charm of Gastown can be seen here. Water Street boasts gas lamps and cobblestones, as well as shops, cafés, and the famous steam clock. Steam Clock Said to be the ld’ fi t t

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a hotel and forms the corner of Alexander and Powell streets. It is now an apartment building.

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garden, using traditional techniques and tools. Pavilions and walkways were all built with materials from China. Many of the plants and trees symbolize different virtues. Willow is a symbol of feminine grace, and the plum and bamboo represent masculine strength. Complimentary Chinese tea rounds out the soothing atmosphere.

Street signs with colorful Chinese characters add to the authentic atmosphere. Whether buying mouthwatering duck, or watching the spicy dumplings known as won tons being made at top speed, or settling down to taste the myriad dishes available in an array of fine restaurants, the main attraction for the visitor is food. There is also a fascinating 2 range of stores, from bakeries selling a selection of savory Pender St. @ East Hastings & East and sweet buns to traditional Pender Sts routes. herbalists, and jewelers specializing in jade. In contrast Vancouver’s Chinatown is to the bustling markets there are also several relaxing teaolder than the city itself. In 1858 the first wave of Chinese rooms, as well as the nearby immigrants was drawn to Dr. Sun Yat-sen Chinese Canada by the Garden, which promise of gold. also offers tea The Canadian and cakes and Pacific Railroad has weekly attracted even Bilingual sign in Chinatown evening concerts of Chinese music more Chinese workers in the 1880s with under the soft light of lanterns jobs to build the new railroad. throughout the summer. Today Chinatown stretches from Carrall to Gore Streets 3 and still provides a warm welcome for more recent Asian immigrants. 1455 Quebec St. Tel (604) 443 7443. Declared an historic area in £ Central Station. c Central 1970, Chinatown has restored Station. # 10am – 5pm Mon – Fri, 10am – 6pm Sat & Sun. ¢ Dec 25. many of its notable houses with their elaborately deco& 7 www.scienceworld.bc.ca rated roofs and covered balconies. The main drag, Pender Overlooking the waters of Street, is the best place to view False Creek, near the Main the architectural details that Street Railway Station, stands decorate the upperstories of the 47-m (155-ft) high steel the buildings, such as highly geodesic dome that now painted wooden balconies. houses Vancouver’s science

Chinatown

Peaceful pavilion in the Dr. Sun Yatsen Classical Chinese Garden

Dr. Sun Yat-sen Classical Chinese Garden 1 578 Carrall St. Tel (604) 662 3207. £ & c Central Station. @ 19, 22. g Downtown terminal. # 10am – 4:30pm daily. ¢ Mon, Dec 25, Jan 1. & 8 7 www.vancouverchinesegarden.com

Opened in 1986, the first full-sized Ming Dynasty-style classical Chinese garden built outside of China offers a refuge from Vancouver’s bustling city center. The garden owes its tranquillity to ancient Taoist principles, which aimed to create a healthy balance between the contrasting forces of man and nature. Over 50 skilled craftsmen came from Suzhou, China’s Garden City, to construct the

Science World

The striking geodesic dome housing Vancouver’s interactive Science World For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

VA N C O U V E R

museum, Science World. The dome was designed for Expo ‘86 by American inventor R. Buckminster Fuller, and is now one of the city’s striking landmarks. The highly interactive science museum moved into the structure in 1989. In the Eureka Gallery, visitors can design their own inventions and ride the Vancouver Flyer, a propeller driven merry-go-round. The Sara Stearn Search Gallery lets visitors touch the furs and bones of animals, while the Illusions Gallery boggles the mind with its many optical tricks and displays. For 2 to 6 year olds, the KidSpace Gallery provides a safe and colorful environment for learning and play. The museum is renowned for its Omnimax cinema, located at the top of the dome, where a huge screen shows films of flights through such epic landscapes as Mount Everest and the Grand Canyon.

BC Place Stadium 4 777 Pacific Blvd. Tel (604) 669 2300. £ Stadium. # varies, depending on scheduled events. & 8 May – Oct: Tue – Fri. 7 www.bcplacestadium.com

Standing out from the Vancouver skyline, the white fabric roof of the BC Place Stadium has often been described as a giant marshmallow. When it opened in 1983, it was the first covered stadium in Canada and the largest air-supported dome in the world. Noted for its versatility, the stadium is able to convert in a matter of hours from a football field seating 60,000 people to a more intimate concert bowl seating up to 30,000. Among the famous guests who have visited the dome are Queen Elizabeth II and Pope John Paul II. Visitors hoping to catch a glimpse of a celebrity or two can take behind-the-scenes tours to the locker rooms, playing fields, and media lounges. The stadium also houses the BC Sports Hall of Fame and

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The large white dome of BC Place Stadium

Museum, which chronicles

the history of the region’s sporting heroes. E BC Sports Hall of Fame

and Museum BC Place Stadium. Tel (604) 687 5520. # 10am–5pm daily. & 7

Vancouver Art Gallery 5 750 Hornby St. Tel (604) 662 4719. £ Central Station. c Central Station. @ 3. # 10am–5:30pm Mon, Wed, Fri–Sun; until 9pm Tue & Thu. & 7 www.vanartgallery.bc.ca

What was once British Columbia’s imposing provincial courthouse now houses the Vancouver Art Gallery. The building was designed in 1906 by Francis Rattenbury, an architect known for the Gothic style of Victoria’s Parliament building and the Empress Hotel (see p280). The interior was modernized in 1983 by Arthur Erikson, another noted architect, who

Decorative Victorian features on the Vancouver Art Gallery façade

designed the UBC Museum of Anthropology (see pp276–7). The Vancouver Art Gallery presents a full range of national and international art by groundbreaking contemporary artists and major historical figures, including the most significant body of work by British Columbian artist Emily Carr. The gallery also houses a permanent collection of 8,000 works of art. Visitors can take part in talks and tours, or visit interpretive sites and learning centers, as well as the Gallery Café and the Gallery Store.

Maritime Museum 6 1905 Ogden Ave. Tel (604) 257 8300. £ & c Central Station. # late May– Aug: daily; Sep–mid-May: Tue–Sun. ¢ 25 Dec. & 7 www.vmm.bc.ca

Celebrating Vancouver’s history as a port and trading center, the Maritime Museum’s star feature is the schooner, St. Roch, which is on permanent display. Built as a supply ship for the Mounties in 1928, in 1940–42 St. Roch was the first ship to navigate the Northwest Passage in both directions. Other displays include Man the Oars, and Map the Coast, which tells the story of British Captain George Vancouver and the crews of the Chatham and the Discovery who charted the inlets of the coast of British Columbia in 1792. The Children’s Maritime Discovery Centre has a powerful telescope through which the city’s busy port can be viewed.

Vancouver’s skyline reflected in the waters of False Creek, backed by the Coastal Mountains

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Steel sculpture in front of the Vancouver Museum’s distinctive façade

Vancouver Museum and Pacific Space Centre 7 1100 Chestnut St., Vanier Park. Tel (604) 736 4431. £ Central Station. c Central Station. @ 22. # 10am– 5pm Mon–Wed, Fri–Sun; until 9pm Thu. & 7 www.vanmuseum.bc.ca

children. The Archaeological Discovery Center lets visitors take part in a simulated archaeological dig.

Granville Island 8 1398 Cartwright St. Tel (604) 666 5784. £ Central Station. c Central Station. @ 51. # Market: 9am–6pm daily; other stores: 10am – 6pm daily. 7 www.granvilleisland.bc.ca

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There are no chain stores on the island, and the smaller stores are known for their variety, originality, and quality, displaying a range of local arts and crafts such as rugs, jewelry, and textiles. The island is also a center for the performing arts and boasts several music, dance, and theater companies. A daily public market offers a cornucopia of foods that reflect Vancouver’s ethnic diversity. Waterside cafés and restaurants occupy the False Creek Shore where there was once a string of sawmills.

Queen Elizabeth Park and Bloedel Conservatory 9 Cambie St. Tel Conservatory: (604) 257 8584. @ 15. # Conservatory: 10am –5pm daily. & for Conservatory. 7

Located in Vanier Park near Queen Elizabeth Park is the Maritime Museum located on Little Mountain, (see p271), the Vancouver Today, this once down Vancouver’s highest hill Museum is a distinctive trodden industrial district has (152-m/499-ft), and has fine addition to the city’s skyline. Built in 1967, the museum’s a glorious array of stores, gall- views of the city. Despite curved, white, concrete roof eries, and artists’ studios in its being built on the site of two is based on a First Nations brightly painted warehouses former stone quarries, the hat. Outside, a stunning and tin sheds. The fire of 1886 park’s gardens are continually modern sculpture, which destroyed almost all of fledgin bloom, beginning in early looks like a giant steel ling Vancouver and drove spring when multicolor tulips crab, sits in a fountain people south across cover the hillsides. on the museum’s the water to The plastic-domed Bloedel Granville Island Conservatory is perched on south side. and beyond. top of the hill, and grows Permanent displays here plants from many climactic Many of the early Granville Island Brewing buildings were zones in the world, from include the Company sign Orientation rainforest plants and trees constructed on Gallery which land reclaimed to desert cacti. There are also re-creates British Columbia’s in 1915 to cope with the free-flying colorful tropical birds and fishponds filled rocky coastline and mountain- burgeoning lumber and iron industries. with Japanese carp. ous interior. Vancouver’s history is explored from the culture of the aboriginal people of the area to the city’s pioneering days, celebrated in a series of delightful blackand-white photographs. The museum is particularly noted for its depiction of everyday life, with exhibits such as an 1880s Canadian Pacific Railroad car, 1930s clothes, and the 1950s gallery with a vintage Ford Thunderbird and a working jukebox. Part of the museum, the Pacific Space Centre is The plastic dome of the Bloedel Conservatory in Queen Elizabeth Park particularly popular with For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

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A dazzling fall display of reds and oranges, one of many attractions in Stanley Park

Van Dusen Botanical Garden 0 5251 Oak St. Tel (604) 878 9274. £ Central Station. c Central Station. @ 17. # daily, call ahead for hours. & 7 www.vandusengarden.org

Old Hastings Mill Store w 1575 Alma Rd. Tel (604) 734 1212. @ 4th Ave. route. # Jul & Aug: 11am – 4pm Tue –Sun; Sep –Jun: 1– 4pm Sat & Sun. Donation. 7

The Old Hastings Mill Store Situated in the center of was Vancouver’s first general store and post office and one Vancouver, this 22-ha (55of the few wooden buildings acre) garden was opened in 1975. In 1960 the land was to survive the Great Fire of under threat from its original 1886. Built in 1865, it was owners, the Canadian moved by barge from Pacific Railroad, who its original site at wanted to build high-rise Gastown in 1930 to the shores of Jericho apartments there. It took Beach and then to its a campaign by local people and a donation present home on Alma from Mr W.J. Van Dusen, Street, at the corner of Point Grey Road. a wealthy local busStarting in the inessman, to save the site for the gardens. Marble statue in 1940s, local people Today, visitors enjoy Botanical Gardens contributed a spectacular yeara variety of historic round display of over 7,500 artifacts, and today the house families of plants from six is an interesting small continents, set among lakes museum. Behind the pretty clapboard exterior, the musand marble sculptures. In spring there are narcissi, eum’s exhibits include a crocuses, and thousands of range of Victorian artifacts flowering rhododendrons. such as a horse-drawn cab, The Perennial Garden is filled several antique sewing with roses in summer, while September heralds the blazing reds and oranges of fall.

University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology q See pp276– 7.

machines, and an extensive collection of native artifacts including an impressive range of hand-woven baskets.

Stanley Park e 2099 Beach Ave. Tel (604) 257 8400. £ Central Station. c Central Station. @ 135, 123. g Horseshoe Bay. # daily. 7

This is a magnificent 404-ha (1,000-acre) park of tamed wilderness, just a few blocks from downtown, that was originally home to the Musqueam and Squamish native Canadians. Named after Lord Stanley, Governor General of Canada, the land was made a park by the local council in 1886. It offers visitors the opportunity to experience a range of typical Vancouver attractions. There are beaches, hiking trails, and fir and cedar woods as well as wonderful views of the harbor, English Bay, and the coastal mountains. Bicycles can be rented for the popular ride around the 10-km (6.5-mile) perimeter seawall. The park is also home to the Vancouver Aquarium Marine Science Center where visitors can watch orca and beluga whales through the glass of enormous tanks. q Vancouver Aquarium

Marine Science Center

The Old Hastings Mill Store, one of Vancouver’s oldest buildings

Stanley Park. Tel (604) 659 3474. # Jun–Sep: 9:30am–8pm daily; Oct–Apr: 9:30am –5pm daily. & 8 7 www.vanaqua.org

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University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology q Founded in 1947, this outstanding museum houses one of the world’s finest collections of Northwest coast native peoples’ art. Designed by Canadian architect Arthur Erickson in 1976, the museum is housed in a stunning building overlooking mountains and sea. The tall posts and huge windows of the Great Hall were inspired by the post-and-beam architecture of Haida houses and are a fitting home for a display of full-size totem poles, canoes, and feast dishes. Through the windows of the Great Hall, the visitor can see the magnificent outdoor sculpture complex, which includes two houses designed by contemporary Haida artist Bill Reid.

. The Great Hall The imposing glass and concrete structure of the Great Hall is the perfect setting for totem poles, canoes, and sculptures.

OUTDOOR HAIDA HOUSES AND TOTEM POLES Set overlooking the water, these two Haida houses and collection of totem poles are faithful to the artistic tradition of the Haida and other tribes of the Pacific northwest, such as the Salish, Tsimshan, and Kwakiutl. Animals and mythic creatures representing various clans are carved in cedar on these poles and houses, made between 1959 and 1963 by Vancouver’s favorite contemporary Haida artist Bill Reid and Namgis artist Doug Cranmer. Carved red cedar totem poles

Climbing figures These climbing figures are thought to have decorated the interior of First Nations family houses. Carved from cedar planks, the spare style is typical of Coast Salish sculpture.

STAR EXHIBITS

. The Great Hall . The Raven and the First Men by Bill Reid

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Ceramic jug This beautifully decorated jug was made in Central Europe in 1674 by members of the Anabaptist religious sect. The foliage motifs are in contrast to the freely sketched animals that run around the base.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

VA N C O U V E R

. The Raven and the First Men (1980) Carved in laminated yellow cedar by Bill Reid, this modern interpretation of a Haida creation myth depicts the raven, a wise and wily trickster, trying to coax mankind out into the world from a giant clamshell.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 6393 NW Marine Drive. Tel (604) 822 5087. @ 4 UBC, 10 UBC. # Jun–Sep: 10am–5pm Wed –Mon, 10am–9pm Tue; Oct–May: 11am– 5pm Wed–Sun, 11am –9pm Tue. ¢ Mon, Dec 25– 26. & 7 0 = www.moa.ubc.ca

GALLERY GUIDE The Museum’s collections are arranged on one level. The Ramp gallery leads to the Great Hall, which features the cultures of Northwest coast First Nations peoples. The Visible Storage gallery contains artifacts from other cultures, and a range of 15th- to 19th-century European ceramics is housed in the Koerner Ceramics gallery.

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Wooden Frontlet Decorated with abalone shell, this wooden frontlet was a ceremonial head-dress worn only on important occasions such as births and marriages. KEY

Red cedar carved front doors This detail comes from the set of stunning carved red cedar doors that guard the entrance to the museum. Created in 1976 by a group of First Nations artists from the ‘Ksan cultural center near Hazelton, the doors show the history of the first people of the Skeena River region in British Columbia.

The Ramp gallery The Great Hall The Rotunda Visible storage/Research collection Archeological gallery Koerner Ceramics gallery Temporary exhibition space Theatre gallery Nonexhibition space

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Lonsdale Quay Market r 123 Carrie Cates Ct, North Vancouver. Tel (604) 985 2191. g Lonsdale. # 9:30am–6:30pm Sat–Thu, 9:30am– 9pm Fri (until 8pm Nov–Mar). 7 www.lonsdalequay.com

Opened in 1986, the striking concrete-and-glass building housing the Lonsdale Quay Market forms part of the North Shore SeaBus terminal. The market has a floor devoted to food – everything from freshbaked bread to blueberries – as well as an array of cafés and restaurants that serve a variety of ethnic cuisines. On the second floor, visitors will find specialty shops offering a wide choice of hand-crafted products such as jewelry, pottery, and textiles, and Kid’s Alley, a row of child-oriented shops. The complex includes a five-star hotel, a pub, and a nightclub.

The modern fountain at Lonsdale Quay

Lynn Canyon Park and Ecology Centre t 3663 Lynn Canyon Park Rd. Tel (604) 981 3103. c Hastings. g Lonsdale Quay, then bus 228 or 229. # daily. Ecology Centre Jun– Sep: 10am–5pm daily; Oct–May: 10am–5pm Mon–Fri, noon–4pm Sat, Sun & public hols. ¢ Dec 25 & 26, Jan 1. & donation. 8 - www.dnv.org/ecology

Located between Mount Seymour and Grouse Mountain, Lynn Canyon Park is a popular hiking destination

Panoramic view of Vancouver’s skyline from Grouse Mountain

Grouse Mountain

noted for its lush secondgrowth temperate rain forest. y The original 90-meter (295-ft) trees were logged in the early 6400 Nancy Greene Way. Tel (604) 1900s and a few of the huge 984 0661. g Lonsdale Quay. @ stumps with circumferences 236. # 9am –10pm daily. & 7 of up to 11 meters (36 ft) can 0 - www.grousemountain.com still be seen lying on the forest floor. Some of the From the summit of Grouse stumps have springboard Mountain visitors experience notches left by lumberjacks the grandeur of British Columbia’s dramatic landscape of the time. Several marked trails, some and stunning views of Vancouver. On a clear day of them steep and rugged, lead through the canyon, with it is possible to see as far as longer hikes heading into Vancouver Island in the west, surrounding park land. Many the Coastal Mountains to the of the trails, however, are north and toward the Columbia gentle strolls through Douglas Mountains in the east. fir, western hemlock, and Although there is a tough western red cedar. If you 3-km (2-mile) trail that goes to venture far enough into the the top of the 1,211-m (3,973forest it is possible to see ft) mountain, most visitors black bears, cougars, and choose to take the Skyride blacktail deer, but most visitors cable-car. In the summer there keep to the main trails where are a multitude of activities they are more likely to see including mountain bike tours, squirrels, jays, woodpeckers, nature walks, and hang-gliding competitions, not to mention and banana slugs, which can grow to lengths of 26 cm (10 logger sports such as chain-saw sculpture shows. In the winter, inches). There are wonderful views from the 50-m (164-ft) the summit has all the amenhigh suspension bridge that ities of a ski resort, including ski schools, a dozen ski runs, crosses the canyon. From here, it’s a short equipment rental, walk to 30 Foot snowboarding, and illuminated slopes Pool, a popular summer spot for for night skiing. sunbathing and At the Refuge for swimming. A 40Endangered Wildlife, an enclosed minute walk takes hikers to the beaunatural habitat that tiful Twin Falls. is home to two orphaned grizzly The nearby bears, wildlife rangEcology Centre ers give daily talks. offers guided walks, shows natural The Theatre in the history films, and Sky presents a video features interesting that takes viewers The Skyride cable-car, displays on the on an aerial tour of Grouse Mountain British Columbia. ecology of the area.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

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Capilano Suspension Bridge u 3735 Capilano Rd, North Vancouver. Tel (604) 985 7474. @ Highlands 236. # daily (hours vary according to season). ¢ Dec 25. & 8 May – Oct. 0 = www.capbridge.com

The Capilano Suspension Bridge has been a popular tourist attraction since it was built in 1889. Pioneering Scots-man George Grant Mackay, drawn by the wild beauty of the place, had already built a small cabin overlooking the Capilano Canyon. Access to the river below was almost impossible from the cabin and it is said that Mackay built the bridge so that his son, who loved fishing, could easily reach the Capilano River. The present bridge, which dates from 1956 and is the fourth to be constructed here, hangs 70 m (230 ft) above the canyon and spans 137 m (450 ft), making it one of the longest such bridges in the world. Nature lovers are drawn by the views and the chance to wander through old-growth woods (old trees that have never been felled) past trout ponds and a 61-m (200-ft) waterfall. Don’t miss the Big House, where native artists carve totem poles and explain their techniques and heritage.

Atkinson Lighthouse, Canada’s oldest manned lighthouse

Lighthouse Park i Off Beacon Lane, West Vancouver. Tel (604) 925 7200. # 6am–10pm daily.

Named after the hexagonal lighthouse built at the mouth of Burrard Inlet in 1910 to guide ships through the foggy channel, Lighthouse Park is an unspoiled area with 75 ha (185 acres) of old growth forest and wild, rocky coast. The trees here have never been logged and some of the majestic Douglas firs are over 500 years old. There is a variety of hiking trails in the park, some leading

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to a viewpoint near the 18-m (60-ft) Point Atkinson Lighthouse. On a clear day one can see stunning vistas across the Strait of Georgia all the way to Vancouver Island. A two-hour hike leads through about 5 km (3 miles) of old-growth forest, taking walkers through the fairly rugged terrain of mosscovered gullies and steep rocky outcrops with breathtaking views of the sea and surrounding area. Wear good walking shoes or boots, stay on the trails and be prepared for inclement weather. The drive to the park itself is spectacular. Scenic Marine Drive winds along the West Vancouver coastline edging past beaches, clinging to rocky shoreline and passing some of Canada’s priciest real estate. On the way, there are a couple of towns that are worth a stop. Ambleside has a long beach, which is a favourite with families but packed on sunny summer weekends. From here there are great views of Stanley Park and the Lion’s Gate Bridge. A seawall walkway leads to Dundarave Pier, with panoramic views sweeping from Vancouver right around to the Strait of Georgia. Dundarave itself is a small town with a pleasing cluster of shops, cafés, and restaurants, as well as a beach that is not so busy as the beach at Ambleside.

The Capilano Suspension Bridge crossing the dramatic and tree-covered Capilano Canyon

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A quiet, attractive city, Victoria’s reputation for having an old-fashioned, seaside-town atmosphere is enhanced in the summer by the abundance of flowers in hanging baskets and window boxes that decorate every lampost, balcony, and storefront. Established as a Hudson’s Bay Company fur-trading post in 1843 by James Douglas, Victoria had its risqué moments during its gold rush years (1858–63) thousands of prospectors drank in 60 or more on Market Square. Victoria was established as provincial capital of British Columbia in 1871 bu soon outgrown by Vancouver, now BC’s large r Today, Victoria is still the province’s political ce well as one of its most popular attractions for sitors.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Parliament Buildings 9 Royal BC Museum 7 See pp284–5 The Bay Centre 3 The BC Experience 5 Thunderbird Park 8

Bastion Square 2 Beacon Hill Park q Carr House 0 Fairmont Empress Hotel 4 Helmcken House 6 Market Square 1

* 71,500. k Victoria Airport. 25 km (15 miles) N of city. £ Via Station, 450 Pandora Avenue. @ Pacific Coach Lines, 700 Douglas St. g Victoria Clipper/Blackball Transport. n 812 Wharf Street. Tel (250) 953 2033. _ Jazz Fest International, (Jun); Folkfest, (Jul & Aug); First People’s Festival, Royal BC Museum (Aug).

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Bastion Square is a popular lunch spot for locals and visitors

includes the MacDonald Block building, built in 1863 in Italianate style, with elegant cast-iron columns and arched windows. The old courthouse, built in 1889, houses the BC Maritime Museum. In summer, both visitors and workers lunch in the courtyard cafés. P Market Square 560 Johnson St. Tel (250) 386 2441. # 10am–5pm daily. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. 7 limited. www.marketsquare.ca

Two blocks north of Bastion Square on the corner of Johnson Street, Market Square has some of the finest Victorian saloon, hotel, and store façades in Victoria. Most of the buildings were built in he 1880s and 1890s, during the boom period of the Klondike Gold Rush. After decades of neglect, the area received a much-needed facelift in 1975. Today, the square is a shoppers’ paradise, with a variety of stores selling everything from books and jewelry to musical instruments and other arts and crafts.

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which visitors are permitted to play. Other exhibits include a collection of antique dolls and the family’s personal belongings such as clothes, shoes, and toiletries. E The BC Experience 713 Douglas St. Tel (250) 953 2033 (Tourism Victoria). # daily. 7 8 www.bcexperience.info

One of the giant totem poles on display at Thunderbird Park

Y Thunderbird Park cnr Belleville & Douglas Streets.

This compact park lies at the entrance to the Royal British Columbia Museum (see pp284–5) and is home to an imposing collection of plain and painted giant totem poles. During the summer months it is possible to watch native artists in the Thunderbird Park Carving Studio producing these handsome carved totems. The poles show and preserve the legends of many different tribes from the aboriginal peoples of the Northwest Coast.

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John Wright, was saved from demolition by a public campaign, as were the fronts of the 1910 Times Building and the fine, 19th-century Lettice and Sears Building. Behind these elegant façades, there are three floors of stores selling everything from fashion and gifts to handmade chocolates and gourmet food.

This multi-media showcase is P Carr House housed in the former Crystal Garden Conservation Centre, 207 Government St. Tel (250) 383 an 80-year-old historic building 5843. # mid-May –mid-Oct: 11am– designed by 4pm daily; closed Mon in May & Oct. architect Francis 7 8 www.emilycarr.com Rattenbury as a mily Carr, one of salt water swimCanada’s best-known ming pool. Interartists (see pp32–3), active exhibits all was born in 1871 in visitors to explor this charming, yellow geography, geolo clapboard house. It was climate, wildlife, built in 1864 by promiand history of nent architects Wright Parrot in the British Columbia. and Saunders, under Crystal Gardens The centrepiece of instruction from Emily’s father, Richard Carr. the exhibition is a Located just a few minutes 372-sq m (4,000-sq ft), threedimensional, solid terrain map walk from Inner Harbour, of BC, the largest in the world. both the house and its English-style garden are open P The Bay Centre to visitors. All the rooms are Government St. Tel (250) 952 5690. appropriately furnished in # 9:30am – 6pm Mon, Tue & Sat; late 19th-century period style, 9:30am – 9pm Wed– Fri; 11am – 5pm with some original family Sun. 7 pieces. Visitors can see the The Bay Centre is a shopping dining room where Emily mall within walking distance taught her first art classes to of the Inner Harbour and was local children. Emily’s drawing of her father still sits upon built behind the façades of several historic buildings on the mantel in the sitting room Government Street. The Driard where, as an eight-year-old, Hotel, designed in 1892 by she made her first sketches.

E Helmcken House 10 Elliot St. Square. Tel (250) 356 7226, 1 888 447 7977. # May– Oct: 10am–5pm daily; Nov–Apr: noon–4pm Thu–Mon. & 7 8

Located in Elliot Square in the Inner Harbour area, the home of Hudson’s Bay Company employee Dr. John Sebastian Helmcken was built in 1852 and is thought to be British Columbia’s oldest house. The young doctor built his house with Douglas fir trees felled in the surrounding forest. This simple but elegantly designed clapboard dwelling contains many of the original furnishings including the piano,

The Carr House where renowned painter Emily Carr was born

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

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Y Beacon Hill Park Douglas St. Tel (250) 361 0600. # daily. 7 www.beaconhillpark.ca

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Although not a real castle, the design of this large house was In the late 19th century this based on that of his delightful park was used for ancestral home in stabling horses, but in 1888 Scotland and mixes John Blair, a Scottish landseveral architectural scape gardener, redesigned styles such as Roman the park to include two lakes and French Gothic. and initiated extensive tree When the castle planting. Once a favorite was threatened with haunt of artist Emily Carr, this demolition in 1959, peaceful 74.5-ha (184-acre) a group of local citipark is now renowned for its zens formed a society lofty old trees (including the that successfully batrare Garry oaks, some of tled for its restoration. which are over 400 years old), Today, the restored picturesque duck ponds, and interior of the house is a 100-year-old cricket pitch. a museum that offers an insight into the E Art Gallery of Greater lifestyle of a wealthy Victoria Canadian entrepreneur. 1040 Moss St. Tel (250) 384 4101. The castle is noted A tower at Craigdarroch Castle in the French # 10am – 5pm Sun – Wed, Fri, for having one of the Gothic style of a château & Sat; 10am – 9pm Thu. & finest collections of Art www.aggv.bc.ca Nouveau lead-glass P Government House This popular gallery’s contem- windows in North America, 1401 Rockland Ave. Tel (250) 387 porary, newly renovated and many of the rooms and 2080. # daily (gardens only). 7 facilities are located in the www.ltgov.bc.ca hallways retain their patheritage neighborhood of The present Government terned wood parquet floors Rockland, a few blocks west and carved paneling in white House building was completed of Craigdarroch Castle. oak, cedar, and maho- in 1959 after fire destroyed Inside, visitors will gany. Every room is the 1903 building, which was filled with opulent designed by renowned archifind a diverse presentation of tect Francis Rattenbury. Victorian furnishings exhibitions, inclufrom the late 19th As the official residence of ding contemporary, century and decthe Lieutenant-Governor of Canadian, heritage, British Columbia, the Queen’s orated in original colors such as deep and national representative to the province, touring exhibitions. greens, pinks, and the house is not open to the On permanent rusts. Several layers public, but visitors can view exhibition is the of the paint have 5.6 ha (14 acres) of stunning work of British been painstakingly public gardens with beautiful Columbia’s premier Shinto lawns, ponds, an English counh shrine h d detaill at removed from try garden, and a Victorian rose artist, Emily Carr, the drawing room the Art Gallery featuring her ceiling to reveal the garden. From Pearke’s Peak, a paintings of the British original hand-painted, stenmount formed from the rocky Columbian coastal forests cilled decorations beneath, outcrops that surround the including wonderfully detailed property, there are marvelous and depictions of the lives butterflies and lions. views of the grounds. of native peoples, as well as excerpts from her writings and archival photographs. In its quaint courtyard garden, the gallery also houses the only original Japanese Shinto shrine in North America. + Craigdarroch Castle 1050 Joan Cres. Tel (250) 592 5323. # Jun – Sep: 9am – 7pm daily; Oct – May: 10am – 4:30pm daily. ¢ Dec 25, 26, Jan 1. & www.craigdarrochcastle.com

Completed in 1889, Craigdarroch Castle was the pet project of respected local coal millionaire, Robert Dunsmuir.

The 1959 Government House, built with blue and pink granite

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The Royal British Columbia Museum The Royal British Columbia Museum tells the story of this region through its natural history, geology, and peoples. The museum is regarded as one of the best in Canada for the striking way it presents its exhibits. A series of imaginative dioramas re-create the sights, sounds, and even smells of areas such as the Pacific seashore, the ocean, and the rainforest, all of which occupy the second floor Natural History Gallery. Every aspect of the region’s history is presented on the third floor, including a reconstruction of an early 20th-century town. Visitors can experience the street life of the time in a saloon and a cinema showing silent films. The superb collection of native art and culture includes a ceremonial Big House.

Third Floor

19th-century Chinatown As part of an 1875 street scene, this Chinese herbalist’s store displays a variety of herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine. . First People’s Gallery Made of cedar bark and spruce root in around 1897, this hat bears the mountain goat crest of the raven clan.

First Nations’ Ceremonial Masks The mouse, raccoon, and kingfisher are carved on these masks, belonging to the Mungo family who wore them to dance on ceremonial occasions.

KEY TO FLOOR PLAN First People’s gallery Modern History gallery Feature exhibits Natural History gallery National Geographic IMAX theater Nonexhibition space

Exterior of the museum The museum’s main exhibits building was opened in 1968 after years of having to occupy several sites in and around r the Legislative Buildings. The museum also houses an archives building, and a Heritage Court.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

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Modern History Gallery A variety of streets, stores and public buildings, from the 1700s to 1990s, are re-created in this gallery. Here, the Grand Hotel occupies an authentic wooden sidewalk. Second Floor

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST 675 Belleville St. Tel 1 888 447 7977 or (250) 356 7226. @ 5, 28, 30. # 9am –5pm daily. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7 = 8 www.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca

. Natural History Gallery A full-size prehistoric tusked mammoth guards the entrance to the Natural History gallery which includes several lifelike dioramas that re-create British Columbia’s coastal forests and ocean life since the last Ice Age.

. Pacific Seashore Diorama This diorama uses sound, film, lighting, and realistic animals such as this northern sea lion.

GALLERY GUIDE The main exhibits of the museum are housed on the second and third floors. The Natural History gallery, on the second floor, reconstructs a range of environments from the Coast Seashore to the Old Growth Forest displays. The third floor has the First People’s and Modern History galleries.

STAR EXHIBITS

. Pacific Seashore Diorama

. Natural History First Floor

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. First People’s Gallery Main Entrance

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Port Renfrew a * 300. n 2070 Phillips Rd., Sooke (250) 642 6351.

The lily pond in the formal Italian garden at Butchart Gardens

Butchart Gardens p 800 Benvenuto Ave., Brentwood Bay. Tel (250) 652 4422, 1 866 652 4422. £ Victoria. c Victoria. # 9am daily; closing times vary by season. & 7 www.butchartgardens.com

These beautiful gardens were begun in 1904 by Mrs. Jennie Butchart, the wife of a cement manufacturer. When her husband moved west to quarry limestone near Victoria, Mrs. Butchart began to design a new garden, which would stretch down to the water at Tod Inlet. When the limestone deposits ran out, Mrs Butchart decided to add to her burgeoning garden by landscaping the quarry site into a sunken garden which now boasts a lake overhung by willow and other trees laden with blossom in spring. A huge rock left in the quarry was turned into a towering rock garden. Today visitors can climb stone steps to see stunning views from the top. As their popularity grew, so the gardens were filled with thousands of rare plants collected from around the world by Mrs Butchart. Today, the gardens are arranged into distinct areas. There is a formal Italian garden with a lily pond that features a fountain bought in Italy by the Butcharts in 1924. The rose garden is filled with the scent of hundreds of different blooms in summer. During the summer the gardens are illuminated and play host to evening musical performances.

Port Renfrew is a small, friendly fishing village and ex-logging town. A popular daytrip from Victoria, the town offers visitors access to Botanical Beach where a unique sandstone shelf leaves rock pools filled with marine life such as starfish at low tide. Port Renfrew is famed for its hiking along old logging roads: the Sandbar Trail goes through a Douglas fir plantation to a large river sandbar where it is possible to swim at low tide. A more serious hike is the 48-km (30-mile) Juan de Fuca Marine Trail from Port Renfrew to China Beach. This trail offers a range of hikes, from treks lasting several days to short beach walks. The town is one of two starting points for the West Coast Trail in Pacific Rim National Park (see pp288–9).

Cowichan District s £ & c from Duncan. n 381A Trans-Canada Hwy, Duncan (250) 746 4636, 1 888 303 3337. www.cowichan.net

Located on the south central coast of Vancouver Island, about 60 km (37 miles) north of Victoria, the Cowichan District incorporates both the Chemainus and Cowichan Valleys. Cowichan means “warm land” in the language of the Cowichan peoples, one of British Columbia’s largest First Nations groups; the area’s mild climate means the waters of Cowichan Lake are warm

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enough to swim in during the summer months. The largest freshwater lake on the island, Lake Cowichan offers excellent fishing, canoeing, and hiking. Between the town of Duncan and the lake lies the Valley Demonstration Forest which has scenic lookouts and signs explaining forest management. Duncan is known as the City of Totems as it displays several poles along the highway. The Cowichan Native Village is a heritage center which shows films on the history of the Cowichan Tribe. The gift shop sells traditional artifacts including Cowichan sweaters. At the large carving shed, sculptors create poles while guides tell the stories behind the images.

Stunning vista over Lake Cowichan in the Cowichan Valley

Chemainus d * 4,200. £ c g n 9796 Willow St. (250) 246 3944.

When the local sawmill closed in 1983, the picturesque town of Chemainus transformed itself into a major attraction with the painting of giant murals around the town that depict the history of the region. Local artists continued the project and today there are more than 34 murals on the outside walls of local buildings, based on real events in the town’s past. Larger-than-

First Nations’ faces looking down from a Chemainus town mural

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

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Port Alberni g * 26,800. k c g n Site 215, C10, RR2 (250) 724 6535.

Port Alberni sits at the head of Alberni Inlet, which stretches 48 km (30 miles) from the interior of Vancouver Island to the Pacific Ocean in the west. The town depends upon the lumber and fishing industries and is a popular haunt for salmon fishers. Every year the Salmon Derby and Festival offers thousands of Pleasure craft and fishing boats moored in Nanaimo harbor Canadian dollars for the biggest fish caught during the last life images of Cowichan As the second largest city on weekend in August. The natives, pioneers, and loggers Vancouver Island, Nanaimo has town’s other attractions include plenty of malls and businesses a 1929 locomotive offering dominate Chemainus and along the Island Highway, but train rides along the waterfront have revitalized the town. Visitors enjoy browsing in the it is the Old City Quarter on during the summer from the waterfront in the h 1912 Port Alberni town’s various antique stores downtown Nanaimo way Station to the and relaxing in the many pleasant sidewalk cafés, visitors enjoy most. am operated MacLean espresso bars, and tearooms. wmill. Many visitors The Old City Quart has many 19th-centu me to cruise on one Environs buildings, including t of two freighters, the Some 70 km (45 miles) south Nanaimo Court Hous 40-year-old M.V. designed by Francis Lady Rose and the of Chemainus, Swartz Bay is M.V. Frances Rattenbury in 1895. the departure point on Vancouver Island for ferries to The Nanaimo rkley. The ships District Museum at ver mail down the the Southern Gulf Islands. Visitors are drawn to the 200 Piper’s Park has a t, as well as offering mostly uninhabited islands by re-creation of Victori s to Ucluelet, Bamtheir tranquillity and natural 19th-century Chinato d, and other waybeauty. It is possible to stroll complete with wood nts near the Pacific along empty beaches where sidewalks, a Rim National Park. A carved eagle soars sightings of eagles and turkey general store, a They also carry vultures are common. There over Port Alberni Pier kayaks and canoes barber shop, and a for those hoping are fishing charters for visitors schoolroom. Other who enjoy catching salmon exhibits include native to sail around the Broken Group Islands (see p288). and cod as well as kayaking artifacts displayed in a village diorama. Just east of Port Alberni, it tours offering stops on isolated shores to view otters, is possible to hike among aweE Nanaimo District Museum inspiring old growth Douglas seals, and marine birds. 100 Cameron Rd. Tel (250) 753 firs and red cedars in the outSalt Spring is the most pop1821. # 10am–5pm daily. & 7 standing MacMillan Cathedral ulated island, with about 8 book in advance. 10,000 inhabitants. In the sumGrove Provincial Park. mer, visitors come to wander around the pretty Ganges Village, where a busy marina surrounds the wooden pier. The village offers stores, cafés, galleries, and colorful markets.

Nanaimo f * 78,800. k £ c g n 2290 Bowen Rd. (250) 756 0106, 1 800 663 7337. www.tourismnanaimo.bc.ca

Originally the site of five Coast Salish native villages, Nanaimo was established as a coal-mining town in the 1850s.

A 1929 locomotive offering rides along Port Alberni’s waterfront

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Gold River h * 1,900. n Highway 28 (250) 283 2418.

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to Friendly Cove where Captain Cook is said to have been the first European to meet local native peoples in 1778. Gold River is a good base from which to explore Strathcona Provincial Park which lies in the center of Vancouver V Island. Established in 1911, this rugged wilderness is BC’s oldest provincial park and encompasses 250,000 ha

Gold River is a logging village located at the end of the picturesque Hwy 28, near Muchalat Inlet. The village is a popular center for caving, containing over 50 caves in its environs. Just 16 km (10 miles) west of Gold River, the unique crystalline formations of the Upana Caves and the deeper grottos of White Ridge draw hundreds of visitors every summer. Summer cruises on a converted W World War II minesweeper, M.V. Uchuck III, take visitors Mountain view at Strathcona Provincial Park

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(617,750 acres) of impressive mountains, as well as lakes and ancient forests. However, much of the park’s outstanding scenery can be explored only by experienced hikers. Y Strathcona Provincial Park Off Hwy 28. Tel (250) 337 2400. # daily. & for campsites. 7 limited. 8 Jul & Aug: call ahead for details.

Campbell River k * 30,000. n 1235 Shoppers Row (250) 286 1616, 1 800 463 4368. www.campbellrivertourism.com

Located on the northeast shore of Vancouver Island, Campbell River is renowned as a center for salmon fishing.

Pacific Rim National Park Reserve

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The Pacific Rim National Park Reserve is composed of three distinct areas: Long Beach, the West Coast Trail, and the Broken Group Islands, all of which occupy a 130-km (80-mile) strip of Vancouver Island’s west coast. The park is a world famous area for whalewatching, and the Wickaninnish Interpretive Centre off Hwy 4 has the latest information on their movements. Long Beach offers a range of hiking trails, parking at all trail heads and beach accesse most challenging hike is Coast Trail, between P Renfrew and Bamfield Broken Group Islands popular with kayakers

roup Islands of some kers

The Schooner Trai

one of nine scenic an easy-to-follow trails along the sands of Long Beach.

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Long Beach The rugged, windswept sands of Long Beach are renowned for their wild beauty, with crashing Pacific rollers, unbeatable surfing opportunities, rock pools filled with marine life, and scattered driftwood. For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp360–62 and pp385–8. For transport information see p419

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which follow the fish up river. Visitors can rent a fishing boat or try their luck catching fish from the 200-m (656-ft) Discovery Pier in the town. Just 10 km (6 miles) northwest of Campbell River, Elk Falls Provincial Park houses large Douglas Fir forests and several waterfalls, including the impressive Elk Falls.

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over the waters of Johnstone Strait. In summer, about 300 killer whales, drawn to the area by the migrating salmon, come to cavort and scratch their bellies on the gravel beds in the shallow waters of Robson Bight, an ecological preserve established in 1982. Visitors may view the antics of the whales from tour boats or from the village pier.

Telegraph Cove l The crashing waters of Elk Falls along the Campbell River

The waters of Discovery Passage are on the migration route for five major species of salmon, including the giant Chinook. There are boat tours,

* 100. c Port McNeill. n Port Hardy (250) 949 7622.

Located on the northern end of Vancouver Island, Telegraph Cove is a small, picturesque boardwalk village, with distinctive high wooden houses built on stilts that look

WHALE WATCHING More than 20 species of whale are found in British Columbia’s coastal waters. Around 17,000 gray whales migrate annually from their feeding grounds in the Arctic Ocean to breed off the coast of Mexico. The whales Migrating gray whales tend to stay near to the coast and often move close enough to Vancouver Island’s west shore to be sighted from land. From March to August there are daily whale-watching trips from Tofino and Ucluelet.

Killer whales in the waters of Johnstone Strait, Vancouver Island

VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwy 4. Tel (250) 726 7721. c from Port Alberni. # daily. 7 8 Mar–Sep. 0 - www.pc.gc.ca

KEY Major road Minor road West Coast Trail National Park boundary

West Coast Trail s trail passes stunning cluding mossrest and es

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on the West Coast Tra take a short ferry ride across this pretty waterway. The trail is open from May to September.

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THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS 3,048-m (10,000-ft) high. A region of spectacular beauty, the landscape of the Rockies is dominated by snow-topped peaks, luminous glaciers, and iridescent glacial lakes, now protected in a series of national parks. The discovery of natural hot springs at Banff in 1883 prompted the federal government to create Canada’s first national park. Since 1985 Banff, Jasper, Yoho, and Kootenay parks have become UNESCO World Heritage sites.

he Canadian Rockies occupy a band of the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta nearly 805 km (500 miles) wide, and are part of the range that extends from Mexico through the United States into Canada. Between 65 and 100 million years ago, a slow but massive upheaval of the Earth’s crust caused the rise of the Rocky Mountains and the dramatic, jagged appearance of their peaks, 30 of which are over

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SIGHTS AT A GLANCE Fort Macleod 2 Fort Nelson o Fort St. John i Grande Prairie u

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Prince George y Radium um Hot Springs 0 National at and Provincial Parks Pr

Banff National Park e Glacier National Park 9 Jasper National Park t Kootenay Nationall Park q Muncho o Lake L Provincial Park p Pro Waterton Lakes W National Park 3 Yoho National Park r Y

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Mountie’s cabin in the Interpretive Centre at Fort Calgary Historic Park

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and Deane House 806 9th Ave. SE. Tel (403) 290 1875. # Deane House: daily. &

The Hunt House lies across the Elbow River from the Fort Calgary Interpretive Centre. This small log house is one of the few buildings left from the original settlement of Calgary in the early 1880s. Nearby Deane House was built for the Superintendent of Fort Calgary, Captain Richard Burton Deane, in 1906. Today, the house is a restaurant where visitors can enjoy a meal in a delightful period setting. P Fort Calgary

Historic Park 750 9th Ave. SE. Tel (403) 290 1875. # May – Oct: daily. & 7

Fort Calgary was built by the North West Mounted Police in 1875 at the conjunction of the

Bow and Elbow Rivers. The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway (later amalgamated with the CPR), arrived in 1883, and the tiny fort town grew to over 400 residents in a year. In 1887, a fire destroyed several of the settlement’s key buildings and a new town was built out of the more fireresistant sandstone. In 1914 the land was bought by the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway and the fort was leveled. Pieces of the fort were discovered during an archeological dig in 1970, and the well-restored site was opened to the public in 1978. Today, the reconstructed fort offers an interpretive center, which houses a re-created quartermaster’s store and carpenter’s workshop. There are also delightful walks along the river. Costumed guides participate in dramatic reenactments.

CALGARY STAMPEDE An exuberant ten-day festival of all things western, the Calgary Stampede is held every July in Stampede Park. Originally established as an agricultural fair in 1886, the Stampede of 1912 attracted 14,000 people. In the 1920s one of its still-popular highlights, the risky but exciting covered wagon races, became part of the show. Today’s festival has an array of spectacular entertainments that dramatize scenes from western history. They can be seen both on site and in Calgary itself. The fair starts with a dazzling parade through the city, and then features bull riding, calf roping, and cow tackling. The main events are the Half-Million Dollar Rodeo, and chuck-wagon racing which have combined prize money of over Can$1.2 million.

Saint George’s Island sits on the edge of the Bow River near downtown Calgary. The island houses the magnificent Calgary Zoo, the Botanical Gardens, and Prehistoric Park. The zoo prides itself on the exciting presentation of its animals, which can be seen in their appropriate habitats. A series of environments called The Canadian Wilds has been created, highlighting the diversity of both the Canadian landscape and its wildlife. There are aspen woodlands where it is possible to see the endangered woodland caribou, and visitors can wander the pathways of the boreal forest environment, maybe spotting the rare whooping crane feeding in the shallow wetlands area. The zoo is surrounded by the Botanical Gardens, which has a vast greenhouse displaying plants from different climate zones from around the world. The Prehistoric Park offers a reconstructed Mesozoic landscape, where visitors can picnic among 22 life-size dinosaurs.

The stately whooping crane at Calgary Zoo, Saint George’s Island

Y Stampede Park 1410 Olympic Way SE. Tel (403) 261 0125. # daily. & some events. 7

Famous as the site of the Calgary Stampede, the park offers year-round leisure and conference facilities. There is a permanent horse racetrack, as well as two ice-hockey stadiums, one of which is housed inside the striking Saddledome, named for its saddle-shaped roof. Trade shows, such as antiques and home improvements, are also held here.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9. For transport information see p420

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bobsleds and luge tracks. The views toward the Rockies and over Calgary from the 90-m (295-ft) high Olympic Ski Jump Tower are truly stunning. Visitors can experience the thrills of the downhill ski run and the bobsleds on the simulators housed in the Olympic Hall of Fame and Museum.

Heritage Park Historic Village houses some 70 historic buildings

Y Fish Creek

Provincial Park Bow Bottom Trail SE. Tel (403) 297 5293. # daily. 7 partial.

Established in 1975, Fish Creek Provincial Park is one of the world’s largest urban parks, covering 1,348 ha (3,318 acres) of forest and wilderness along the Fish Creek valley. Park guides hold slide shows on both the ecology and history of the region, detailing the park’s many archeological sites, such as buffalo jumps dated between 750 BC and 1800 AD. The park’s forest is a mix of white spruce, aspen, and balsam poplar. In winter, many of the hiking trails become cross-country ski trails, popular with locals and visitors alike. The Canada goose, the great blue heron, and the bald eagle are among a variety of birds that visit the park during both summer and winter. P Heritage Park

Historic Village 1900 Heritage Drive SW. Tel (403) 268 8500. # May–Aug: daily; Sep & Oct: weekends only. ¢ Nov–Apr. & 7 www.heritagepark.ca

Heritage Park Historic Village sits on the shore of Glenmore Reservoir, and contains over 150 historic buildings, from outhouses to a two-story hotel, which have been brought here from sites all over western Canada. The buildings have been organized into time periods, which range from an 1880s fur trading post to the shops and homes of a small town between 1900 and 1914. Most of the 45,000 artifacts that furnish and decorate the village have been donated by residents of Calgary and the surrounding towns, and vary from teacups to steam trains.

E Calgary Science Centre 701 11th St. SW. Tel (403) 268 8300. # Jun–Sep: daily; Sep–May: Tue–Sun. & 7 www.calgaryscience.ca

Among the most thrilling of The Calgary Science Centre is the exhibits, a working 19tha popular interactive museum, century amusement park has with over 35 exhibits of scienseveral rides, and three tific wonders such as the book original operating steam of mirrors, the music area, and the human sundial. locomotives. A replica of the SS Moyie, a In the Discovery Dome, charming sternwheeler the latest multimedia paddle boat, takes visitechnology brings all tors on 30-minute cruises kinds of images to life around the Glenmore on an enormous domed Reservoir. One of the screen. Fascinating most popular experishows include detailed ences is to ride one explorations of everyof two vintage electric thing from an ordinary streetcars to the park’s Victorian drink backyard to the solar container at front gates. The sense system. On Friday Heritage Park of stepping back in evenings, visitors can time is enhanced by observe the stars the all-pervasive clip-clopping using the high-powered teleof horsedrawn carriages, and scopes in the observatory. by the smells and sounds of shops such as the working E Museum of the Regiments bakery and the blacksmith’s, 4520 Crowchild Trail SW. Tel (403) all staffed by costumed guides. 974 2850. # 10am – 4pm daily. Y Canada Olympic Park 88 Canada Olympic Rd. SW. Tel (403) 247 5452. # 9am–10pm Mon–Fri, 9am–5pm Sat & Sun. & 7

Canada Olympic Park was the site of the 1988 XV Olympic Winter Games. Today, both locals and visitors can enjoy the facilities all year round, including riding on the

¢ Wed. & Donation 7 www.museumoftheregiments.ca

The Museum of the Regiments is devoted to the history of the Canadian Armed Forces. The largest of its kind in western Canada, it focuses on four regiments and the history of the military in Alberta with realistic displays that depict actual battle situations.

Sherman tank on display outside the Museum of the Regiments

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The mountain-ringed Lake Waterton in Waterton Lakes National Park

Fort Macleod 2 * 3,100. c n Fort Macleod Museum, 25th St. (403) 553 4703. www.fortmacleod.com

Alberta’s oldest settlement, Fort Macleod was established in 1874 as the first North West Mounted Police outpost in the west. Sent to control lawless whiskey traders at the Fort Whoop-up trading post, the Mounties set up Fort Macleod nearby (see p232). Today’s town retains over 30 of its historic buildings, and the reconstructed fort palisades (completed in 1957) house the fort’s museum, which tells the story of the Mounties’ journey. The world’s oldest and best preserved buffalo jump lies just 16 km (10 miles) northwest of Fort Macleod. Head-SmashedIn-Buffalo Jump was made a UN World Heritage site in 1987. This way of hunting buffalo, where as many as 500 men wearing buffalo skins stampeded herds of the animals to their deaths over a cliff, was perfected by the Blackfoot tribe. The site takes its name from the brave whose head was smashed in when watching the kill from below the cliff!

Waterton Lakes National Park 3 £ Calgary. n Park Info Centre, open mid-May–Sep (403) 859 2224. # daily. & 7 partial. www.pc.gc.ca

Scenery as amazing as any of that found in the Rockies’ other national parks characterizes the less-known Waterton Lakes National Park. Located in the southwest corner of Alberta along the US border, the park is an International Peace Park and manages a shared ecosystem with Glacier National Park in the US. The park owes its unique beauty to the geological phenomenon of the Lewis Overthurst, which was forged over a billion years ago (before the formation of the Rockies)

when ancient rock was pushed over newer deposits. Thus, the peaks of the mountains rise up sharply out of the flat prairies. Waterton’s mix of lowland and alpine habitats means it has the widest variety of wildlife of any of Canada’s parks, from bears to bighorn sheep, and from waterfowl to nesting species such as sapsuckers.

Crowsnest Pass 4 n Frank Slide Interpretive Centre (403) 562 7388. www.frankslide.com

Crowsnest Pass is located on Highway 3, in Alberta close to the border with British Columbia. Like most Rocky Mountain passes, it is enclosed by snowcapped mountains.

T Head-Smashed-In-

Buffalo Jump Rte 785, off Hwy 2. Tel (403) 553 2731. # daily. & 7

Visitors on an underground tour of Bellevue Mine at Crowsnest Pass

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9

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In the early 1900s this area was dominated by the coal-mining industry and was the site of Canada’s worst mine disaster. In 1903, a huge mass of rock slid off Turtle Mountain into the valley below, hitting part of the town of Frank, killing 70 people. The Frank Slide Interpretive Centre offers two award-winning audio/visual presentations called “In The Mountain’s Shadow” and “On the Edge of Destruction.” A trail through the valley is marked with numbered stops and leads hikers to the debris left by the disaster. Visitors can learn more about the history of local mining communities at the Bellevue Mine, which offers tours through the same narrow tunnels that working miners took daily between 1903 and 1961. Tours are available of Leitch Collieries, a fascinating early mining complex.

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Fernie is known for its winter sports, and boasts the best powder snow in the Rockies. The skiing season runs from November to April. The nearby Fernie Alpine Resort is huge and is capable of taking around 12,300 skiers up the mountain every hour. During the summer, the Mount Fernie Provincial Park offers a broad range of hiking trails through its magnificent mountain scenery. Boat trips on the many nearby lakes and rivers are popular, as is the fishing. Various companies offer helicopter sightseeing trips that take visitors close to the mountains to see the formations and granite cliffs particular to this region of the Rockies.

Fort Steele Heritage Town 6 Hwy 95. Tel (250) 426 7352. # daily. & 7 www.fortsteele.bc.ca

A re-creation of a 19thcentury pioneering supply town, this settlement was established in 1864, when gold was discovered at Wild Horse Creek. Thousands of prospectors and entrepreneurs arrived by the Dewdney Trail, which linked Hope to the gold fields. The town was named after the North West Mounted Police Superintendent, Samuel

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19th-century barber’s shop at Fort Steele Heritage Town

Steele, who arrived in 1887 to restore peace between warring groups of Ktunaxa native peoples and European settlers. The town underwent a brief boom with the discovery of lead and silver, but the mainline railroad was routed through Cranbrook instead, and by the early 1900s Fort Steele was a ghost town. Today, there are over 60 reconstructed or restored buildings, staffed by guides in period costume, including the general store, livery stable, and Mountie officers’ quarters, where personal items such as family photographs, swords, and uniforms create the illusion of recent occupation. Demonstrations of traditional crafts such as quilt- and ice creammaking are also held here. Tours at the nearby Wild Horse Creek Historic Site include the chance to pan for gold.

THE BUFFALO The Rocky Mountains tower over houses in the town of Fernie

Fernie 5 * 4,877. c n Hwy 3 & Dicken Rd. (250) 423 9207. www.fernie.com

Fernie is an attractive, treelined town beautifully set amid a circle of pointed peaks on the British Columbia side of Crowsnest Pass. The town owes its handsome appearance to a fire that burned it to the ground in 1908, since when all buildings have been constructed from brick and stone. Among several historic buildings, the 1911 courthouse stands out as the only châteaustyle courthouse in BC.

The large, shaggy-headed type of cattle known as buffalo are really North American bison. These apparently cumbersome beasts (a mature bull can weigh as much as 900 kg/1,980 lbs) are agile, fast, and unpredictable. Before European settlers began moving west to the plains, in the 18th and 19th centuries, the buffalo lived in immense herds of hundreds of thousands. It is estimated that as many as 60,000,000 roamed here. Initially hunted only by the Plains Indians, who respected the beasts as a source of food, shelter, and tools, the buffalo were subsequently hunted almost to extinction by Europeans. By 1900 less than 1,000 animals remained. In 1874 a rancher called Walking Coyote bred a small herd of just 716 plains bison whose descendants now roam several Canadian national parks. A North American plains bison

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The luxurious dining car on a restored train at Cranbrook’s ’ rail museum

Cranbrook 7 * 18,050. ~ c n 2279 Cranbrook St. N. (250) 426 5914.

Cranbrook is the largest town in southeast BC and lies between the Purcell and the Rocky Mountain ranges. A major transportation hub for the Rocky Mountain region, Cranbrook is within easy reach of a variety of scenic delights, including alpine forest and the lush, green valleys of the mountain foothills. A range of wildlife such as elk, wolves, cougar, and the highest density of grizzlies in the Rockies, may be spotted on one of many hikes available here. The town’s main attraction is the Canadian Museum of Rail Travel. Housed in the restored 1900 station, the museum possesses an archive of papers and photographs illustrating the history of the railroad. Outside, visitors can explore the lavish interiors of its collection of original trains.

attracts hunters and skiers from across the globe. A high range of granite spires, called the Bugaboos, also draws mountain climbers. In the north of the Purcell range, and in one of its few accessible areas, the Purcell Wilderness Conservancy, covers a vast 32,600 ha (80,554 acres). Carefully regulated hunting expeditions for bear, mountain goats, and elk are permitted here. From the nearby pretty town of Invermere, it is possible to access one of the most difficult trails in Canada; the Earl

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Grey Pass Trail extends some 56 km (35 miles) over the Purcell Mountains. It is named after Earl Grey, Canada’s Governor General from 1904 to 1911, who chose the Purcell range as the place to build a vacation cabin for his family in 1909. The trail he traveled followed an established native route used by the Kinbasket natives of the Shuswap First Nations. Today the trail is notoriously dangerous; bears, avalanches, and fallen trees are often hazards along the way. Hiking along it requires skill and experience and should not be attempted by a novice.

Glacier National Park 9 c Revelstoke/Golden. n Revelstoke (250) 837 7500. # daily. & 7 www.pc.gc.ca

Glacier National Park covers 1,350 sq km (520 sq miles) of wilderness in the Selkirk Range of the Columbia Mountains. The park was established in 1886, and its growth was

E The Canadian Museum of

Rail Travel 57 Vanhorne St. S. Tel (250) 489 3918. # Apr – mid-Oct: daily; late Oct – Apr: Tue –Sat. & 7

The Purcell Mountains 8 £ Kamloops. n Hwy 95, Golden (250) 344 7125.

The rugged and beautiful Purcell Mountains face the Rockies across the broad Columbia River Valley. The region is one of the most remote in the Rockies and

The Purcell Mountains are noted for remote rivers, forests, and mountains

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9

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The Illecillewaet Glacier is one of 420 glaciers in Glacier National Park

linked to the growth of the Kootenay National Park. railroad, which was routed During the summer, flowerthrough Roger’s Pass in 1885. filled pots decorate the storeToday, many of the park’s fronts of the many coffee shops most accessible walking trails and pubs along the main street, follow abandoned railroad and the town has more motel lines. Other trails offer visitors rooms than residents. Many of stunning views of the park’s the 1.2 million annual visitors 420 glaciers, including the come to bathe in the healing waters of the springs. There are Great Glacier, now known as the Illecillewaet Glacier. two pools, a hot soaking pool for relaxing in, and a cooler The park is known for its very wet weather in swimming pool. Locker rooms, swimsummer and almost daily snowfalls in suits, showers, and winter, when as towels can all be much as 23 m (75 ft) rented, and massages of snow may fall are readily available. in one season. The Visitors can explore threat of avalanche the nearby Columbia is serious here, and Valley Wetlands too. visitors should stop Fed by glacial waters from the Purcell and at the Roger’s Pass Center for up-toRocky mountains, Taking the waters at Radium Hot Springs date information. the Columbia River meanders through The Roger’s Pass line was abandoned by the these extensive marsh lands, CPR due to avalanches, and which provide an important a tunnel was built underneath habitat for over 250 migratory it instead. The Trans-Canada waterfowl such as Canada Highway (Hwy 1) follows the geese and tundra swans. route of the pass as it bisects the park, en route to the lovely town of Revelstoke. From here visitors may access the forests q and jagged peaks of Mount Revelstoke National Park. c Banff. n Park Info Centre, open

Kootenay National Park

Radium Hot Springs 0 * 1,000. n Chamber of Commerce (250) 347 9331, 1 800 347 9704. www.radiumhotsprings.com

The small town of Radium Hot Springs is famous for its mineral springs and is a good base for exploring the nearby

May – Sep (250) 347 9615. # daily. & 7 8 www.pc.gc.ca

Kootenay National Park covers 1,406 sq km (543 sq miles) and is known for its ecology, climate, and diversity of landscape. The 94-km (58mile) Kootenay Parkway (Hwy 93S) bisects the park from north to south. It winds through the narrow gorge of Sinclair Canyon, past the

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world famous Radium Hot Springs Pools, along the deep red cliffs of the Redwall Fault, and up over the Sinclair Pass. The road continues into the Kootenay River Valley, past Hector Gorge, and into the Vermilion River Valley. Short nature trails introduce you to magical Paint Pots, iron-rich mineral springs with rustcolored clay banks. Visitors will see the Marble Canyon, whose 35-m (96-ft) deep dolomite walls are carved by the glacial waters of Tokumm Creek. The Fireweed Trail at Vermilion Pass features vibrant regenerating forests growing along the Continental Divide, in the wake of old forest fires.

The ochre-colored Paint Pot pools in Kootenay National Park

Kananaskis Country w c Canmore. n Suite 201, 800 Railway Ave., Canmore. (403) 678 5508. www.kananaskisalberta.ca

Kananaskis Country is a verdant region of the Rocky Mountain foothills, with mountain peaks, lakes, rivers, and alpine meadows. Located southwest of Calgary on the boundary of Banff National Park, this 5,000 sq km (1,930 sq miles) of wilderness is popular for hiking and viewing wildlife such as eagles, wolves, and bears. The town of Canmore serves as the center of this large recreational area, and has plenty of accommodations, as well as information on outdoor activities such as wildlife tours.

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Banff National Park

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The best known of the Rockies’ national parks, Banff was also Canada’s first. The park was established in 1885, after the discovery of natural hot springs by three Canadian Pacific Railroad workers in 1883. Centuries before the arrival of the railroad, Blackfoot, Stoney, and Kootenay native peoples lived in the valleys around Banff. Today, Banff National Park covers an area of 6,641 sq km (2,564 sq miles) of some of the most sublime scenery in the country. The park encompasses impressive mountain peaks, forests, glacial Peyto Lake lakes and mighty rivers Some five million visitors O f th

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run, and stay calm. Bears have an excellent sense of smell, so if you are camping be sure to lock food or trash inside a car or in the bearproof boxes provided.

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9

Valley of the Ten Peaks A scenic road from Lake Louise winds to Moraine Lake, which is ringed by ten peaks each over 3,000 m (10,000 ft) high.

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Johnston Canyon This spectacular gorge boasts two impressive waterfalls, and is one of the most popular trails in the park. The walk can be reached from the Bow Valley Parkway (see p302), and has walkways l t th f ll

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwys 1 & 93. n Banff Visitor Centre, 224 Banff Ave., Banff (403) 762 8421. c Brewster Bus Depot, 100 Gopher St. # daily. 8 7 0 - = www.banfflakelouise.com

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Louise are an abiding symbol of the beauty of the Rockies. It was here that one of the first resorts was established in Banff, with visitors beginning to arrive in 1885.

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Exploring Banff National Park It is impossible to travel through Banff National Park and not be filled with awe. There are some 25 peaks that rise over 3,000 m (10,000 ft) in Banff, which are magically reflected in the turquoise waters of the park’s many lakes. Banff townsite offers visitors a full range of facilities, including the therapeutic hot springs that inspired the founding of Wild goat by the the park, and is an excellent base for Icefields Parkway exploring the surrounding country. Even the highway is counted an attraction here. The Icefields Parkway (Hwy 93) winds through stunning mountain vistas and connects Banff to Jasper National Park, beginning from the renowned Lake Louise. Icefields Parkway (Highway 93)

The Icefields Parkway is a 230-km (143-mile) scenic mountain highway that twists and turns through the jagged spines of the Rocky Mountains. The road is a wonder in itself, where every turn offers yet another incredible view as it climbs through high passes from Lake Louise to Jasper. The road was built during the Depression of the 1930s, as a work creation project. Designed for sightseeing, the highway was extended to its present length in 1960, with plenty of pull-offs to allow visitors to take in the views. Bow Summit is the highest point on the highway, at 2,068 m (6,785 ft), and has a side road that leads to the Peyto Lake viewpoint, which looks over snow-topped peaks mirrored in the brilliant blue of the lake. In summer, Bow Summit’s mountain meadows are covered with alpine flowers. From here, it is also possible to see the Crowfoot Glacier, a striking chunk of ice in the shape of a crow’s foot, hanging over a cliff-face. Farther north a trail leads down from a parking lot to Mistaya Canyon with its vertical walls, potholes, and an impressive natural arch. The highway passes close by the Icefields (which cross the park boundaries into Jasper National Park), and the Athabasca Glacier is clearly visible from the road. Mountain goats and bighorn sheep are drawn to the mineral deposits by the roadside.

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many interpretive signs and viewpoints along the way. From the road it is possible to see the abundant wildlife such as bears, elk, and coyotes. About 19 km (12 miles) west of Banff, one of the best short walks leads from the roadside to the Johnston Canyon trail. A paved path leads to the canyon and two impressive waterfalls. The path to the lower falls is wheelchair accessible, and the upper falls are a slightly longer 2.7-km (1.5mile) hike. A boardwalk along the rock wall leads to the floor of the canyon, offering valley views close to the railroad crossing through the mountains. One of the most striking natural phenomena in the canyon is the Ink Pots, a series of pools where vivid bluegreen water bubbles up from underground springs. Interpretive signs explain how this fascinating canyon took shape, and how the water created its unique rock formations. Lake Minnewanka Drive

The Bow Valley Parkway passing scenic country along the river

The Bow Valley Parkway

The Bow Valley Parkway is a 55-km (35-mile) long scenic alternative to the Trans-Canada Highway, running between Banff and Lake Louise. The road follows the Bow River Valley and offers visitors the chance to explore the gentle country of the valley with

This narrow, winding 14-km (8.5-mile) loop road begins at the Minnewanka interchange on the Trans-Canada Highway. From here it is a pleasant drive to picnic sites, hiking trails, and three lakes. Lake Minnewanka is Banff’s biggest lake, almost 20 km (13 miles) long. A popular short trail leads to Bankhead, the site of an abandoned coal mine that was the first settlement in Banff and whose heyday was in the first half of the 19th century. The footpath displays old photographs and notices which depict the life of the miners.

Lake Minnewanka, the largest lake in Banff National Park

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9

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Banff Springs Hotel, styled after the baronial castles of Scotland

Banff

The town of Banff grew up around the hot springs that were discovered here in the 1880s. The Canadian Pacific Railroad’s manager, William Cornelius Van Horne, realized the springs would attract visitors, so he built the grand Banff Springs Hotel in 1888. The resort was very popular, and the town expanded to accommodate the influx. Located at the foot of Sulphur Mountain, The Cave and Basin National Historic Site is the site of the original spring found by the railroad workers in 1883 and is now a museum telling the story of Banff’s development. The Upper Hot Springs Pool, also at the base of Sulphur Mountain, is a popular resort where visitors can relieve their aches in the mineral-rich, healing waters. At 2,295-m (7,529-ft) above sea level, Sulphur Mountain provides a spectacular view of the surrounding area. Although there is a 5-km (3mile) trail to the top, a glassenclosed gondola (cable car) carries visitors to the summit in eight minutes. Here the viewing platforms offer beautiful vistas of the Rockies. Banff is busy all year round. In winter snow sports from skiing to dog-sledding are available, while summer visit-

ors include hikers, bicyclists, and mountaineers. The Banff Park Museum was built in 1903 and houses specimens of animals, birds, and insects. E Banff Park Museum 93 Banff Ave. Tel (403) 762 1558. # daily. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7

lake offer exhibits that explain the lake’s formation some 10,000 years ago, at the end of the last Ice Age. The amazing color of the water of this and other lakes in the park comes from deposits of glacial silt, known as rock flour, suspended just beneath the surface. Dominating the landscape at one end of the lake is the imposing hotel Château Lake Louise, built in 1894. During the summer, a gondola carries visitors up to Mount Whitehorn for stunning views of the glacier and the lake. In winter, the area attracts large numbers of skiers, ice-climbers, and snowboarders. In Lake Louise village visitors can stock up on supplies, such as food, clothes, and gas. Moraine Lake

Gondolas or cable cars taking visitors up Sulphur Mountain

Lake Louise n by Samson Mall (403) 762 0270.

One of Banff National Park’s major draws, the beauty of Lake Louise is an enduring image of the Rockies. Famed for the blueness of its water and the snow-capped peaks that surround it, Lake Louise also boasts the Victoria Glacier, which stretches almost to the water’s edge. Trails around the

Less well known than Lake Louise, Moraine Lake is every bit as beautiful, with its shimmering turquoise color. The lake has a pretty waterside lodge that offers accommodations, meals, and canoe rentals. There are several trails that all start at the lake: one lakeside path follows the north shore for 1.5 km (1 mile), while the climb, which leads up Larch ValleySentinel Pass trail, offers more stunning vistas, ending at one of the park’s highest passes.

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Inspired by the beauty of the park’s mountains, lakes, waterfalls, and distinctive rock formation this area was named Yoho, for the Cree word meaning “awe and wonder.” Yoho National lies on the western side of the Rockies rang BC, next to Banff and Kootenay National P The Park offers a wide range of activities climbing and hiking to boating or skiing. Shooting star park also houses the Burgess Shale f flower beds, an extraordinary find of perfe preserved marine creatures from th prehistoric Cambrian period, over 500 millio years ago. Access to the fossil beds is by gu hike and is limited to 15 people each tri

Emerald The rusti Emerald Lodge (s p363) p facilitie quiet, se place in dle of the The lake, is named f intense colo waters, is a p lar spot for can ing, walking, a riding horses. Natural Bridge Found in the center of the park, over the waters of the Kicking Horse River, Natural Bridge is a rock bridge formed by centuries of erosion, which have worn a channel through solid rrock.

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Hoodoo Creek These fabulou mushroom-like towers of rock ha been created by erosion and can be accessed from a shor but very steep, trail.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwy 1. n Park Info. Centre, Field (250) 343 6783. # daily. 0-=M www.parkscanada.gc.ca/yoho alley

Takakkaw Falls Takakkaw means “it is wonderful” in the language of the local natives, and these are among the most impressive falls in Canada, having a drop of 254 m (833 ft). The falls can be accessed along the Yoho Valley Road, which is open seasonally. is a UN e Site otect ds. ed y

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Kicking Horse River This wild river rushes through Yoho alongside the original 1880s railroad. Today the tracks carry freight and the “Rocky Mountaineer” tourist train (see p423).

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Lake O’Hara Shadowed by the majestic peaks of Mounts Victoria and Lefroy, Lake O’Hara is astonishingly beautiful. However, guests wishing to use the area’s excellent hiking trails must book in advance as access is limited to protect this fragile environment.

The Valley of the Ten Peaks reflected in the stunning turquoise waters of Moraine Lake

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The largest and most northerly of the four Rocky Mountain national parks, Jasper is also the most rugged. Covering an area of 10,878 sq km (4,199 sq miles) of high peaks and valleys dotted with glacial lakes, Jasper encompasses the Columbia Icefield (see p310), a vast area of 400-year-old ice that is 900 m (2,953 ft) thick in places. From the icefield, fingers of ice reach down through many of Jasper’s valleys. Some of the most accessible hiking trails in the park start from the Maligne Lake and Canyon, and Jasper town. The town is located roughly in the park’s center and is the starting point for many of the most popular wa

out of Jasper tow popular Jasper T which takes visito viewing platform n summit of Whistler’s tain at 2,285 m (7,49 Panoramic vistas take in park’s mountains, forests, an

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Maligne Canyon One of the most beautiful canyons in the Rockies, its sheer limestone walls and several impressive waterfalls can be seen from the many footbridges that are built both along and across its walls.

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST Hwys 93 & 16. n 409 Patricia St, Jasper (780) 852 3858. £ VIA Rail, Connaught St. c Greyhound Bus Station. # daily. 7 8 = www. jaspercanadianrockies.com

Miette Hot Springs Visitors here enjoy relaxing in the warmest spring waters in the Rockies. The springs are said to have healing effects because of their high mineral content. Medicine Lake Renowned for its varying water levels, Medicine e is drained by ries of underund tunnels aves. It is sper’s

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Athabasca Falls The dramatic, rushing waters of these falls are the result of the Athabasca River being forced through a narrow gorge.

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Exploring Jasper Established in 1907, Jasper National Park is as staggeringly beautiful as anywhere in the Rockies, but it is distinguished by having more remote wilderness than the other national parks. These areas can be reached only on foot, horseback, or by canoe, and backpackers need passes from the Park Trail Office for hikes that last more than one day. Jasper also has a reputation for more sightings of wildlife such as bear, moose, and elk than any of the other Rockies’ parks. Although most of the park services are closed between October and Easter, visitors who brave the winter season have an opportunity to cross-country ski on breathtaking trails that skirt frozen lakes. In addition, they can go ice fishing, downhill skiing, or on guided walking tours on frozen rivers. In the summertime there are a range of daytrips which are easily accessible from the park’s main town of Jasper. Columbia Icefield and Icefield Centre Icefields Parkway. Tel (780) 852 6288. # May – Oct: daily. 7 www.columbiaicefield.com

The Columbia Icefield straddles both Banff and Jasper National Parks and forms the largest area of ice in the Rockies. The Icefield covers 325 sq km (125 sq miles) and were created during the last Ice Age. Around 10,000 years ago, ice filled the region, sculpting out wide valleys, sheer mountain faces, and sharp ridges. Although the glaciers have retreated over the last few hundred years, during the early years of the 20th century ice covered the area where the Icefields Parkway now passes. The Icefields Centre has an interpretive centre that

explains the Ice Age and the impact of the glaciers on the landscape of the Rockies. Tours of the Athabasca Glacier, in 4-wheel drive Sno-coaches, are available from the Icefield Centre, which also has information on trails in the area. Athabasca Falls

Located at the junction of highways 93 and 93A, where the Athabasca River plunges 23 m (75 ft) to the river bed below, these are among the most dramatic waterfalls in the park. Despite being a short drop compared with other falls in the Rockies, the force of the waters of the Athabasca River being pushed through a narrow, quartz-rich gorge transforms these waters into a powerful, foaming torrent.

Downhill skiing is just one of the outdoor activities around Jasper

Jasper

The town of Jasper was established in 1911 as a settlement for Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad workers, who were laying track along the Athabasca River Valley. As with Banff, the coming of the railroad and the growth of the parks as resorts went hand-in-hand, and the town expanded to include hotels, restaurants, and a visitor center. Today, many of the park’s main attractions are close to the town, which is located at the center of the park, on both Highway 16 and Icefields Parkway (Hwy 93). Just 7 km (4.5 miles) out of town is the Jasper Tramway station, from where visitors may take a brisk, seven-minute ride up Whistlers Mountain. The trip whisks visitors up to the upper terminal at 2,285 m (7,497 ft), where there is a clearly marked trail leading to

The wild waters of Athabasca River make it a popular venue for white-water rafting For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9

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the summit at 2,470 m (8,100 ft). On a clear day the view is incomparable. For those who would rather walk than ride the tram, there is a 2.8-km (1.7-mile) trail to the top of the mountain. The trail winds upward, offering panoramic views of both the Miette and Athabasca valleys, and, in July, the lush meadows are blanketed with colorful wild flowers. Patricia and Pyramid Lakes

North of Jasper townsite, the attractive Patricia and Pyramid lakes nestle beneath the 2,763-m (9,065-ft) high Pyramid Mountain. A popular daytrip from the town, the lakes are noted for windsurfing and sailing. Equipment rental is available from two lakeside lodges.

A boat cruise on Maligne Lake, the largest natural lake in the Rockies

road ends at the impressive Maligne Lake. The largest natural lake in the Rockies, Maligne is 22 km (14 miles) long and surrounded by snow-capped mountains. There are several scenic trails around the lake, one of which leads to the Opal Hills and amazing views of the area. Guided walks around here can be organized from Jasper, and it is possible to rent fishing tackle and canoes and kayaks to go out on the lake. Medicine Lake

The deep blue waters of Pyramid Lake beneath Pyramid Mountain

Medicine Lake is also reached from a side road off Maligne Lake Drive. The lake is noted for its widely varying water levels. In autumn the lake is reduced to a trickle, but in springtime the waters rise, fed by the fast-flowing Maligne River. A vast network of underground caves and channels are responsible for this event.

Maligne Lake Drive

Miette Springs

Maligne Lake Drive begins 5 km (3 miles) north of Jasper townsite and leads off Hwy 16, following the valley floor between the Maligne and the Queen Elizabeth ranges. This scenic road travels past one magnificent sight after another, with viewpoints along the way, offering visitors panoramas of Maligne Valley. Among the route’s most spectacular sights is the Maligne Canyon, reached by a 4-km (2.5-mile) interpretive hiking trail which explains the special geological features behind the gorge’s formation. One of the most beautiful in the Rockies, Maligne Canyon has sheer limestone walls as high as 50 m (150 ft) and many waterfalls, which can be seen from several foot bridges. The

Tel (780) 866 3939, 1 800 767 1611. # mid-May–Sep: daily. & 7

Located 61 km (38 miles) north of Jasper along the attractive Miette Springs Road, these

springs are the hottest in the Rockies, reaching temperatures as high as 53.9°C (129°F). However, the thermal baths are cooled to a more reasonable 39°C (102°F) for bathers. The waters are held to be both relaxing and healthy – they are rich in minerals, such as calcium, sulfates, and small amounts of hydrogen sulfide (which smells like rotten eggs). The resort of Miette Springs now houses two new pools, including one suitable for children. The springs are part of a leisure complex that offers both restaurants and hotels. Mount Edith Cavell

Named after World War I heroine nurse, this mountain is located 30 km (18.5 miles) south of Jasper townsite, and the scenic road that climbs it is well worth the drive. The road ends at Cavell Lake by the north face of the mountain. From here, a guided trail leads to a small lake beneath the Angel Glacier. A three-hour walk across the flower strewn Cavell meadows has views of the glacier’s icy tongue.

A peninsula of ice from Angel Glacier seen from Mount Edith Cavell

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Typical kitchen of the late 1900s at Grande Prairie Museum

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* 70,000. ~ £ c n 1198 Victoria St. (250) 562 3700. www.tourismpg.com

* 40,000. ~ c n 11330 106th St. (780) 539 7688. www.northernvisitor.com

The largest town in central British Columbia, Prince George is a bustling supplyand-transportation center for the region. Two major highways pass through here, the Yellowhead (Hwy 16) and Highway 97, which becomes the Alaska Highway at Dawson Creek. Established in 1807 as Fort George, a fur-trading post at the confluence of the Nechako and Fraser rivers, the town is well placed for exploring the province. Today, Prince George has all the facilities of a larger city, including a new university specializing in First Nations’ history and culture, as well as its own symphony orchestra and several art galleries. The

Grande Prairie is a large, modern city in the northwest corner of Alberta. Surrounded by fertile farming country, the city is a popular stop for travelers heading north toward Dawson Creek and the Alaska Highway (see pp262–3). The city is the hub of the Peace River region; it offers extensive opportunities for shopping in its giant malls and many downtown specialty stores, with the added draw of having no provincial sales tax (see p392). Running through the city center is the attractive wilderness of Muskoseepi Park. Covering 45 ha (111 acres), the park offers a variety of outdoor activities including walking and biking trails, and cross-country skiing. The Grande Prairie Museum is also housed in

Fort George Regional Museum lies on the site of the

original Fort, within the 26-ha (65-acre) Fort George Park, and has a collection of artifacts from native cultures, European pioneers, and early settlers. An important center for the lumber industry, the town offers a range of free tours of local pulp mills, which take visitors through the process of wood production, from vast fields of young seedlings to hill-sized piles of planks and raw timber.

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the park and has ten buildings containing over 16,000 historical artifacts. There are several reconstructions, including a 1911 schoolhouse, a rural post office, and a church. A renowned display of dinosaur bones recovered from the Peace River Valley are also on display at the museum. Bear Creek, which runs through Muskoseepi Park, has become a magnet for bird watchers as sightings of eagles are common. The Grand River wetlands, particularly those at Crystal Lake, located in the northeast corner of the city, contain one of the few breeding grounds for the rare trumpeter swan. E Grande Prairie Museum cnr 102nd St. & 102nd Ave. Tel (780) 532 5482. # May –Sep: daily; Oct–Apr: – Sun–Fri. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & 7

Fort St. John i * 17,000. ~ c n 9923, 96th Ave. (250) 785 6037.

Fort St. John is located at Mile 47 of the Alaska Highway among the rolling hills of the Peace River Valley. During the construction of the Highway in 1942, the tiny town dramatically expanded from a population of about 800 to 6,000. When completed, the highway turned Fort St. John into a busy supply center that caters to visitors exploring the area, as well as

E Fort George Regional

Museum 20th Ave. & Queensway. Tel (250) 562 1612. # daily. ¢ Dec 25, Jan 1. & donation. 7

Lush farmland along the Peace River in northern British Columbia

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp362–3 and pp388–9

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The green waters of Muncho Lake framed by mountains in Muncho Lake Provincial Park

supporting the growth of agriculture in the surrounding countryside. However, the town boomed when oil was found here in the 1950s, in what proved to be the largest oil field in the province. Today, Fort St. John’s pride in its industrial and pioneering heritage is reflected in the local museum, which has a 43-m (140-ft) high oil derrick at its entrance and a range of exhibits that tell the story of the local oil industry.

Fort Nelson o * 6,000. ~ c n 5319 50th Ave. Sth. (250) 774 2541.

Despite the growth of the oil, gas, and lumber industries in the 1960s and 70s, Fort Nelson retains the atmosphere of a northern frontier town. Before the building of the Alaska Highway in the 1940s, Fort Nelson was an important stop on route for the Yukon and Alaska, and until the 1950s was without telephones, running water, or electricity. Fur trading was the main activity until the energy boom; even today both native

and white trappers hunt wolf, encompasses the bare peaks beaver, and lynx, for both of the northern Rockies, their fur and their meat. whose stark limestone slopes Today, the town has incorporate the faults, alluvial an air and bus service, fans, and hoodoos that a hospital, and good estament to ands of years of visitor facilities such as motels, restaurants, and ial erosion. The gas stations. Local ghway skirts the people are famous for eastern shoreline of the 12-km their friendliness, and during the busy (7.5-mile) long summer months run Muncho Lake a program of free before crossing the Liard River talks describing life in the north to where the visitors. A small Lynx near Fort Nelson Mackenzie museum displays Mountain range photographs and artifacts that begins. In early summer, tell the story of the building of passing motorists are likely to the 2,394-km (1,488-mile) see moose grazing among meadows filled with colorful Alaska Highway. wildflowers. The park’s bogs are popular with botanists eager to see the rare yellow p Lady’s Slipper orchid. The roadside also attracts goats, Off Hwy 97. # mid-May – Sep: daily. sheep, and caribou, drawn by delicious deposits of sodium, One of three provincial known as mineral licks. Visitors may stay in the park parks (including Stone at one of the campgrounds or Mountain and Liard Hot Springs) that were established lodges in order to explore its after the building of the Alaska 88,000 ha (194,000 acres) of Highway in 1942, Muncho wilderness. The deep waters Lake occupies the most scenic of Muncho Lake house a good section of the road. The park supply of trout for anglers.

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SOUTHERN AND NOR THERN BRITISH COLUMBIA outhern British Columbia covers the region south of Prince George, down to the US border. There is a vast variety of natural beauty here, including the forests and waterfalls of Wells Gray Provincial Park, and the lush valleys, wineries, and lake resorts of the Okanagan Valley. One of the most stunning wildernesses in North America, northern British Columbia spreads north of Prince Rupert, between the Coast Mountains

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in the west, the Rockies in the east, and the Yukon. Its dramatic landscape, from the volcanic terrain around Mount Edziza with its lava flows and cinder cones to the frozen forests of Atlin Provincial Park, can be reached from the scenic Cassiar Highway. Some of the best sights can be enjoyed on the boat trip to Queen Charlotte Islands. For 10,000 years the archipelago has been home to the Haida people, famous for their totem-carving.

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The Trans-Canada Highway overlooking the Fraser Canyon along the Fraser River

Whistler 1 * 10,000. c n 4010 Whistler Way. (604) 930 2769, 1 877 991 9988. www.tourismwhistler.com

Whistler is the largest ski resort in Canada. Set among the spectacular Coast Mountains, just 120 km (75 miles) north of Vancouver, the resort is divided into four distinct areas: Whistler Village, Village North, Upper Village, and Creekside. Whistler and Blackcomb mountains have the greatest vertical rises of any ski runs in North America. The skiing here can be among the best in the world, with mild Pacific weather and reliable winter snow. In summer there is skiing on Blackcomb’s Hortsman Glacier. Whistler Village offers visitors a full range of facilities, from comfortable bed-and-breakfasts to luxurious five-star hotels. Café-lined cobbled squares and cozy bars and restaurants cater to all tastes, while a range of stores sell everything from ski-wear to native

arts and crafts in this friendly resort. Whistler will be the 2010 Winter Olympics venue for all snow sports, from downhill skiing to luge.

Fraser River 2 n Vancouver (1 800 667 3306).

The majestic Fraser River travels 1,368 km (850 miles) through some of BC’s most stunning scenery. The river flows from its source in the Yellowhead Lake, near Jasper, to the Strait of Georgia, near Vancouver. Along the way, it heads north through the Rocky Mountain trench before turning south near the town of Prince George. It continues by the Coast Mountains, then west to Hope through the steep walls of the Fraser Canyon, and on toward Yale. It was Fraser Canyon that legendary explorer Simon Fraser found the most daunting when he followed the river’s course in 1808. However, when gold

The ski resort at alpine Whistler village in British Columbia For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp363–4 and p390

was discovered near the town of Yale 50 years later, thousands of prospectors swarmed up the valley. Today, Yale is a small town with a population of 200 and the delightful Yale Museum, where exhibits focus on the history of the gold rush, as well as telling the epic story of the building of the Canadian Pacific Railroad through the canyon. This section of river is also a popular whitewater rafting area, and trips can be arranged from the small town of Boston Bar. At Hell’s Gate the river thunders through the Canyon’s narrow walls, which are only 34 m (112 ft) apart. E Yale Museum 31187 Douglas St. Tel (604) 863 2324. # Jun–Sep: 10am–5pm daily. & 7 www.historicyale.ca

Hope 3 * 3,150. c n 919 Water Ave. (604) 869 2021.

Located at the southern end of the Fraser Canyon, Hope is crossed by several highways, including Hwy 1 (the TransCanada) and Hwy 3. Hope is an excellent base for exploring the Fraser Canyon and southern BC, as well as being within easy reach of several provincial parks. The beautiful country of Manning Provincial Park, with its lakes mountains, and rivers, is noted for its outdoor activities – swimming, hiking, fishing, and sailing in summer, and downhill and crosscountry skiing in winter.

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The Okanagan Valley is actually a series of valleys, linked by a string of lakes, that stretches for 250 km (155 miles) from Osoyoos in the south, to Vernon in the north. The main towns here are connected by Highway 97, which passes through the desert landscape near Osoyoos, and on to the lush green orchards and vineyards for which the valley is most noted. Mild winters and hot summers have made Okanagan the Okanagan one of Canada’s wine favorite vacation destinations

TIPS FOR DRIVERS Starting point: On Highway 97 from Vernon in the north: Osoyoos in the south. Length: 230 km (143 miles). Highlights: Blossom and fruit festivals are held in spring and summer, when roadside stalls offer a cornucopia of fruit, and wine tours are available year-round.

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Surrounded by farms and orchrds, Vernon owes s lush look to the rowth of irrigation ro n 1908. Several small esorts are set around the nearby lakes.

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The biggest city in the Okanagan, Kelowna lies on the shores of L Okanagan between Penticton and Vernon, and is the center of the wine- and fruit-growing industries.

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This small but charming lakeside resort boasts several 19th-century buildings and stunning views from the top of Giant’s Head Mountain.

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This sunny lakeside town is known for the long Okanagan Beach, windsurfing, and local winery tours, as well as for its Peach Festival, held every August.

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Founded by the O’Keefe family in 1867, this historic ranch displays original artifacts belonging to the family who lived here until 1977. The original log cabin remains, as does the church and store.

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Impressive and historic stone buildings in the attractive town of Nelson

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in the 1890s, Nelson flourished as a center for transporting ore * 7,000. ~ c n 1995 6th Ave. and timber. The town owes Tel (250) 365 6313. its good looks to its location on the shores of the lake and Located in southeastern BC, to the large number of public Castlegar is a busy transbuildings and houses that were portation hub. The town is constructed between 1895 and 1920. In 1986 the town was crossed by two major highchosen as the location ways, Hwy 3 and Hwy 22, and lies at for the Steve Martin the junction of the comedy film, Roxanne. British Columbia’s important Kootenay best-known architect, and Columbia rivers. In the early 1900s, Francis Rattenbury (see p280), played a a steady influx of Doukhobors (Russian part in the design of some of the town’s religious dissenters most prestigious and fleeing persecution) began arriving here. beautiful structures, The Doukhobor such as the elegant Traditional Village Museum Burns building which Doukhobor tunic reflects the group’s was built in 1899 for heritage and houses a variety millionaire cattle rancher and of traditional clothes and tools, meat packer, Patrick Burns. and antique farm machinery. Rattenbury also designed the Nelson Court House in 1908, E Doukhobor Village a stately stone building with Museum towers and gables. Jct Hwy 3 & 3A. Tel (250) 365 6622. Today, the town has a # May – Sep: daily. & 7 thriving cultural scene, with an art walk during the summer, as well as numerous cafés, 6 book, and craft shops. Visitors also enjoy the short ride on Car * 9,300. c n 225 Hall St. Tel (250) 23, a 1906 streetcar that oper352 3433. www.discovernelson.com ated in the town between 1924 and 1949 (it was restored in One of the most attractive 1992), and which today travels towns in southern British along Nelson’s delightful waterColumbia, Nelson overlooks front. The infocenter provides Kootenay Lake. Established in visitors with a map and guide the 1880s as a mining town, for the heritage walking tour with the coming of the railroad of the town’s historic buildings.

Nakusp 7 * 1,700. n 92 W. 6th Ave. Tel (250) 265 3689.

With the snow-topped Selkirk Mountains as a backdrop, and overlooking the waters of Upper Arrow Lake, Nakusp is a charming town. Originally developed as a mining settlement, the town is now known for its mineral hot springs. There are two resorts close to town; the Nakusp and Halcyon Hot Springs, both of which provide therapeutic bathing in hot waters, rich in sulfates, calcium, and hydrogen sulfide, said to be good for everyday aches, as well as arthritis and rheumatism.

Nelson

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp363–4 and p390

The town of Nakusp overlooking picturesque Upper Arrow Lake

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Roughly 40 km (25 miles) to the south of Nakusp, in the Slocan Valley, are two fascinating abandoned silver mining towns, New Denver and Sandon. Sandon had 5,000 inhabitants at the height of the mining boom in 1892. It also had 29 hotels, 28 saloons, and several brothels and gambling halls. A fire in 1900, poor metal prices, and dwindling ore reserves crippled the mines, and Sandon became a ghost town. Today, the town has been declared an historic site, and its homes and businesses are being carefully restored. The nearby town of New Denver suffered a fate similar to Sandon’s, but is also noted as the site of an internment camp for the Japanese during World War II. The Nikkei Internment Centre on Josephine Street is the only center in Canada devoted to telling the story of the internment of over 20,000 Japanese Canadians. The center is surrounded by a formal Japanese garden.

Sicamous 8 * 3,166. c n 110 Finlayson St. Tel (250) 836 3313.

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Houseboats moored along the waterfront at Sicamous

and locals enjoy both the good public beach on the lake, as well as the pleasant walk along a marked waterfront trail.

Kamloops 9 * 80,000. ~ £ c n 297 First Avenue. Tel (250) 828 6818, 1 888 526 5667. www.adventure kamloops.com

Kamloops means “where the rivers meet” in the language of the Secwepemc First Nations. The largest town by area in BC’s southern interior, it lies at the crossroads of the north and south Thompson Rivers. Three major highways also meet here; the TransCanada, Hwy 5, and Hwy 97 to the Okanagan Valley, V as do the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National railroad. European settlement began in 1812, when fur traders started doing business with local natives. The Museum and

Sicamous is an appealing waterfront village known for its 3,000 houseboats, as well as its charming cobblestone streets hung with flower-filled planters. Located between Mara and Shuswap lakes, at the junction of the TransCanada Highway and Highway 97A, the town is ideally placed for touring the lakes, and the Native Heritage town of Salmon Park focuses on the cultural history Arm, at the northern end of the of the Secwepemc Okanagan Valley First Nations and (see p317). Over has a variety of arti250 houseboats are A horse’s snow shoe on facts, including a display at Kamloops birch-bark canoe, available for renting in the summer, and hunting equipment, there are 12 marinas and a and cooking utensils. Outside, houseboat store. From the short trails lead visitors through boats it is possible to view the archeological remains of a the inlets and forested land2,000-year-old Shuswap winter scape of Lake Shuswap where village site, which includes four wildlife such as black bear, authentically reconstructed deer, moose, coyote, and bob- winter pit houses and a sumcat have been spotted along mer camp. The village has a the shore. In summer, visitors hunting shack, a fish-drying

rack, and a smoke house. The museum store sells pine-needle and birch-bark baskets, moccasins, and a wide variety of beaded and silver jewelry. In the town center, the Art Gallery has a small but striking collection that features landscape sketches by A.Y. Jackson, one of the renowned Group of Seven painters (see pp164–5). E Museum and Native

Heritage Park 355 Yellowhead Hwy. Tel (250) 828 9801. # Jun–Sep: daily; Sep–May: 8:30am – 4:30pm Mon – Fri. & 7

Wells Gray Provincial Park 0 Tel (250) 674 2194. £ Clearwater. c Clearwater. # daily. www.wellsgray.ca

Wells Gray Provincial Park is one of the most beautiful wildernesses in British Columbia, and offers wonders comparable to the Rockies in the east. The park was opened in 1939 and is distinguished by alpine meadows, thundering waterfalls, and glacier-topped peaks that rise as high as 2,575 m (8,450 ft). The Canadian National Railroad and Hwy 5 follow the Thompson River along the park’s western edge, offering stunning views. From the Clearwater Valley Road, off Hwy 5, there are several trails, from easy walks to arduous overnight hikes in remote country. A selection of small trails, just a few minutes from the road, lead to the spectacular sight of Dawson Falls.

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mining towns between here and Kamloops. Quesnel occupies an attractive position in a triangle formed by the Fraser Tel (250) 387 4550. £ Quesnel. and Quesnel rivers. The town’s c Quesnel. # daily (weather sights include the Riverfront permitting). 7 partial. Park Trail System, a tree-lined Bowron Lake Provincial Park 5-km (3-mile) path that runs along the banks of both rivers. is located about 120 km (75 miles) east of Quesnel on Just outside the town’s limits, Highway 26 in the Cariboo Pinnacle Provincial Park features the geological wonder Mountains. The park is of hoodoos, rocky columns renowned for having a formed 12 million years 112-km (70-mile) recago when the volcanic tangular waterway composed of nine lakes, surface was eroded by three rivers, streams, Ice Age meltwaters. From Quesnel, 87 km small lakes, and many (54 miles) east on portages (trails linkHwy 26, lies the hising the waterways). There is a week-long toric mining town of canoe trip here, but it Barkerville. The town is limited to 50 canwas born when Englishoeists at a time, and man Billy Barker dug passes must be up a handful of gold nuggets in 1862. obtained from the visitor center. It is Today, it is a good example of a perfectly a special trip that A grizzly bear allows visitors to come preserved 19th-century standing up quietly upon wildlife mining town, with more than 120 restored or such as moose or beaver. In late summer, bears come to reconstructed buildings and feed on the spawning sockeye costumed guides. Visitors can see a blacksmith at work in his salmon in the Bowron River. forge, see showgirls put on the kind of display the miners w would have seen at the theater, or take a ride on a stagecoach.

Quesnel

* 25,000. ~ £ c n 705 Carson Ave. (250) 992 8716.

Quesnel is a busy logging town that started life as a gold rush settlement between 1858 and 1861. The town was the last along the Gold Rush Trail, or Cariboo Road (now Hwy 97), which was lined with

A 19th-century horse and carriage in the streets of Barkerville

P Barkerville 85 km E. of Quesnel, Hwy 26. Tel (250) 994 3302. # daily. & 7

‘Ksan Village e Tel (250) 842 5544, 1 877 842 5518. # grounds: year round; houses: Apr– Sep: daily. & 7 www.ksan.org

Some 290 km (180 miles) east of Prince Rupert, ‘Ksan Village is a re-creation of an 1870 native settlement, established in the 1950s to preserve the culture of the Gitxsan First Nations. Gitxsan natives have lived in the area for thousands of years, particularly along the beautiful Skeena River valley. Their way of life was threatened by an influx of white settlers who arrived in the 1850s at Prince Rupert to work their way up river to mine or farm. Noted for their skill in creating carved and painted masks, totems, and canoes, Gitxsan

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp363–4 and p390

Gitxsan carved cedarwood totem pole in ‘Ksan Indian village

elders are now schooling new generations in these skills at ‘Ksan Village. Within the complex are seven traditional long houses containing a carving school, museum, and gift shop.

Prince Rupert r * 16,000. ~ £ c g n 100 1st Ave. W. (250) 624 5637, 1 800 667 1994. www.tourismprince rupert.com

Prince Rupert is a vibrant port city, and the second-largest on BC’s coast. Located on Kaien Island, at the mouth of the Skeena River, the city is circled by forests and mountains, and overlooks the beautiful fjord-studded coastline. The busy harbor is the main access point for the Queen Charlotte Islands and Alaska. Like many of BC’s major towns, Prince Rupert’s development is linked to the growth of the railroad. Housed in the 1914 Grand Trunk Railroad Station, the Kwinitsa Railway Museum tells the story of businessman Charles Hay’s big plans for the town, which were largely unfulfilled: he went down with the Titanic in 1912. Tsimshian First Nations were the first occupants of the area, and as recently as 150 years ago the harbor was lined with their large cedar houses and carved totems. The Museum of Northern British Columbia focuses on northwest

coast First Nations culture and

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history. Tsimshian dance, song, and drama are performed in a traditional long house and there are Archaeological tours. E Museum of Northern

British Columbia 100 1st Ave. W. Tel (250) 624 3207. # Jun–Aug: daily; Sep–May: Mon–Sat. ¢ Dec 25, 26. & 7 =

Queen Charlotte Islands t £ & c Prince Rupert. n 3220 Wharf St., Queen Charlotte. (250) 559 8316 (open May –Sep). www.qcinfo.ca

Shaped like a bent ice-cream cone, the Queen Charlotte Islands, also known as Haida Gwaii, are an archipelago of about 150 islands across from the city of Prince Rupert. The islands were left untouched by the last Ice Age, and have an eco-system unique to Canada. The forests house distinctive species of mammal such as the dusky shrew and short-tailed weasel. There is also a large population of bald eagles, and the spring brings hundreds of migrating gray whales past the shores. The islands have been the home of the Haida people for thousands of years. Today, the Haida are recognized for their artistic talents, particularly their carvings and sculptures from cedar wood and argillite (a black slatelike stone found only on these islands). It was the Haida who led environmental campaigns against the logging companies

Atlin Lake in remote Atlin Provincial Park

in the 1980s, which led to the founding of the Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve in 1988. The park houses centuries-old rainforest, including 1,000-year-old Sitka spruce, red cedar, and western hemlock. Y Gwaii Haanas National

Park Reserve Tel (250) 559 8818. # May–Sep. &

Northern Parks y Mount Edziza, Spatsizi; Hwy 37. Atlin; Hwy 7. n (250) 387 4550.

The provincial parks of northern British Columbia comprise Mount Edziza Provincial Park, Spatsizi Plateau Wilderness Provincial Park, and, farther north, Atlin Provincial Park. These offer remote landscapes, with high peaks, icefields, and tundra. Established in 1972, Mount Edziza Provincial Park is distinguished by its volcanic landscape which includes lava

rivers, basalt plateaus, and cinder cones. The park can be reached by a minor road off the Cassiar Highway (Hwy 37). There is no vehicle access within the park, and only long, rugged overland trails or chartered float planes take visitors through open meadows, arctic birch woods, and over creeks. Across the highway lies the even more rugged country of Spatsizi Plateau Wilderness Provincial Park, which includes the snow-capped peaks of the Skeena Mountains. Gladys Lake, a small lake in the center of the park, is an ecological reserve for the study of sheep and mountain goats. Access to the park is again limited to a small road leading from the village of Tatogga along Hwy 37. The village also offers guides and float plane hire. The spectacular Atlin Provincial Park is only accessible from the Yukon on Hwy 7, off the Alaska Hwy. About onethird of the park is covered by large icefields and glaciers.

Massett, one of three major towns on Graham Island, the most populous of the Queen Charlotte Islands

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Glorious flaming fall colors rise above the evergreens in the north of the Yukon

Inuit hunter with dog team, Igloolik, Nunavat

q y y settlements only one hotel is available, but the Yukon towns are well-equipped with places to stay.

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Inuit in the Northwest Territories still run dog teams for transportation

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Inuit Art and Culture For centuries, the hunting and trapping lifestyle has created a distinct culture for the Inuit. Their customs have remained largely the same throughout the communities of eastern and central Northern Canada, although regional differences can be seen in the varied artforms. The Inuit have a limited written tradition, and much of 21st-century culture is still oral. It might seem surprising, given the outstandingly harsh environment and limited natural resources, that their communities offer a flourishing artistic output, but it is the hardship of northern life that has promoted artistic achievement. For example, the Inuit use their tool-making skills for sculpture. Inuit culture is closely tied to their lansdcape and environment, which has inspired many artists and mythmakers.

This woodblock print of a girl

meeting a polar bear represents an artform developed in the 1950s. Stone cuts and stencils are also used to interpret drawings by older artists.

Warm clothing is both functional and decorative. Often painstakingly handwoven from scraps from the remains of a kill, women dress their families mostly in fur and wool.

Inuit beadwork and jewelry was made in

earlier times from bone and ivory; colored stones and beads are now used. Each piece shows birds, animals, or people, and is unique. Western influences include new designs in silver and gold.

This soapstone carving

represents Inuk, the human superhero of many preChristian Inuit legends, with a friendly seal companion.

INUIT WOMAN PREPARING CHAR The outdated, if not offensive, name for the Inuit people is “eskimo,” a native Cree word meaning “eaters of raw meat.” The Inuit traditionally eat their meat uncooked, as the Arctic has no trees for firewood. Much of the caribou, polar bear, and fish was sundried or mixed with sauces made from summer fruits and berries. The arrival of the stone and modern fuels has changed the menu somewhat, although tradition remains at the heart of the community’s eating habits. These dancing costume ornaments are carved

from ivory or whalebone and worn by Inuit dancers to celebrate ceremonial events. As with clothing, Arctic bird feathers are used for decoration.

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Inuit father and son in parkas, which are tradit-

ionally made by the women of the family. They use caribou, wolf, and polar bear fur. Today, imported Western fabrics are added for decoration. Inuit Homes are no

onger the traditional gloo. Most people ave moved to amps or community housing.

Inuit fishermen have made the best possible use

of their often limited natural resources and still rely largely on small-scale fishing for food.

INUIT MYTH Set on the very fringes of the habitable world, the Inuit guarded against the threat of starvation with a supernatural belief Carving of Inuk fighting his spirit system based on the respect of the animals they hunted, being careful to guard against divine retribution. Their myths promote the belief that every living creature has a soul, and that the village shaman could travel between the upper and lower worlds to commune with, and appease, the spirits in control of the hunt and the weather. Since earliest times hunting tools and weapons have been carved with the representations of the appropriate guardian spirit, and singers and musicians are well versed in legends of sea spirits and human heroes.

Traditional hunting and fishing remains at

the core of Inuit culture, although in the 1960s the Ottawa government unsuccessfully tried to stop these ancient practices. Drum dancing is

one of the varied forms of traditional music, and plays an important part in most of life’s great events: births, weddings, a successful hunt, and honoring a person who has died. Another form of music, throat singing, is usually performed by two women facing one another to recount a legend, life event, or myth.

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Whitehorse takes its name from the local rapids on the Yukon River that reminded miners in the gold rush of “the flowing manes of albino Appaloosas.” The town evolved when 2,500 stampeders on the hunt for gold braved the arduous Chilkoot and White Pass trails on foot in the winter of 1897–98 and set up camp here by the banks of Lindeman and Bennett Lakes. Boatmen made over 7,000 trips through the rapids during the spring thaw of 1898 before a tramway was built around them. On the spot where gold miners could catch a boat downstream to the mines of the Klondike and the glittering nightlife of Dawson City in the Yukon, a tent town sprang up and Whitehorse was born. This regional capital is the fastest-growing town in the northern territories, but despite all modern amenities, the wilderness is always only a few moments away. E MacBride Museum First Avenue & Wood St. Tel (867) 667 2709. # mid-May–Sep: daily; Sep– mid-May: noon–5pm Thurs–Sat. & 7 www.macbridemuseum.com

The MacBride Museum is housed in a log cabin along the river. Here the exciting history of the Yukon is revealed in its glory, with galleries featuring the gold rush, Whitehorse, natural history, the Mounties (RCMP), and First Nations of the region. Special features include an engine from the White Pass and Yukon Railroad, and a log cabin complete with recorded poetry readings from Yukon poet Robert Service (see p35). Also included is the restored old government telegraph office, originally built in 1900 and used as the focus for the new museum in the 1950s.

tent and lived in a second, as the log building took shape. The church opened on October 17 and the log rectory was built that winter. These buildings are among the few remaining here from the gold rush period. In 1953, the log church became the Diocese of Yukon cathedral and is said to be the only log cathedral in the world. Now, exhibits and interactive programs feature Inuit and First Nations cultures, missionaries, and the development of the Anglican church in the north.

P Log Skyscrapers Lambert St. & Third Ave. n (867) 667 3084.

Two blocks away from the Old Log Church Museum on Elliott Street are the unique log skyscrapers. Now several decades old, these log cabins have two or three floors. Currently used for giftshops and exhibits, one was home to a Yukon member of parliament. Worth a detour, the cabins offer a pleasing diversion from the rather functional architecture that characterizes much of the rest of town. E Old Log Church Museum Elliott St. & Third Ave. Tel (867) 668 2555. # May–Aug. & 7

In August 1900, Anglican missionary Rev. R. J. Bowen was sent to Whitehorse to build a church. He held services in one

The city center of Whitehorse, sheltered in the Yukon River valley For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp364–5 and pp390–91

The Old Log Church, constructed entirely from local timber

E S.S. Klondike End Second Ave. Tel (867) 667 3910. # mid-May–mid-Sep: 9am–7pm daily. & 7 www.pc.gc.ca

Originally built in 1929, the S.S. Klondike paddle-steamer sank in 1936. Rebuilt from its wreckage, the Klondike made 15 supply trips each season to Dawson City. In the early 1950s, bridges along the road to Dawson were built too low, blocking the passage of the sternwheelers, so all journeys stopped. The Klondike ceased

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 20,000. ~ c Greyhound bus depot, 2191 2nd Ave. n Whitehorse Visitor Reception Centre, 100 Hanson St. (867) 667 3084, 1 800 661 0494. _ Yukon Quest, Yukon Sourdough Rendezvous, Frostbite Music Festival (Feb). www.touryukon.com

O Yukon Wildlife Reserve Takhini Hot Springs Rd. Tel (867) 668 3225. # daily. &

This sanctuary was set up in 1965 for research and breedwith temperatures dropping ing purposes and lies about below -30°C (-22°F), this 25 km (16 miles) from the popular summer swimming, town off the Klondike Hwy on the Takhini Hot Springs fishing, and boating destination comes to life during Road. A beautiful reserve of forest, grassland, meadows, the annual thaw. The lake is famous among and water areas, it has many indigenous animals locals as the site of the funeral of the far north pyre of Yukon poet roaming free in Robert Service’s their natural settings. Moose, Cremation of Sam bison, elk, cariMc Gee, which relates the true-life bou, mountain demise of a local goats, deer, Dall Local mountain goat sheep, as well hero. Trout fishing is excellent; fish were barged as musk ox can all be seen here by the ton during the here protected in the 280-ha Klondike gold rush to feed (700-acre) parkland of their the hordes of hopeful miners. natural roaming habitat.

S.S. Klondike in its permanent home in Whitehorse

Largest of the lakes in the area, Lake Laberge is 62 km (39 miles) from Whitehorse along the Klondike Hwy. Frozen for half of the year,

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operating in 1955 and was beached forever in Whitehorse. It is now restored to its heyday in every detail, right down to the 1937 Life magazines on the tables and authentic staff uniforms. Although no longer operational, the boat is a National Historic Site, with regular guided tours of the interior on offer.

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Male caribou resting near Carcross, as herds migrate across the Yukon

Carcross 2 * 250. c n (867) 821 4431, 1 866 660 4629. # mid-May–Sep daily. www.southernlakesyukon.com

Carcross is a small village that lies at the picturesque confluence of Bennet and Tagish Lakes, an hour’s drive south of Yukon’s regional capital, Whitehorse. Early miners crossing the arduous Chilkoot Pass on their journey to the bounty of the gold mines in the north named the site “Caribou Crossing” after herds of caribou stormed their way through the pass between the two lakes on their biannual migration. The town was established in 1898 in the height of the gold rush with the arrival of the White Pass and Yukon railroad. “Caribou

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Crossing” was abbreviated officially to Carcross to avoid duplication of names in Alaska, British Colombia, and a town in the Klondike. Carcross has a strong native tradition, and was once an important caribou hunting ground for the Tagish tribe. Tagish guides worked for US Army surveyors during the building of the Alaska Highway in 1942 (see pp262–3). Just 2 km (1 mile) north is the smallest desert in the world, Carcross Desert. Blasted by strong winds, the sandy plain is barren, and the only remnant of a glacial lake that dried up after the last Ice Age. The strength of the winds allows little vegetation to grow, but the spot is memorable.

base camp for the US Army engineers who in 1942 built much of the Alcan Highway (now known as the Alaska Highway) that links Fairbanks in Alaska to the south of Canada. The St. Elias Mountains tower above the town, and air trips can be taken from here to admire the views of the frozen scenery, glaciers, and icy peaks of this wilderness.

Haines Junction 3 * 862. c n Kluane National Park Visitor Information Centre (867) 634 7250.

Haines Junction is a handy fuel and food stop for visitors on the way to the impressive Kluane National Park. The town has a post office, restaurant, and hotels. Trips into the park for rafting canoeing, and various hiking excursions can be organized from the town, as the park’s administrative headquarters are here. Those wishing to raft should book well ahead. Haines Junction was once a

The St. Elias range dominates the small town of Haines Junction For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp364–5 and pp390–91

Kaskawulsh Glacier rising over Kluane National Park

Kluane National Park 4 Tel (867) 634 7250. c Haines Junction. # year round. & 7 8 www.pc.gc.ca

This superb wilderness area is a United Nations World Heritage Site. Covering 22,000 square km (8,500 square miles) of the southwest corner of the Yukon, the park shares the St. Elias mountain range, the highest in Canada, with Alaska. The whole park comprises one of the largest nonpolar icefield in the world. Two-thirds of the park is glacial, filled with valleys and lakes that are frozen yearround, broken up by alpine forests, meadows, and tundra. The landscape is one of the last surviving examples of an Ice Age environment, which disappeared in the rest of the world around 5–10,000 BC. Mount Logan, at over 5,950 m (18,500 ft), is Canada’s tallest peak. Numerous well-marked and established trails make

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Kluane National Park displays radiant foliage in fall, as seen here in the Alsek River area

for excellent hiking here, and several conveniently start from the main road. There are some less defined routes, which follow the old mining trails. There are trails to suit both the novice and experienced hiker, ranging from a two-hour stroll to a ten-day guided trek. Kluane’s combination of striking scenery and an abundance of wildlife, including moose, Dall sheep, and grizzly bears, make it the Yukon’s Y most attractive wilderness destination. Trips into the park are organized from nearby Haines Junction. Due to the hazardous weather, untamed wildlife, and isolated conditions, safety measures are mandatory here.

Burwash Landing 5 * 88. n Whitehorse (867) 667 5340.

Northwest of Haines Junction by 124 km (77 miles), this little village at the western end of Kluane Lake lies just outside Kluane National Park on the Alaska Hwy. A community was established here in 1905, after a gold strike in a local creek, and Burwash Landing is now a service center. Visitors can also enjoy stunning panoramas of Kluane Lake to the south. The village is noted for its Kluane Museum, with many animal-related exhibits, including a mammoth’s tooth and numerous displays on local

natural history. Focus is also given to the traditional lifestyle of the region’s tribe of Southern Tutchone native people. E Kluane Museum Burwash Junction. Tel (867) 841 5561. # mid-May – mid-Sep: 9am –9pm daily. & 7

Stewart Crossing 6 * 25. c n Whitehorse (867) 667 5340.

Approximately 180 km (113 miles) east of Dawson City (see p336), Stewart Crossing is a small community at the junction of the Klondike Hwy and the Silver Trail, which leads to the small mining settlements of Mayo, Elsa, and Keno, once famous for their silver trade. During the gold rush in the late 19th century, the area was referred to as the “grubstake,” because enough gold could be panned from the river sandbars here during the summer to buy the following

year’s stake. Stewart Crossing is a modest service center that also operates as the startingpoint for canoe trails on the Stewart River. Unusual for this wild terrain, these boat trips are suitable for children and beginners. Trips should be organized in Whitehorse or Dawson City. Above the community is a scenic viewpoint that overlooks the spectacular Klondike River valley and the Tintina Trench. Providing in a glance visible proof of the geological theory of plate tectonics, the trench itself stretches for several hundred kilometers across the Yukon, with layers of millennia-old rock gaping open to the skies. “Tintina” means “chief” in the local native language, and this is one of the largest geological faults in the Yukon system. Stewart Crossing is an ideal place to view the trench, which runs up to here along the route of the Klondike Hwy, from a course parallel with the Yukon River that begins at Fortymile village.

Broad Valley by Stewart Crossing near the Yukon River, Yukon The stunning beauty of a Yukon river valley in summer

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Founded in the 1950s as a supply center for military projects in the NWT, the town prospered in the oil boom of the 1970s. Full of functional contemporary architecture, Inuvik’s charm lies more in its location as a good visitors’ center for The Gaslight Follies Theatre in Dawson City the region – there are a few hotels and 7 several shops, no mean feat for a town that boasts just a * 2,150. ~ c n cnr Front single traffic light. It is, none& King Sts. (867) 993 5575. theless, the most visited town www.dawsoncity.ca in the northern Arctic, popular as a craft center for the The town of Dawson City Inuit and as a starting point came into prominence during for a tour of the far north. the Klondike gold rush of Environs 1898 (see pp50–51), when the The settlement of Paulatuk lies population boomed and the 400 km (250 miles) east of city grew from a moose pasture into a bustling metropolis Inuvik and is one of the smalof some 30–40,000 people, all lest communities in the terriseeking their tory. It is well fortune in the placed for hunting, fishing, and new “Paris of trapping game; the North.” The these activities town continues remain its staple to mine gold, but tourism is now support after the town’s most many centuries. reliable source Inuvik welcomes its visitors Its location is also useful as a of income. Dawson City Museum has stepping-stone to the wilderexhibits on the Klondike, with ness. Tourism is becoming features on the gold rush and popular, and trips leave from here with Inuit guides in search artifacts from that period. A of wildlife. Visitors also come popular attraction is Diamond Tooth Gertie’s, the gambling to see the unusual Smoking hall complete with a honkyHills, which are composed of sulfide-rich slate and coal. tonk piano and can-can girls.

Dawson City

Norman Wells 9 * 800. ~ n NWT Tourism Office, 52nd St., Yellowknife 1 (800) 661 0788. www.normanwells.com

In 1919 crude oil discoveries were made here near a small Inuit settlement. Oil production surged in World War II when the US estabishd a pipeline to supply oil to the Alaska Highway while it was being built, and the town grew. The wells closed down in 1996. Today Norman Wells is the starting point for the Canol Heritage Route, a long-distance path of wilderness trail through to the Canol Road above the Ross River in the Yukon Territory, which links up with the Yukon Highway system. There are few facilities along the trail, making it one of the toughest trekking paths in the world. Despite the difficulties, this is a popular destination with experienced hikers.

Nahanni National Park Reserve 0 Tel (867) 695 2713. ~ Fort Simpson. # year round. & n Nahanni National Park Reserve, Box 348, Fort Simpson, NWT. www.pc.gc.ca

Nahanni National Park Reserve sits astride the South Nahanni River between the border with the Yukon and the small settlement of Fort Simpson. In 1978, it was

E Dawson City Museum 5th Ave. Tel (867) 993 5291. # mid-May–Sep: 10am–6pm daily; late Sep–May: by appointment. & 7 P Diamond Tooth Gertie’s cnr 4th Ave. & Queen St. Tel (867) 993 5575. # mid-May – mid-Sep: 7pm – 2am daily. & 7

Inuvik 8 * 3,500. ~ n 2 Firth St. (867) 777 8600. www.inuvik.ca

About 770 km (480 miles) north of Dawson City, Inuvik lies at the tip the Dempster Hwy, the most northerly road in Canada. At the heart of the Mackenzie River delta, Inuvik has only a very recent history.

Inuvik’s town church and hall, shaped like an igloo against the climate

For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp364–5 and pp390–91

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Hay River w * 3,600. ~ c n MacKenzie Hwy (867) 874 6522. # Jun–Sep.

The vast expanses of Nahanni National Park in summer

the first place in the world to be designated a UN World Heritage Site to protect its wildlife. The park is a great wilderness with four vast river canyons, hot springs, and North America’s most spectacular undeveloped waterfall, Virginia Falls. The falls, at 90 m (295 ft), are twice the height of Niagara but have less volume, and boast excellent flora and fauna. At least 13 species of fish enjoy the cascades, and more than 120 varieties of bird live overhead. Wolves, grizzly bears, and woodland caribou move freely in the park. The park’s main activities are, surprisingly, not wildlifewatching but whitewater rafting and canoeing. In summer, watersports take precedence over walking tours as the rivers thaw and the landscape bursts into bloom with wild flowers. The park can be reached by boat along the Nahanni River.

the prospect of employment, the local Dene First Nations people settled here permanently. Today the town is a Dene handicrafts center. Just north of the village lies the Mackenzie Bison Sanctuary. The sanctuary is home to the world’s largest herd of 2,000 rare pure wood bison. The park stretches for 100 km (60 miles) north along the banks of Great Slave Lake, and bison can be seen along the road.

Set on the banks of Great Slave Lake, the small community of Hay River is the major port in the Northwest Territories. A lifeline, the town supplies the High Arctic settlements and the northernmost towns in the country, particularly Inuvik, with essentials. When the river thaws in spring, it supplies freight. The town looks designed for the purpose it serves – the wharves are lined with barges and tugs, as well as the local fishing fleet. Unusually for this area, Hay River’s history stretches back over a millennium. The Dene moved here centuries ago, lured by the town’s strategic position at the southern shore of the Great Slave Lake, for its hunting and fishing. Attractions here are based on local industry; as a shipping center, the harbor is a bustling place to spot barges. The original Dene settlement, now a village of 260 people, sits across the river north from the Old Town and welcomes visitors.

Fort Providence q * 750. c n NWT Tourism Office, 52nd St., Yellowknife 1 800 661 0788, (867) 873 7200.

The Dene people call this village “zhahti koe,” which means mission house in their native tongue. Fort Providence began life as a Catholic mission and was later enlarged by the Hudson’s Bay Company (see pp162–3), which set up an outpost here in the late 19th century. Attracted by this and

THE NORTHERN LIGHTS The Northern Lights, or aurora borealis, are believed to be the result of solar winds entering the Earth’s ionosphere some 160 km (100 miles) above the surface of the planet. Emanating from the sun, these winds collide with the gases present in the Earth’s upper atmosphere, releasing energy that becomes visible in the night sky. The stunning consequences are visible in the Yukon and the NWT, most often from August to October. Some Inuit groups attach religious significance to the Lights, believing them to be the spirits of dead hunters, while 19th-century gold prospectors mistook them for vapors given off by ore deposits. Whatever one’s beliefs, the sparkling ribbons of light are an awesome sight.

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Yellowknife

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 18,000. ~ n The Northern Frontier Regional Visitors’ Centre, 4804 49th St. (867) 873 4262, 1 877 881 4262. _ The Caribou Carnival (Mar); Raven Mad Daze (Jun); Folk on the Rocks (Jul). www.northernfrontier.com

Originally a native Dene settlement, Yellowknife is named after the yellow-bladed copper hunting knives used by its first residents. The Hudson’s Bay Company closed its outpost here in 1823 due to failing profits, but the Old Town thrived again with gold mining in the 1930s and again after 1945. With improved road communications, the city became the regional capital of the Northwest Territories in 1967. Growing bureaucratic needs and the occasional successful goldmine guaranteed that Yellowknife has flourished ever since the 1960s.

here on Yellowknife Bay, many living on makeshift houseboats. Also interesting is the variety of older architecture that can be seen from a stroll around this now residential area. Shops and accomodations are found farther south in the New Town. A good vantage point from which to survey the area is the Bush Pilot’s Monument (a blue Bristol airplane) at the north end of Franklin Avenue. The Wildcat Café Wiley Road. Tel (867) 873 8850. # Jun – Sep: 11am – 9pm daily. 7

Makeshift houseboats on the Great Slave Lake

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of the Old Town and has been refurbished in 1930s style. Its atmospheric interior is reminiscent of the pioneer days. Rather showing its age, this establishment is the most photographed building in Yellowknife. It is also the most popular eating place – top dishes include hearty stew and fish.

Sampling the fare at the Wildcat Café is a truly northern experience

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Rankin Inlet r * 2,058. n (867) 979 4636. ~

Founded in 1955 when North Rankin Nickel Mine opened, Rankin Inlet is the largest community in the stony plateau of Keewatin, the mainly Inuit district of Nunavut that stretches east of the Canadian Shield to Hudson Bay. This small town is the government center for the Keewatin region, whose population, now 85 percent aboriginal, has settled mainly on the coast. The Inlet is also the local tourism center. This region is characterized by its historic rural way of life and stunning Arctic scenery. Meliadine Park, 10 km (6 miles) from the town center, contains a traditional Thule (ancestor of the Inuit) restored native site with stone tent rings, meat stores, and semisubterranean winter houses. Y Meliadine Park 10 km (6 miles) northwest of Rankin Inlet. Tel (867) 645 3838. # daily, weather permitting.

Northern Heritage Centre 49th Street. Tel (867) 873 7551. # daily. ¢ public holidays. 7

This excellent local museum is a good introduction to the history of the Northwest Territories. There is a display on the lifestyles of the Dene and Inuit peoples, followed by one describing European development of the area. Another gallery retells the history of aviation in the Territories, with exhibits on natural sciences. P The Legislative Assembly Frame Lake. Tel (867) 669 2230, 1 800 661 0784. # Mon – Fri. 7 8 Jul & Aug.

Built in 1993, this headquarters of local government has a tall domed roof. Signifying equal rights for all ethnic groups, the government chamber is the only round one of its kind in the country, with a large oval table to give all delegates equal responsibility, in the manner practiced by aboriginals. Decorated with paintings and Inuit art, the chamber is graced with a large polar bear rug. The official public government rooms can be toured when the council is not in session.

Baker Lake t * 1,385. ~ n (867) 793 2874.

Baker Lake is geographically at the center of Canada and is the country’s only inland Inuit community. Located at the source of the Thelon River, the area has always been a traditional summer gathering place for different Inuit peoples. Today it is an important center for Inuit art, especially textiles.

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Heading westward, the Thelon Game Sanctuary can also be visited. Visitors can see herds of musk ox in their natural habitat and glimpse other indigenous animals and birds. O Thelon Game Sanctuary 300 km (200 miles) w. of Baker Lake. Tel (867) 979 4636. # daily.

Banks Island and Victoria Island y n (867) 979 4636.

Located in the Arctic Ocean, Banks Island is home to the largest herds of musk ox in the world. They dwell in Aulavik National Park, on the remote northern tip of the island. This numbers among the world’s most remote wildlife destinations, and is accessible only by plane. In common with large areas of the far north, trips are mostly undertaken by the wealthy and adventurous. Split between the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, Victoria Island has a town in each – Holman in NWT and the Inuit Cambridge Bay in Nunavut, where local native people traveled each summer for char fishing and caribou and seal hunting. The town today is a service center for locals and visitors along the Arctic coast. Polar bears, musk ox, wolves, and Arctic birds live nearby. Y Aulavik National Park Sachs Harbour. Tel (867) 690 3904. # daily, weather permitting. &

An Inuit igloo builder near Baker Lake, practicing this traditional skill

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Part of Nunavut, Baffin Island is one of the most remote places in North America. At 500,000 square km (193,000 square miles), the island is the fifth larg more than 60 perce the Arctic Circle. Purple Saxifrage in summer is inhabited 9,000 of w people live in one of eig scattered throughout th chief of which is Iqalu ~ of the province of Nu With its spectacular knife-edged mounta with glaciers, Baffin a chance to experie outdoor activities o Canoeing, kayakin and thrilling walks unbeatable here. M the activities often t the company of abu including polar bears

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AUYUITTUQ NATIONAL PARK Auyuittuq is the third-largest national park in Canada at 21,470 square km (8,300 square miles). It is a rarity as one of the few national parks with land above the Arctic Circle. A spectacular destination, the park displays a pristine wilderness of mountains, valleys, and fjords. In spring the meadows thaw out from under their snowy coverlets, and wildflowers burst into bloom. Within the park borders, wildlife abounds, with animals ranging from snow geese and arctic foxes to polar bears sharing the territory. Even in the brief summer, the weather can be tricky with the risk of heavy snow. Temperatures are low year-round. The nearby town of Pangnirtung is a craft center. Wildflowers f flourish f beneath Auyuittuq’s frozen peaks For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp364–5 and pp390–91

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VISITORS’ CHECKLIST * 11,400. n Nunavut Tourism, T Iqaluit (1 866 686 2888). _ Toonik Tyme (Apr), Iqaluit. www.nunavuttourism.com

ACCESSING CANADA’S NORTH

Pangnirtung little town of 1,100 residents sits at the southern end he Pangnirtung Fjord, the 100-km (62-mile) hiking l which is the most popular on Baffin. During the Pass is free of snow and can be negotiated for stupendous views of the fjord below.

While tourism to Nunavut increases every year, visitors should be aware of severely limited travel and communications. The only access to these remote settlements is by air, which is very expensive compared to mainline routes. Despite the cost, the region has over 600 airports and small landing strips.

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Travelers’ Needs

WHERE TO STAY 344–365 WHERE TO EAT 366–391 SHOPPING IN CANADA 392–395 ENTERTAINMENT IN CANADA 396–399 SPECIALTY VACATIONS AND ACTIVITIES 400–403

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WHERE TO STAY s one might expect in a country of scenic spots, elegant town apartts size, Canada has a wide ments, hostels, houseboats, and the range of places in which to most popular choice of all, the stay: from stately, world-famous convenient motel. Whether you hotels such as the Château need a mid-journey bed for Frontenac in Quebec City, to the night or a seasonal rental, family-run bed-and-breakfasts you can always find the right Hotel doorman in the countryside, the variety place and may not even need is immense. Canada offers excellent to book in advance. The listings on middle-range accommodations, and you pp346–65 describe in full a selection of will find rural inns, cottages to rent in destinations for every taste and budget.

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CHILDREN Traveling with children is relatively easy. Nearly every property will supply a cot or junior-sized bed in a parents’ room. Major hotels offer babysitting services. A lone parent traveling with children may need written consent from the other parent under antiabduction regulations. DISABLED TRAVELERS A rental lodge in Banff National Park

GRADING AND FACILITIES There is no governmentsponsored hotel grading system in Canada, but the voluntary program “Canada Select” is usually very accurate. Each establishment is rated by numbers of stars. It is worth bearing in mind, however, that a 4-star hotel in a large city such as Toronto, for example, might not have the same level of facilities as one with the same rating in a small upscale resort with a château hotel. The Canadian Automobile Association also operates an assessment system, mostly for hotels and motels along main highways, and these, while also non-official, are largely recognized as consistent and accurate. Air-conditioning comes as standard in most of the country during summer, except in national park lodges and cooler coastal and northern regions. Central heating country-wide is efficient. Cable TV, radio, irons and ironing boards, and coffee-making facilities are standard. Private

bathrooms are usual, but you will need to specify a bathtub or shower – also remember to ask for double or twin beds when booking a double room.

Canada’s building laws require all new and renovated public buildings to provide wheelchair facilities with ramps, wide doors, and straight access to rooms. However, as many rural hotels date from the 19th century, facilities should always be checked in advance.

PRICES With such a wide range of accommodations, prices vary hugely. In a major town, the top hotel’s presidential suite may command a daily rate in excess of Can$1,000, while a hiker’s hostel will provide a dormitory bed for under Can$25. Budget hotels and B-and-Bs charge Can$50–75 a night per person. Some prices rise in high season, but rates are discounted in low season. RESERVATIONS Advance reservations are always recommended in the main cities, where festivals, conventions, meetings, and major sports and musical events are held year-round (see pp38–41). Provincial tourist offices f or airlines (see p409) will assist in suggesting and arranging bookings.

Life jackets stored at the Madawaska Canoe Centre, Eastern Ontario

Imposing façade of The Fairmont Royal York in Toronto (see p355)

LUXURY HOTELS Although Canada has few five-star hotels, the major cities boast some truly worldclass establishments. The railroad age of the late 19th

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B-and-Bs, with many located in the elegant Victorian homes of historic towns. Call the provincial tourist office for a detailed list with tariffs. Most establishments have up to four rooms for rent. ACCOMMODATIONS TAXES

Bedroom at Elmwood Heritage Inn on Prince Edward Island (see p348)

century ushered in châteaustyle hotels, which are unique Canadian architectural features. Nowadays, most of the castlehotels, including the Château Frontenac, are owned and operated by Fairmont Hotels. Luxury chains are well represented: the Four Seasons, the Hilton, the Radisson, the Sheraton, and Westin chains operate in Toronto, Montreal, Calgary, and Vancouver. CHAIN HOTELS Canada offers numerous franchise and chain hotels and motels. Reliable and comfortable, if occasionally a little bland, chains vary in style and price from grand resort areas to the less expensive but equally well-known Best Western, Comfort, and Super 8. Popular with families and business travelers, many of the properties have offices for use, including fax, e-mail, and telegraph equipment. Children’s facilities are usually good.

in the north. The proliferation of this choice guarantees high quality and a well-priced stay: electrical connections, as well as laundry facilities, general store, and sports programs are often available for all ages. For many, the cottage or cabin option is traditionally Canadian. Ontario is famous for its selection of rural vacation homes, again very well equipped, which are available weekly, monthly, or seasonally, and are always well located for nearby attractions. National parks also rent lodges and offer campgrounds. BED-AND-BREAKFASTS The growing number of bedand-breakfasts across Canada is testimony to their popularity. From historic inns to rustic quarters on vacation farms, each provides personalized service, a friendly local face, and insight into the region’s way of life. Atlantic Canada is renowned for its

Bear in mind that accommodations of almost every kind are subject to two taxes on top of the basic tariff. The first, Provincial Sales Tax (PST), varies from province to province and ranges from between 5 and 12 percent. It must be paid on accommodations as well as on goods and other services. Rules vary slightly between provinces: Alberta levies only the PST on hotel and motel stays, and campsites, B-andBs, and guesthouses are tax-free. The Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a standard national charge of 6 percent throughout the country; this affects most accommodation classes. In some provinces the GST and PST are combined as Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) of approximately 14 percent. In Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland and Labrador, the HST of 14 percent replaces the GST. Smaller hotels may not charge the GST, so inquire on arrival. Since April 2007 the GST rebate program for nonresidents of Canada has been eliminated.

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS There is a tremendous variety of these options available in Canada in addition to the traditional cottage rental industry. Motorhomes or RVs (Recreational Vehicles) are gaining in popularity and can be leased in all the major cities. Most nowadays have air-conditioning, refrigerators, ovens, and bathrooms. Campgrounds are found all over the country, from lush fields in the fertile southern national parks to well-insulated zones partly inhabited by the Inuit

A bed-and-breakfast in the Rocky Mountains

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Choosing a Hotel The hotels in this guide have been selected for their good value, excellent facilities, or location. This chart lists hotels under the region chapter headings in the same order as the rest of the guide, and grouped alphabetically by province and then by town. Entries are alphabetical within the price category. For restaurant listings, see pages 370–391.

PRICE CATEGORIES IN CANADIAN DOLLARS (CAN $) For a standard double room per night, including breakfast (where served), taxes, and any extra service charges. \ Under $100 \\ $100–$150 \\\ $150–$250 \\\\ $250–$350 \\\\\ Over $350

NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR BAULINE EAST Celtic Rendezvous Cottages

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P.O. Box 20, Tors Cove, Bauline East, Newfoundland, A0A 4A0 Tel (709) 334 3341 Fax (709) 334 2571 Rooms 23 These are pine cottages with large picture windows and spectacular ocean views, within a bird sanctuary. Watch icebergs float by and whales play. There are private decks with barbecue. Horseback riding, fishing, boat tours, sea kayaking, and spa services are on site. www.celticrendezvouscottages.com

CORNER BROOK Bell’s Inn

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2 Ford’s Road, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, A2H 1S6 Tel (709) 634 1150 Fax (709) 634 1114 Rooms 8 This is Corner Brook’s oldest bed & breakfast in a large, rambling, and modernized home. The host is happy to let guests use laundry facilities and is very knowledgeable about Newfoundland. There is a pleasant backyard garden. There are no set times for breakfast. A “make yourself at home” kind of place. www.bellsinn.ca

GRAND FALLS Mount Peyton Hotel

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214 Lincoln Road, Grand Falls - Windsor, Newfoundland, A2A 1P8 Tel (709) 489 2251 Fax (709) 489 6365 Rooms 150 Medium-sized hotel with additional motel and efficiency units. Staff are friendly and helpful. Close to shopping, arts and culture center, great walking trails, and museum. For an intimate and quiet meal, check out Peyton Corral Steak House – one of two restaurants. www.mountpeyton.com

GROS MORNE Gros Morne Resort

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P.O. Box 200, Saint Paul’s, Newfoundland, A0K 4Y0 Tel (709) 243 2606 Fax (709) 243 2615 Rooms 20 Great views here at world famous Gros Morne. The resort has luxurious, extra large rooms. Amenities include hair salon, tanning salon, Internet Café, and a bakery. The family restaurant has good food. There is an excellent golf course. Thursday nights feature Newfoundland kitchen parties and lively music. www.grosmorneresort.com

HAPPY VALLEY GOOSE BAY The Labrador Inn

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380 Hamilton River Road, Happy Valley Goose Bay, A0P 1C0 Tel (709) 896 3351 Fax (709) 896 3927 Rooms 66 The largest and most modern hotel in Labrador on a landmark spot. This is pioneer country. The Labrador Inn proudly displays its heritage in the conference room with over 200 photos depicting life in the olden days. There is a NATO low-level flight training base close by. www.labradorinn.nf.ca

PORT REXTON Fishers’ Loft Inn

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Box 36, Mill Road, Port Rexton, Newfoundland, A0C 2H0 Tel (709) 464 3240 Fax (709) 464 3240 Rooms 21 Located on a hillside between forest and ocean, this hotel offers wonderful views from every room. Staff are generous, always helpful, and have a unique sense of humor. There is a large selection of Newfoundland art and award-winning furniture, a garden, and the food is superb. There are amazing hiking trails close by. www.fishersloft.com

QUIRPON Quirpon Lighthouse Inn

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Box 652 Corner Brook, Newfoundland, A2H 6G1 Tel (877) 254 6586 Fax (709) 639 1592 Rooms 11 This well appointed, fully restored 1922 lightkeeper’s home overlooking “Iceberg Alley” is a fascinating 45-minute jaunt from the mainland. Enjoy the whale watching station and see Humpback, Orca, and Minke whales. Better yet, get in a kayak and paddle through the icebergs and whales. Rare spot, exquisite experience. www.linkumtours.com

ST. JOHN’S Compton House Heritage Inn and Apartments

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26 Waterford Bridge Rd, St. John’s, Newfoundland, A1E 1C6 Tel (709) 739 5789 Fax (709) 738 1770 Rooms 12 A grand old Victorian mansion with ornate woodwork, period furniture, interesting antiques, and working fireplaces. A great place to leave the world behind. Breakfast includes everything from fruit plates to wild berry pancakes. The library has over 1,000 books and a large selection of movies. www3.nf.sympatico.ca/comptonhouse/

ST. JOHN’S The Fairmont Newfoundland

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P.O. Box 5637, 115 Cavendish Sq., St.John’s, Newfoundland, A1C 5W8 Tel (709) 726 4980 Fax (709) 726 2025 Rooms 302 The view alone from this hotel is worth the price. Think “relaxed elegance.” Queens, movie stars, and prime ministers stay here. The hotel’s Cabot Club offers fine dining (the only 5-Diamond rating in Newfoundland). There is a unique court garden on the lower level. City core and historic tours are within walking distance. www.fairmont.com Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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NEW BRUNSWICK BRUNSWICK,, NOVA SCOTIA SCOTIA,, AND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BOUCTOUCHE Auberge Le Vieux Presbytère

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157 Chemin du Couvent, Bouctouche, New Brunswick, E4S 3B8 Tel (506) 743 5568 Fax (506) 743 5566 Rooms 19 Originally built for a priest in 1880, then converted into a monastery-like operation replete with a chapel, and later again into a nursing home. Opened as an inn 1993. Popular place with travelers from all over the world. Exceptional views, expansive grounds, peaceful surroundings. Easy driving distance to major attractions. www.vieuxpresbytere.nb.ca 0zh

CARAQUET Hotel Paulin

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143 Boulevard St-Pierre West,Caraquet, New Brunswick, E1W 1B6 Tel (506) 727 9981 Fax (506) 727 4808 Rooms 12 A classic Victorian Hotel, built in 1891. This is a one-of-a-kind historical boutique-style hotel, still owned and operated by the Paulin family. Situated on the scenic Bay of Chaleur, it offers intimate surroundings with old-world French village charm. Long-standing reputation as a travel destination. Remarkable hosts. Incredible cuisine. www.hotelpaulin.com

EDMUNDSTON Château Edmundston

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100 Rice Street, Edmundston, New Brunswick, E3V 1T4 Tel (506) 739 7321 Fax (506) 735 9101 Rooms 102 Château Edmundston “where every client is King” works hard to uphold this motto. It is also the only hotel downtown. Check out its special promotions, including great winter ski packages. LInked to the Carrefour Assomption shopping center, there is no need to go outside. There is free access to a gym close by. www.chateauedmundston.com/ zh

FREDERICTON Carriage House Inn

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230 University Ave., Fredericton, New Brunswick, E3B 4H7 Tel (506) 452 9924 Fax (506) 452 2770 Rooms 10 The Carriage House Inn is a Victorian Queen Anne style mansion built in 1875. Hearty and delicious breakfasts are served in the elegant ballroom filled with interesting antiques. The owners have a very impressive collection of art that graces the walls. Close by are city attractions and the beautiful St. John River. www.carriagehouse-inn.net h

GARDNER CREEK Moore’s Specialties Tourist Home and Gallery

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1254 Route 825, Gardner Creek, New Brunswick, E2S 2B2 Tel (506) 696 4722 Rooms 3 In a country setting with spectacular sunrises and sunsets overlooking the Bay of Fundy, this newly renovated homestead with antiques, large verandas, and gardens is run by an artist who has painted murals throughout the home. Guests are allowed to use the kitchen and laundry facilities. The beach is within walking distance. www.sjnow.com/moores

MONCTON Crowne Plaza Hotels and Resorts

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1005 Main Street, Moncton, New Brunswick, E1C 1G9 Tel (506) 854 6340 Fax (506) 382 8923 Rooms 191 This is a landmark hotel in the heart of Moncton. Newly renovated guest rooms showcase the Sleep AdvantageTM program with luxurious seven-layer bedding. There is free Internet and local phone calls are free. There is a cuttingedge fitness room and an exclusive saltwater pool. www.cpmoncton.com 0zh

SAINT JOHN Inn On The Cove & Spa

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1371 Sand Cove Road, Saint John, New Brunswick, E2M 4Z9 Tel (506) 672 7799 Rooms 9 In an oceanside setting next to the Irving Nature Park yet very near the city center, this inn’s guest rooms overlook the world’s highest tides. There is a full service spa and hair salon and fine dining in the Ocean Room (reservations required). The hosts are well known TV personalities and provide memorable dining experiences. www.innonthecove.com

ST. ANDREWS Rossmount Inn

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4599 Route 127, St. Andrews by the Sea, New Brunswick, E5B 3S7 Tel (506) 529 3351 Rooms 18 Rossmount Inn is part of an 87 acre estate, which includes a beautiful interpretive nature walk to Chamcook Mountain with breathtaking vistas. An ideal place to rekindle your spirits. Meander through the large organic garden, enjoy superb dining, or just relax on the large covered veranda overlooking the bay. www.rossmountinn.com

ST. ANDREWS The Fairmont Algonquin Hotel

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184 Adolphus Street, St. Andrews, New Brunswick, E5B 1T7 Tel (506) 529 8823 Fax (506) 529 7162 Rooms 234 This Maritime gem provides a superb culinary experience, hospitality, and lush gardens. Situated in the Bay of Fundy, it is close to Kingsbrae Gardens. It combines true old world charm with modern luxury and has an award winning seaside golf course. Off the beaten track but worth the drive. www.fairmont.com

ANNAPOLIS ROYAL Milford House

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South Milford, RR 4 Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, B0S 1A0 Tel (902) 532 2617 Fax (902) 532 2617 Rooms 27 Milford House is defined by a huge handsome lodge and 27 cabins situated on a lake. Life is slow and easy here. Each cabin has its own name and distinctive character. This magical resort is popular, well loved, and respected. Meals are included in the price. www.milfordhouse.ca

CAPE D’OR Cape D’Or Lighthouse

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Box 122, Advocate Harbour, Nova Scotia, B0M 1A0 Tel (902) 670 0534 Rooms 4 If you are looking for seclusion, this is the place. Be prepared to share a common room full of games and books. Guest rooms are not fancy but the spectacular location makes up for it. The owner is a fun-loving cook who serves gourmet cooking in the restaurant. www.capedor.ca

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HALIFAX Halifax Waverley Inn

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1266 Barrington Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3J 1Y5 Tel (902) 423 9346 Fax (902) 425 0167 Rooms 34 This bed & breakfast-style inn offers European-style canopies, feather beds, large Jacuzzi baths, and fluffy robes. Other pleasant surprises include antiques, free parking, Internet access, a delicious hot breakfast buffet, evening tea, coffee, and snacks. A historic building in an ideal downtown location. www.waverleyinn.com

HALIFAX Westin Nova Scotian

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1181 Hollis Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 2P6 Tel (902) 421 1000 Fax (902) 422 9465 Rooms 297 This grand dame, built in 1930, is one of the first great CN railroad hotels. Guests’ expectations are usually exceeded and it has won many awards. A live theater, museums, water tours, and nightlife are all within a short walk. Pets are welcome and also spoiled. Completely non-smoking. www.westin.ns.ca

INGONISH BEACH Keltic Lodge

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383 Keltic Inn Road, Ingonish Beach, Nova Scotia, B0C 1L0 Tel (902) 285 2880 Fax (902) 285 2859 Rooms 105 Set high on a cliff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, the view here is breathtaking. This resort offers a spacious main lodge, a unique inn, and cozy upscale cottages. On site or nearby are tennis courts, a world class golf course, and wilderness trails. The Purple Thistle Dining room specializes in seafood delicacies. Breakfast and dinner included. www.signatureresorts.com

LOUISBOURG Cranberry Cove Inn

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12 Wolfe Street, Louisbourg, Nova Scotia, B1C 2J2 Tel (902) 733 2171 Rooms 7 Ideally located overlooking the harbor and only a ten-minute walk to world famous Fortress Louisbourg. Rooms at the inn are themed. If you stay in the Captain’s Den, you will feel as if you are aboard an old time vessel. The food is superb and the staff friendly. www.cranberrycoveinn.com

LUNENBURG Lunenburg Inn

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26 Dufferin Street, Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, B0J 2C0 Tel (902) 634 3963 Fax (902) 634 9419 Rooms 7 This registered heritage property (Victorian building circa 1893) features a prominent tower. It is renowned for its attentive (but not intrusive) hospitality and exceptional breakfasts. Lunenburg is a UNESCO world heritage site and the inn is in a prime location. www.lunenburginn.com

MARGAREE VALLEY Normaway Inn and Cabins

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P.O. Box 100, Margaree Valley, Nova Scotia, B0E 2C0 Tel (902) 248 2987 Fax (902) 248 2600 Rooms 29 In an idyllic setting, this handsome lodge has tasteful cabins. A sunny dining room offers superb regional fare. The innkeeper is happy to help guests discover the magic of Cape Breton. There are tennis courts and bike rentals on site and a Weekly Three Fiddler Concert, Ceilidh, and Dance in the Blue Barn. www.normaway.com

TATAMAGOUCHE Train Station Inn

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21 Station Rd, Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, B0K 1V0 Tel (902) 657 3222 Rooms 10 Step back in time and experience Nova Scotia’s railroad heritage brought to life in this award-winning country inn. Sleep in your own private railroad car that features a king-sized bed and fireplace. Evening meals served in 1928 dining car. Unusual experience! Train station itself houses guest rooms and unique museum café. www.trainstation.ca

YARMOUTH MacKinnon-Cann Historic Inn

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27 Willow Street, Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, B5A 1V2 Tel (902) 742 9900 Fax (902) 742 0326 Rooms 7 Beautifully restored Italianate Victorian home (circa 1887) located in the heart of the town’s historic district, close to the downtown core. Guest rooms are featured in decades, starting with the 1900s through to the 1960s. The interior is exquisite. Thoughtful hosts are fun and entertaining. Delicious breakfasts, superb dinners. www.mackinnoncanninn.com

BAY FORTUNE Inn at Bay Fortune

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RR 4, Souris, Prince Edward Island, C0A 2B0 Tel (902) 687 3745 Fax (902) 583 3540 Rooms 17 This inn is in an idyllic rural setting overlooking the mouth of the Fortune River and harbor and has beautiful grounds and a large organic garden. Its kitchen is renowned for fine dining and for being the set of the famed TV show, “The Inn Chef.”It has interesting architecture with a unique history and fascinating courtyards and towers. www.innatbayfortune.com

CHARLOTTETOWN Elmwood Heritage Inn

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121 North River Rd, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 3K7 Tel (902) 368 3310 Fax (902) 628 8457 Rooms 7 Elmwood is an oasis in the heart of the city – an exquisite mansion on a secluded park-like acre, yet within easy walking distance to the downtown core. Breakfast is served by candlelight and features exotic entrées such as sundried tomato pecan pesto omelets. There are not enough superlatives to describe Elmwood. www.elmwoodinn.pe.ca

CORNWALL Howard Johnson Dutch Inn

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Trans Canada Highway, Cornwall, Prince Edward Island, C0A 1H0 Tel (902) 566 2211 Fax (902) 566 2214 Rooms 58 Known as “Ho-Jos,” this family hotel has great seasonal packages including golf, geocaching, snowmobile, and romance getaways. Relaxed atmosphere. Check out the Windmill Lounge on Friday nights for a game of darts and Trivia. Henry’s Restaurant is pretty laid back, has decent food, and will not break the bank. www.hojopei.com

GRAND TRACADIE Dalvay-By-the-Sea

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Dalvay, Prince Edward Island, C0A 1P0 Tel (902) 672 2048 Rooms 26 Located at the east end of Prince Edward Island National Park, Dalvay-By-the-Sea offers a unique Maritime experience. Enjoy miles of beach, acres of manicured grounds. You can indulge in biking, picnics, canoeing, kayaking, and more. Staff go out of their way to help. www.dalvaybythesea.com Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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MILL RIVER Rodd Mill River Resort

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Woodstock, O’Leary, Prince Edward Island, C0B 1V0 Tel (902) 859 3555 Fax (902) 859 2486 Rooms 90 Rodd Mill River is one of Canada’s best golf resorts, ranking among the top 50 in Canada. Located within Mill River Provincial Park, it’s an easy drive to Summerside and the Confederation Bridge. Canoe, kayak, bike, swim, windsurf, or play squash and tennis. Professional spa services. This place is tops. www.roddvacations.com/ :h

NEW GLASGOW New Glasgow Inn

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5673 Highway 13, New Glasgow, Prince Edward Island, C0A 1N0 Tel (902) 964 2315 or (877) 862 0270 Rooms 4 New Glasgow Inn is located in a small village with huge attractions, including the famous New Glasgow Lobster Suppers, PEI Island Preserve Company, and superb golfing. The inn is a heritage home dating back to 1861. Breakfasts are so hearty you won’t be eating lunch. Its central island location is another plus. www.newglasgowinn.com h

SUMMERSIDE Willowgreen Farm Bed and Breakfast

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117 Bishop Drive, Summerside, Prince Edward Island, C1N 5Z8 Tel (902) 436 4420 Rooms 8 This spacious country homestead in a unique pastoral farm setting is only a short walk from the city center and waterfront activities. It has a friendly, relaxed atmosphere and interesting themed rooms. Breakfasts are good. www.willowgreenfarm.com

MONTREAL CHINATOWN Holiday Inn Select Montréal Centre-Ville

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99 Ave. Viger Ouest, H2Z 1E9 Tel (514) 878 9888 or (888) 878 9888 Fax (514) 878 6341 Rooms 235 Two rooftop pagodas mean this modern hotel blends seamlessly into the cityscape. This member of the well-known chain offers an on-site fitness center, indoor pool, sauna, and whirlpool so you can relax after exploring the city. The lobby’s miniature pond, pretty Chinese gardens, and the Chez Chine restaurant welcome you. www.holidayinn.com

DOWNTOWN Auberge de Paris

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901 Rue Sherbrooke Est, H2L 1L3 Tel (514) 522 6861 or (800) 567 7217 Fax (514) 522 1387 Rooms 39 This copper-roofed old graystone building with fanciful turret is a short walk from the nightlife of Rue St. Denis. The rooms are comfortable and the women’s-only dorm has private bathrooms. There is an on-site free wireless Internet and computer workstation and a fully licensed bistro. www.hotel-montreal.com/auberge/

DOWNTOWN Hôtel Viger

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1001 Rue Saint-Hubert, H2L 3Y3 Tel (514) 845 6058 or (800) 845 6058 Fax (514) 844 6068 Rooms 21 Tried and true, simple formula of clean, possibly unimaginative rooms all with private bath and television mean inexpensive rates at this Victorian hotel. Well known because of its good value, it is adjacent to Old (Vieux-) Montréal and Chinatown, close to Mont-Royal, and the Metro (subway) system. Rates include continental breakfast. www.hotel-viger.com

DOWNTOWN Clarion Hotel & Suites

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2100 Blvd. de Maisonneuve Ouest, H3H 1K6 Tel (514) 931 8861 or (800) 361 7191 Fax (514) 931 7726 Rooms 266 Comfort and cleanliness factor prominently here. All suites have a fully equipped kitchen. An on-site restaurant offers a reasonable, unpretentious menu. This is a reasonably priced option for families or visitors who want longer and more self-sufficient stays, and is within walking or Metro distance of the sights. www.clarionmontreal.com

DOWNTOWN Delta Montreal

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475 Ave. President Kennedy, H3A 1J7 Tel (514) 286 1986 or (877) 286 1986 Fax (514) 284 4306 Rooms 456 Within walking distance of McGill University, Place des Arts, and trendy downtown shops, this grand, high-rise modern hotel also features an on-site spa, fitness center, and large indoor pool. Rooms are spacious, some with great views of the sprawling city and Mont Royal. The lobby is decorated with works by local artists. www.deltamontreal.com

DOWNTOWN Hôtel Château & Meridien Versailles

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1659 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, H3H 1E3 Tel (514) 933 8111 or (888) 933 8111 Fax (514) 933 6867 Rooms 181 Located on what was Canada’s “Fifth Avenue,” this hotel is near chic galleries and stores. It consists of four distinguished residences owned by the likes of James Seath-Smith, architect, art collector, and owner of Montréal’s first automobile. Today’s luxury boutique hotel offers romantic packages. Award-winning French restaurant. www.versailleshotels.com

DOWNTOWN Hôtel du Fort

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1390 Rue du Fort, H3H 2R7 Tel (514) 938 8333 or (800) 565 6333 Rooms 124 There is no on-site restaurant at the Hôtel du Fort, but Café Suprême in the lobby offers coffee and tea, and an elegant continental breakfast (not included in the room rate) is served daily in Louis XV Club Lounge (free for children under 5). Kitchenettes, available in well-lit spacious rooms, means this is a good choice for families. www.hoteldufort.com

DOWNTOWN Le Nouvel Hôtel

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1740 René Lévesque W, H3H 1R3 Tel (514) 931 8841 or (800) 363 6063 Fax (514) 931 5581 Rooms 132 This hotel has elegant, bright rooms, tastefully appointed to maximize relaxation, some featuring old brick walls. It has an on-site Spa Tais and fitness room. Forty studios have kitchenettes so you can buy farm-fresh goodies at Atwater Market and create your own meals. www.lenouvelhotel.com

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DOWNTOWN L’Hôtel de la Montagne

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1430 Rue de la Montagne, H3G 1Z5 Tel (514) 288 5656 or (800) 361 6262 Rooms 135 Richly decorated “belle époque” luxury hotel. You can select from several bars and restaurants, including Terrasse Magnétic rooftop terrace on the 20th floor, featuring panoramic views of the city. Les Beaux Jeudis restaurant offers jazz every Saturday while on Tuesdays you can enjoy the traditional all-you-can-eat leg of lamb. www.hoteldelamontagne.com

DOWNTOWN Marriott Residence Inn

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2045 Rue Peel, H3A 1T6 Tel (514) 982 6064 or (888) 999 9494 Fax (514) 844 8361 Rooms 190 Suites at this hotel are large and all have kitchenettes. There is a library with a fireplace. The “Hearth Room” offers a comfortable seating area where you can meet friends while enjoying a complimentary evening snack (Mondays through Thursdays only) such as nachos or a bowl of soup. www.residenceinn-mtl.com

DOWNTOWN Ritz-Carlton Montréal

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1228 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, H3G 1H6 Tel (514) 842 4212 or (800) 363 0366 Fax (514) 842 3383 Rooms 229 Classic and classy, this oh-so-chic Edwardian “Grande Dame” was Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor’s choice for one of their two weddings. Nestled beside Mont-Royal, in summer it makes a perfect choice for al fresco meals at Le Jardin du Ritz, a renowned urban garden. If nothing else, indulge in tea in the garden or at Café de Paris. www.ritzmontreal.com

DOWNTOWN Fairmont La Reine Elizabeth

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900 René Lêvesque W, H3B 4A5 Tel (514) 861 3511 Fax (514) 954 2296 Rooms 1039 Situated downtown near the VIA rail station and the heart of the business area, the Fairmont has a distinguished charm and elegance from rooms through to lobby. Famous politicians and celebrities dine at chic The Beaver Club. You can reserve seasonal activities including skiing, river rafting, golf, and tennis through the concierge. www.fairmont.com

DOWNTOWN Loews Hotel Vogue

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1425 Rue de la Montagne, H3G 1Z3 Tel (514) 285 5555 or (800) 465 6654 Fax (514) 849 8903 Rooms 142 Priding itself on being child and pet friendly, the Vogue caters to your family’s needs. Games, kid’s menus, and VIT (Very Important Teen) treatment. This includes a library of DVDs, Gameboys, and more. Pet services include a pamphlet containing local dog walks or a kitty litter! (extra charge applies.). www.loewshotels.com

DOWNTOWN Marriott Château Champlain

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1050 de la Gauchetiere W, H3B 4C9 Tel (514) 878 9000 or (800) 200 5909 Fax (514) 878 6761 Rooms 611 Close to shopping districts, a few steps from Old (Vieux-) Montréal, this tall white tower with arch-shaped windows has excellent views of Mont-Royal and the harbor on the St. Lawrence River and is close to the Bell Centre. When you reserve specify whether you are bringing children because some activities require reservations. www.marriott.com

DOWNTOWN Montreal Bonaventure Hilton

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900 de La Gauchetiere W, H5A 1E4 Tel (514) 878 2332 or (800) 267 2575 Fax (514) 878 2575 Rooms 395 Built around a garden complete with ducks playing in a pool and an outside swimming pool open year-round, this Hilton is located over the Place Bonaventure exhibition halls. Each room has windows that open to let in fresh air. Connects to Montréal’s Underground City shopping concourse. www.hiltonmontreal.com

DOWNTOWN Omni Mont-Royal

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1050 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, H3A 2R6 Tel (514) 284 1110 or (800) 444 6664 Fax (514) 845 3025 Rooms 300 This first-class luxury hotel including heated pool, Amerispa, and large fitness centre (featuring dry sauna, steam room, and whirlpool) means you can enjoy resort living right downtown. Children become part of the Omni Sensational Kids program which includes a suitcase filled with games and books. Pets (under 25 lb) permitted. www.omnihotels.com

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL Auberge de la Fontaine

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1301 Rue Rachel Est, H2J 2K1 Tel (514) 597 0166 or (800) 597 0597 Fax (514) 597 0496 Rooms 21 An open kitchen downstairs allows guests to help themselves to snacks, cookies, cheeses, and patés daily until midnight. This boutique hotel comprises two Second-Empire homes converted into a stylish, eccentrically decorated hotel. Some rooms overlook Parc La Fontaine. www.aubergedelafontaine.com

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL Le Jardin d’Antoine

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2024 Rue St-Denis, H2X 3K7 Tel (514) 843 4506 or (800) 361 4506 Fax (514) 281 1491 Rooms 25 Find extra tranquility in deluxe rooms overlooking the small interior courtyard garden at the rear of this charming old home converted into a comfortable inn. All rooms are bright and airy, some have jacuzzis. A complimentary deluxe continental breakfast includes freshly made croissants. www.hotel-jardin-antoine.qc.ca

VIEUX-MONTREAL Auberge du Vieux-Port

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97 Rue de la Commune Est, H2Y 1J1 Tel (514) 876 0081 or (888) 660 7678 Fax (514) 876 8923 Rooms 27 Enjoy beverages on the roof terrace which overlooks the park lands, bike paths, as well as the boats and activities that make the Vieux Port an active, fun place to visit. Elegant, old-fashioned rooms feature hardwood floors and cutstone walls. There is a prize-winning dining room – Restaurant Les Remparts. www.aubergeduvieuxport.com

VIEUX-MONTREAL Auberge les Passants du Sans Soucy

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171 Rue Saint-Paul Ouest, H2Y 1Z5 Tel (514) 842 2634 Fax (514) 842 2912 Rooms 9 This 1723 B&B in Vieux-Montreal contrasts lace curtains against cut stone and polished hardwood floors. The lobby serves as a gallery promoting local artists. Owners transformed this old warehouse by purchasing and installing European and Quebec antiques. Superb breakfast. Owners spin wonderful tales of the city. www.lesanssoucy.com Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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VIEUX-MONTREAL Hôtel Gault

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449 Rue Saint-Hélène, H2Y 2K9 Tel (514) 904 1616 or (866) 904 1616 Fax (514) 904 1717 Rooms 30 Enter this light-flooded boutique hotel where exemplary service matches contemporary design. Every room is uniquely interpreted but each has a flat-screen TV and bathroom with heated concrete floor. The Gault restaurant offers excellent meals. The lobby features an inviting recessed library where you can curl up with a book. www.hotelgault.com

VIEUX-MONTREAL Hostellerie Pierre du Calvet AD 1725

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405 Rue Bonsecours, H2Y 3C3 Tel (514) 282 1725 or (866) 544 1725 Fax (514) 282 0456 Rooms 9 There is opulent luxury in this 1725 merchant’s house, now a boutique hotel. Fireplaces, oak paneling, and deep window seats let you slip back in time as horses trot past on the cobblestone streets of Vieux-Montréal. Breakfast is served in the atrium where parrots entertain with their antics. There are two superb restaurants. www.pierreducalvet.ca

VIEUX-MONTREAL Hôtel Inter-Continental Montréal

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360 Rue Saint-Antoine Ouest, H2Y 3X4 Tel (514) 987 9900 or (888) 424 6835 Fax (514) 847 8550 Rooms 357 This elegant, modern, high-rise hotel has fitness facilities that feature a lap pool, sauna, and massage services, making this a good choice for a “resort” hotel in the heart of Montreal’s financial, shopping, and entertainment district. Babysitting services are also available. www.intercontinental.com

VIEUX-MONTREAL Hôtel Saint Paul

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355 Rue McGill, H2Y 2E8 Tel (514) 380 2222 or (866) 380 2202 Fax (514) 380 2200 Rooms 120 Described architecturally as “muscular Beaux Arts,” this former bank enjoys new life as an award-winning boutique hotel where Canada’s four elements of ice, fire, earth, and sky have been whimsically interpreted. Every chic room is eclectically furnished using such finishings as stone and silk, with heated tile floors in bathrooms. www.hotelstpaul.com

VIEUX-MONTREAL Hôtel le Saint James

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355 St. Jaques, H2Y 1N9 Tel (514) 841 3111 or (866) 841 3111 Fax (514) 841 1232 Rooms 61 The romanesque arched doorway sets a grand tone for this 1870 former bank where every sumptuously decorated room has a unique personality. A sweeping wrought-iron staircase leads from a balconied mezzanine to the Grand Salon restaurant which serves Quebec regional cuisine. There is an on-site spa. www.hotellestjames.com

Q UEBEC CITY AND THE ST QUEBEC ST. LAWRENCE RIVER BAIE SAINT-PAUL Auberge La Muse

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39 Rue Saint-Jean-Baptiste, G3Z 1M3 Tel (418) 435 6839 or (800) 841 6839 Fax (418) 435 6289 Rooms 15 This 1881 Victorian inn and spa with a secluded garden at the back is an oasis from the vibrant art galleries and stores. Well-known as a health retreat, you can enjoy a rejuvenating massage and the restaurant’s deservedly renowned haute cuisine. There are many packages and six styles of rooms, from “economic” to luxurious. www.lamuse.com

BAIE SAINT-PAUL Auberge La Maison Otis

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23 Rue Saint-Jean-Baptiste, G3Z 1M2 Tel (418) 435 2255 or (800) 267 2254 Fax (418) 435 2464 Rooms 36 Located in Quebec’s stunningly spectacular Charlevoix region, this country-style inn features a superb restaurant – every first Thursday of the month a new artist is celebrated in the Café des Artistes. Salmon fishing, fly fishing, golf, and downhill skiing are nearby. www.maisonotis.com

COTE NORD Hôtel Tadoussac

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165 Bord-de-l’Eau, Tadoussac, G0T 2A0 Tel (418) 235 4421 or (800) 561 0718 Fax (418) 235 4607 Rooms 149 With its white clapboard façade and Mansard style, cherry-red roof, this hotel built in 1942 by Canada Steamships is a historic landmark overlooking the St. Lawrence River at the Saguenay River. Take binoculars as the area is famous for whale spotting. Tennis on-site. Closed Oct–May. www.hoteltadoussac.com

GASPE La Gîte du Mont-Albert

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Parc Nacionale de la Gaspesie, G0E 2G0 Tel (418) 763 2288 or (866) 727 2427 Fax (418) 763 7803 Rooms 60 Resembling a hunting lodge, this rustic-looking inn is in the stunning Chic-Choc Mountains. Stay at the resort, lodge, or rent a cabin. Look for wildlife such as white-tailed deer and ask about caribou that eat the alpine tundra vegetation here. Varied open times (some cabins are open year-round for skiing, so check availability). www.sepaq.com

ÎLES-DE-LA-MADELEINE Hôtel au Vieux Convent

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292 route 199, Havre-aux-Maisons, G4T 5A4 Tel (418) 969 2233 Fax (418) 969 4693 Rooms 10 The old convent is a dominant stone landmark with the former dormitories converted into ocean-view rooms. The adjacent presbytery offers six apartments, some accommodating up to six people – good for families visiting these sandy islands. Excellent on-site seafood restaurant. Closed Jan–Mar. www.domaineduvieuxcouvent.com

LA MALBAIE Auberge and Restaurant Sur la Côte

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205 chemin des Falaises, G5A 1T7 Tel (418) 665 3972 or (800) 853 3972 Fax (418) 665 3231 Rooms 12 Find seclusion in this country hillside manor overlooking the spectacular St. Lawrence River. On a summer’s eve watch the sunset while sipping drinks on the patio. Some rooms have fireplaces and there are river views. An on-site restaurant offers gastronomie based on Charlevoix foods. Meals included. Chalets available. www.charlevoix.qc.ca/surlacote

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LA MALBAIE Manoir Richelieu

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181 Rue Richelieu, G5A 1X7 Tel (418) 665 3703 or (866) 540 4464 Fax (418) 665 4566 Rooms 405 Resembling a stone castle complete with turrets, this famous hotel perches on a cliff surrounded by gardens overlooking the St. Lawrence River estuary. As in all Fairmont hotels, with advanced notice your pet dog or cat is welcome. Stroll the beach nearby, bike along pathways, or play golf at heritage courses. www.fairmont.com e0S÷zh

LAC-SAINT-JEAN Hôtel du Jardin

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1400 Blvd. du Jardin, Saint-Felicien, G8K 2N8 Tel (418) 679 8422 or (800) 463 4927 Fax (418) 679 4459 Rooms 85 This comfortable modern hotel with spacious rooms (some with whirlpool baths) is mere yards from the “Véloroute des bleuets” (Blueberryy bike path) so it makes an excellent base from which to explore Lac-Saint-Jean. You can get a massage at the on-site massage center, Le Jardin d’Ô. www.hoteldujardin.com \

L’ÎLE VERT (NEAR RIVIERE-DU-LOUP) Les Maisons du Phare de l’Île Verte 28, Chemin du Phare, G0L 1K0 Tel (418) 898 2730 Fax (418) 898 4002 Rooms 9

The rooms are simple in these two lighthousekeeper’s buildings adjacent to a lighthouse. Breakfast is included, but bring groceries to prepare your lunch/dinner (there is a kitchen in the main building). Bikes and cars are prohibited. Payment is by Visa or cash only (there is no ATM on the island). Closed Nov–mid-May. www.ileverte.net/maisonsduphare h

NEW RICHMOND (GASPE) Auberge Maison Stanley House Inn

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371 Perron Ouest, G0C 2B0 Tel (418) 392 5560 Fax (418) 392 5592 Rooms 11 Formerly the fishing and hunting lodge of Canadian Governor-General Lord Stanley (who gave his name to the coveted Stanley Cup hockey award), this gracious estate home has a private beach overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. It has large lawns. Rooms are comfortably appointed in country-style furnishings. Closed Oct–May. www.stanleyhouse.ca 0h

PERCE Hotel-Motel La Normandie

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221 Route 132 West, Percé G0C 2L0 Tel (418) 782 2112 or (800) 463 0820 Fax (418) 782 2337 Rooms 45 Absorb breathtaking views of the ocean at this white clapboard inn overlooking local landmark, the Rocher Percé. In summer, sit on deck chairs placed on lawns stretching down to the sea. There are beautiful perennial gardens. The on-site fine seafood restaurant is open for breakfast and dinner only. Closed Oct–May. www.normandieperce.com \\

QUEBEC CITY Hôtel Particulier Belley 249 Rue Saint-Paul, G1K 3W5 Tel (418) 692 1694 or (888) 692 1694 Fax (418) 692 1696 Rooms 8

This former tavern shelters beneath the old fortifications of the city, located next to the Marché du Vieux-Port, many antique stores, galleries, and museums. Along with the individually decorated small rooms, families/friends should ask about the small “conciergerie,” a suite where up to four can stay for a monthly rental. www.oricom.ca/belley

QUEBEC CITY Hôtel Clarendon

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57 Rue Sainte-Anne, G1R 3X4 Tel (418) 692 2480 or (888) 554 6001 Fax (418) 692 4652 Rooms 143 After strolling Quebec City’s cobblestone streets, step into old-fashioned luxury in this 1870 heritage hotel. Eavesdrop on Quebec news: this is a popular hangout for politicians, perhaps because Quebec’s Premier lives in the adjacent Price Building when parliament is in session. www.hotelclarendon.com

QUEBEC CITY Le Priori

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15 Rue Sault-au-Matelot, G1K 3Y7 Tel (418) 692 3992 or (800) 351 3992 Fax (418) 692 0883 Rooms 26 Stay in the former heritage residence of architect Jean Baillairgé, who designed many of Quebec City’s religious edifices. This boutique hotel features intriguing rooms where contemporary furniture and art juxtaposes with walls of roughcut stone. Located at the foot of Cap Diamant, it is a short walk to lively stores and galleries. www.hotellepriori.com

QUEBEC CITY Château Frontenac

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1 Rue des Carrières, G1R 4P7 Tel (418) 692 3861 or (800) 441 1414 Fax (418) 692 1751 Rooms 618 Known as the castle on the cliff in the heart of old Quebec City, the baronial style exterior of this impressive landmark ((see p134) is reflected inside with broad hallways and detailed stone-work. Rooms overlooking the St. Lawrence River offer magnificent views. Stroll Dufferin Terrace overlooking the river then retreat to the cozy bar. www.fairmont.com

RIVIERE-DU-LOUP Hôtel Levesque

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171 Fraser, G5R 1E2 Tel (418) 862 6927 or (800) 463 1236 Fax (418) 862 5385 Rooms 83 Located on the St. Lawrence River’s south shore, this hotel is ideal if you seek pampering. A waterfall courses through the tranquil gardens, which gently descend to the river. Many suites have whirlpools for further relaxation after spa treatments. Sample the four-course “discovery menu” where regional foods are highlighted. www.hotellevesque.com

SEPT-ÎLES Hôtel Sept-Îles

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451 Ave. Arnaud, G4R 3B3 Tel (418) 962 2581 or (800) 463 1753 Fax (418) 962 6918 Rooms 91 Now a glorified three-storey motel, the bayside hotel has balconies overlooking the islands. Modernized rooms offer basic accommodations and there is an on-site fitness center for work-outs. The restaurant is open for breakfast only. www.hotelseptiles.com

TROIS-RIVIERES Delta Trois-Rivières

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1620 Rue Notre-Dame, G9A 6E5 Tel (819) 376 1991 or (800) 268 1133 Fax (819) 372 5975 Rooms 159 This modern high-rise hotel overlooking the St. Lawrence River has an on-site health spa, steam room, sauna, and fitness center. Families welcome: kids can enjoy the pool as well as a Sunday breakfast buffet. Small pets are permitted – advise you are bringing an animal when reserving. www.deltahotels.com Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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GATINEAU Auberge de la Gare

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205 Blvd. Saint-Joseph, J8Y 3X3 Tel (819) 778 8085 or (866) 778 8085 Rooms 42 Located in old Hull (Gatineau) this postmodern boutique hotel packs no pretensions yet offers courteous service and rooms that are extra quiet because of special construction considerations. Family packages available. Conveniently located near bridge to Ottawa, bike paths to Gatineau Park, museums, and restaurants. www.aubergedelagare.ca 0Sh

LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS Auberge Le Rouet

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1288 Rue Lavoie, Val-David, J0T 2N0 Tel (819) 322 3221 or (800) 537 6838 Rooms 30 Since 1957 this Swiss-style auberge has offered excellent service with a “log cabin” feel. Guests sit together during meals, so a homey atmosphere is encouraged. Close to rails-to-trails Linear Parkway, a bike path known as Le P’tit train du Nord that traverses nearby Val David village. Rooms sleep up to four guests. www.aubergelerouet.com

LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS Hôtel Far Hills Inn

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3399 ch Far Hills, Val-Morin, J0T 2R0 Tel (819) 322 2014 or (800) 567 6636 Fax (819) 322 1995 Rooms 64 Forested hills surround this charming inn that overlooks a private lake, tennis courts, and 80 miles (120 km) of hiking and cross-country ski trails, making it a superb choice for active-minded guests. Art in the dozen gardens, volleyball, badminton, and shuffleboard are a few of the on-site activities. Swedish massages available. www.farhillsinn.com

LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS Auberge de la Montagne-Coupée

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1000 Chemin Montagne-Coupée, Saint-Jean-de-Matha, J0K 2S0 Tel (450) 886 3891 Fax (450) 886 5401 Rooms 47 With rates that include breakfast and dinner, this comfortable auberge is good value. Its name means “cut mountain” because of a piece of rock that slipped from the face of the mountain that the inn overlooks. There is a health spa, fine regional dining, and near trails for cross-country skiing, and hiking. www.montagnecoupee.com

LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS Château Mont-Tremblant

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3045 de la Chapelle, J8E 1E1 Tel (819) 681 7000 or (866) 540 4415 Fax (819) 681 7099 Rooms 314 Luxury in the Laurentian mountains. Comfort and elegance await you after your ski or mountain bike experience on Mont Tremblant’s trail network. Luxuriate in the spa. Enjoy artwork depicting Quebec legends as well as Canadian wildlife such as moose and bear. Superb restaurants serve delicious Fairmont brunches and regional fare. www.fairmont.com

MAGOG Auberge l’Étoile sur le Lac

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1200 Principale Ouest, J1X 2B8 Tel (819) 843 6521 or (800) 567 2727 Fax (819) 843 5007 Rooms 52 The only inn on the lake, this postmodern style hotel has many rooms with balconies overlooking pretty Lac Memphremagog. During summer, meals are served on the lakeside terrace. It is situated close to the village of Magog for stores, pubs, and restaurants.There are on-site spa facilities. www.etoile-sur-le-lac.com

NORTH HATLEY Hovey Manor

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575 chemin Hovey, J0B 2C0 Tel (819) 842 2421 or (800) 661 2421 Fax (819) 842 2248 Rooms 40 This charming, romantic, historic inn is modeled on George Washington’s Virginia home. Beautiful grounds overlook a lake with beaches. Rates include kayaks, canoes, paddleboats, and windsurfers. In winter sleigh rides, a skating rink, and ice fishing are available.There is an Aveda spa. Many rooms feature fireplaces and four-poster beds. www.hoveymanor.com

NUNAVIK Auberge Kuujjuaq

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Kuujjuaq, J0M 1C0 Tel (819) 964 2903 Fax (819) 964 2031 Rooms 22 The beautiful, elemental tundra wilderness of northern Quebec can be explored from this small lodge with restaurant featuring game and fresh-caught wild fish. Lodging in Quebec’s far north is scarce, hence competitive and expensive so reserve well ahead for a comfortable, basic room with private bath and television – these are luxuries in the North.

OUTAOUAIS Château Montebello

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392 Rue Notre-Dame, Montebello, J0V 1L0 Tel (819) 423 6341 or (866) 540 4462 Fax (819) 423 1133 Rooms 211 The largest log hotel in the world stands on the shores of the Ottawa River. The six-sided fireplace is a perfect gathering spot for a scotch before a dinner of exquisite local cuisine. Sister property, Kenauk, has 4-star chalets on remote lakes. Horseback riding, skiing, and cross-country skiing trails conspire to make your stay memorable. www.fairmont.com

RICHELIEU VALLEY Hostellerie Les Trois Tilleuls

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290 rue Richelieu, St-Marc-sur-Richelieu, J0L 2E0 Tel (514) 856 7787 or (800) 263 2230 Fax (450) 584 3146 Rooms 41 Luxurious Château & Relais auberge borders the historic Richelieu River. Every room has a balcony overlooking the water. There is an on-site Spa Givenchy, an art gallery, and beautiful gardens and walkways. Its restaurant is renowned for using the freshest regional produce. www.lestroistilleuls.com

ROUYN-NORANDA Hôtel Albert

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84 Principale, J9X 4P2 Tel (819) 762 3545 or (888) 725 2378 Fax (819) 762 7157 Rooms 51 With a completely unadorned façade, this old-fashioned downtown hotel built in the 1930s was renovated in 1997 and features large comfortable rooms with courteous service from friendly staff. Pets are allowed (please give advance notice). Located in the heart of the city, it is close to restaurants, stores, and pubs. www.bestwestern.com

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TORONTO AIRPORT Days Hotel & Conference Centre Toronto Airport East

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1677 Wilson Avenue, M3L 1A5 Tel (800) 267 0997 or (416) 249 8171 Fax (416) 243 7342 Rooms 199 This modern hotel for business leisure travel is near Pearson International Airport and the corners of major highways 400 & 401. It has friendly service, an airport shuttle service, and modern conference and banquet facilities. Rooms have data ports, high speed Internet access, and on-demand movies. Informal licensed restaurant. www.daysto.com e0S÷zh

AIRPORT Novotel Toronto Airport

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135 Carlingview Drive, M9W 5E7 Tel (416) 637 7000 Fax (416) 637 7001 Rooms 120 A modern hotel across from the airport, close to major highways, with easy access to downtown Toronto. There is an airport shuttle service, indoor pool, whirlpool, fitness facilities, meeting /event space, full catering services, restaurant, and lounge. Business services include wi-fi Internet access, business center, and a free local fax number. www.novotel.com

AIRPORT Delta Toronto Airport West

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5444 Dixon Road, Missasaga, L4W 2L2 Tel (905) 624 1144 Fax (416) 675 4022 Rooms 250 A large, modern, multi-story hotel, south of major highway 401, and close to major routes for easy access to downtown Toronto. Near the airport, the hotel caters primarily to corporate travelers, groups, and associations. Nearby attractions include corporate headquarters, shopping centers, theaters, and the Mississauga City Centre. www.deltahotels.com

AIRPORT Westin Bristol Place Toronto Airport

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950 Dixon Road, M9W 5N4 Tel (416) 675 9444 Fax (416) 675 4426 Rooms 288 A business hotel with airport shuttle service. Rooms have fax/modem hook-ups and Internet access. There is an indoor pool and Zachary’s fine-dining restaurant. Close to major highways 401 and 427, downtown Toronto, the Woodbine Shopping Centre, Woodbine Racetrack, and Paramount Canada’s Wonderland amusement park. www.starwoodhotels.com e0S÷zh

DOWNTOWN The Primrose Best Western Hotel

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111 Carlton St., M5B 2G3 Tel (416) 977 8000 Fax (416) 977 6323 Rooms 350 This hotel is situated in central downtown Toronto, with newly renovated rooms and complimentary wireless Internet access. The Primrose Restaurant and Bar offers continental or breakfast buffets, and a full dinner menu. There is a seasonal swimming pool. www.torontoprimrosehotel.com

DOWNTOWN Delta Chelsea

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33 Gerrard Street, M5G 1Z4 Tel (416) 595 1975 Fax (416) 585 4375 Rooms 1590 This entrally located hotel is within walking distance of the city’s best shopping districts, world-class theaters, vibrant nightlife, and exciting attractions. It has six restaurants/lounges, an in-room spa service, and separate adult/family recreation facilities and pools, including “Corkscrew” – downtown Toronto’s only indoor waterslide. www.deltachelsea.com

DOWNTOWN Hilton Toronto Hotel

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145 Richmond Street West, M5H 2L2 Tel (416) 869 3456 Fax (416) 869 3187 Rooms 600 This modern 32-story hotel is situated near Queen’s Park, trendy shopping on Queen Street West, the CN Tower, SkyDome, theaters, nightclubs, and the financial district. Rooms have cable TV, pay-per-view, a minibar, and high-speed Internet access. There are three restaurants, two bars, a pool, a fitness center, and multiple meeting rooms. www.hilton.com

DOWNTOWN Radisson Hotel Admiral

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249 Queen’s Quay West, M5J 2N5 Tel (800) 967 9182 or (416) 203 3333 Fax (416) 203 3100 Rooms 157 This waterfront hotel close to the CN Tower and Ontario Place has stunning views of the harbor and islands. As well as fitness and business centers and an outdoor pool, it has the award-winning Commodore’s Restaurant and Bosun’s Bar. www.radisson.com/torontoca_admiral e0z

DOWNTOWN Strathcona Hotel

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60 York Street, M5J 1S8 Tel (416) 363 3321 Fax (416) 363 4679 Rooms 194 This boutique hotel in downtown Toronto dating from 1945 has electronic locks and a 24-hour safety deposit. Corporate rooms include a desk, data ports, and high-speed wireless Internet access. Suites have a mini-fridge. There is access to the Wellington Club with full-service racquet and fitness clubs. There is no parking lot. www.thestrathconahotel.com

DOWNTOWN Hotel Le Germain

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30 Mercer Street, M5V 1H3 Tel (416) 345 9500 Fax (416) 345 9501 Rooms 122 Luxurious comfort, a contemporary atmosphere, and exclusive service can be found in this downtown boutique hotel. Amenities include a library with an open hearth fireplace, a complimentary cappuccino bar, and the Chez Victor intimate restaurant with stylish decor. Late checkout is permitted. Pet friendly. www.germaintoronto.com

DOWNTOWN Le Royal Meridien King Edward

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37 King Street East, M5C 1E9 Tel (416) 863 9700 Fax (416) 863 4102 Rooms 298 The luxurious century-old ‘King Eddy’ has a Royal Club floor and offers Afternoon Tea with the sommelier. Visitors have included Rudyard Kipling, Mark Twain, and The Beatles. The architecture is French Renaissance style with marble columns, a lobby skylight, and sculptures. There is a spa and Internet access. www.starwoodhotels.com/lemeridien Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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DOWNTOWN Sheraton Centre Toronto

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123 Queen Street West, M5H 2M9 Tel (416) 361 1000 Fax (416) 947 4854 Rooms 1337 In the center of the entertainment and business district, the Sheraton is close to shopping, theater, restaurants, and is connected to PATH – the 16-mile underground complex of stores and services. Childcare is available. There is a 43rdfloor Club Lounge and 24-hour room service. Pet friendly, provides dog beds. www.starwoodhotels.com/sheraton

DOWNTOWN Sutton Place Hotel

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955 Bay Street, M5S 2A2 Tel (416) 924 9221 Fax (416) 924 1778 Rooms 294 This elegant European style downtown hotel has original works of art and antiques. Amenities include the Relaxed Accents Restaurant & Bar with continental cuisine, ten function rooms, three ballrooms, residential apartments – La Grande Résidence, a business center, indoor pool, sauna, beauty salon, and exercise room. www.toronto.suttonplace.com

DOWNTOWN The Fairmont Royal York

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100 Front Street West, M5J 1E3 Tel (416) 368 2511 Fax (416) 368 9040 Rooms 1365 A landmark luxury hotel across from Union Station, close to the harbor. It has five restaurants, four lounges, 24-hour room service, a Xerox Business Centre on the Lobby Level, and the Elizabeth Milan Spa. There is a ‘Fairmont Gold’ service with private check-in/check-out, concierge services, and exclusive lounge. Pet friendly. www.fairmont.com/royalyork

DOWNTOWN The Westin Harbour Castle

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1 Harbour Square, M5J 1A6 Tel (416) 869 1600 Fax (416) 869 0573 Rooms 977 This luxury waterfront hotel with twin towers, scenic views, two restaurants, and a glass-enclosed walkway to the conference center, is close to the financial and theater districts, and has a free local area shuttle service. There is a surcharge for multiline phones/Internet access. Outdoor tennis courts. www.starwoodhotels.com/westin e0S÷zh

DOWNTOWN Windsor Arms Hotel

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18 St. Thomas St., M5S 3E7 Tel (416) 971 9666 Fax (416) 921 9121 Rooms 26 suites + 2 rooms This neo-Gothic boutique hotel has a stone carved doorway and vestibule, mahogany furnishings, fireplaces, bathrooms with limestone floors/walls, and luxury suites with butler service. There is a Courtyard Cafe for fine dining, Tea Room for afternoon tea, Club 22 for casual dining, a spa, beauty salon, pool, and exercise facilities. www.windsorarmshotel.com

DOWNTOWN Four Seasons Hotel

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21 Avenue Road, M5R 2G1 Tel (416) 964 0411 Fax (416) 964 2301 Rooms 380 In the heart of Yorkville, Toronto’s fashionable shopping, dining, and entertainment quarter, the Four Seasons has majestic chandeliers, high ceilings, wood paneling, a Regency Ballroom, panoramic views of the city from the 32nd floor, and full business servcies. Great for star-spotting during the Toronto Film Festival. www.fourseasons.com

DOWNTOWN Metropolitan Hotel

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108 Chestnut Street, M5G 1R3 Tel (416) 977 5000 Fax (416) 977 9513 Rooms 422 This luxurious hotel in the financial and shopping district with complimentary morning limousine service to downtown has elegant decor in muted shades, European linens, and windows that open. Eat at the modern Hemispheres restaurant or the luxurious Lai Wah Heen Asian restaurant for intimate dinners or dim sum lunches. www.metropolitan.com

EAST END Delta Toronto East

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2035 Kennedy Road, M1T 3G2 Tel (416) 299 1500 Fax (416) 299 8959 Rooms 371 Near highway 401, with easy access to downtown, this hotel offers a children’s program, fitness center (24 hours), squash courts, miniature putting green, indoor pool, Atrium with waterslide, and full business facilities. Restaurants include the Whitesides Terrace Grill, Sagano Japanese cuisine, and TW’s Bar and Grill. Pets allowed. www.deltahotels.com

EAST END Hilton Suites Toronto/Markham Conference Centre & Spa

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8500 Warden Aveue, L6G 1A5 Tel (905) 470 8500 Fax (905) 477 8611 Rooms 500 Located in the hi-tech area of Greater Toronto, the hotel caters to leisure, business, and convention travel. There are tworoom suites with coffee/tea service, mini-bar/refrigerator, ironing boards/irons, hair dryers, and complimentary Internet access. Wheelchair accessible rooms are available. Totally non-smoking. Three on-site restaurants. www.hilton.com

NORTH Delta Markham

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50 East Valhalla Drive, L3R 0A3 Tel (905) 477 2010 Fax (905) 477 2026 Rooms 204 This modern hotel in North York’s hi-tech sector, in the north part of the Greater Toronto Area, is 30 mintues’ drive from the airport. It also provides convenient access to downtown Toronto. There is Internet access. Enjoy Sunday brunch at the Tivoli Garden Restaurant. www.deltahotels.com

WEST END Drake Hotel

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1150 Queen Street West, M6J 1J3 Tel (416) 531 5042 Fax (416) 531 9493 Rooms 19 Chosen as one of the 500 best hotels in the world by Travel + Leisure magazine 2006, this historic (1890) hotel in Queen West Art and Design District, has a grand lobby staircase, 60-year-old mural, 110-year-old terrazzo floors, and exposed brick. Known as a Bohemian-inspired hotel designed for the local neighborhood. www.thedrakehotel.ca

WEST END Gladstone Hotel

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1214 Queen Street West, M6J 1J6 Tel (416) 531 4635 Rooms 37 Unique 1889 landmark hotel. Rooms designed by individual artists (Teen Queen room, Skygazer Room), and 20” flat screen TV with CD/DVD player, Internet access, hardwood floors, high ceilings, exposed brick, safety deposit box. Busy center for local art events, cabaret, and film screenings; vibrant, eclectic neighborhood. www.gladstonehotel.com

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OTTAWA AND EASTERN ONTARIO BROCKVILLE Quality Hotel & Conference Centre Royal Brock

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100 Stewart Boulevard, Brockville, Ontario, K6V 4W3 Tel (613) 345 1400 Fax (613) 345 5402 Rooms 72 In historic Brockville, ‘City of the 1000 Islands’, this hotel is close to highway 401, within walking distance of shopping, and a 1-hour drive to Ottawa. There is a sports club, indoor pool, hot tub, three squash courts, a business center and wireless Internet, free motorcoach parking, and group tour menus. The rose garden is popular for wedding. www.choicehotels.ca 0zh

COBURG King George Inn & Spa

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77 Albert Street, Cobourg, Ontario, K9A 2L9 Tel (905) 373 4610 Fax (905) 373 4514 Rooms 20 A character inn built in 1906, the restaurant is in the former Jail’s Administrative Office and the west buildings were former Jail Cells. The rooms reflect local history – names include the Warden’s Keep, the Privileged Prisoner, and Albert’s Library. Modern touches include high-speed Internet access. www.thekinggeorgeinn.com

COLLINGWOOD The Westin Trillium House, Blue Mountain

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22 Mountain Dr, RR3, Collingwood, Ontario, L9Y 3Z2 Tel (705) 443 8080 Fax (705) 443 8081 Rooms 228 A Georgian Bay lodge-style hotel at Blue Mountain ski resort. Facilities include the Oliver & Bonacini Café Grill, a 24hour Gym, Kids Club®, a games room, outdoor heated swimming pool, and two hot tubs. Kitchenettes are available. There’s also the‘Plunge!’ aquatic center and nearby championship golf courses. www.westinbluemountain.com 0zh

FENELON FALLS Eganridge Inn & Spa

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26 Country Club Drive, RR3, Fenelon Falls, Ontario, K0M 1N0 Tel (705) 738 5111 Fax (705) 738 5111 Rooms 23 Two hours’ drive from Toronto, this upscale Kawartha resort has 12 guest rooms with private patio or balcony, private cottages, and a six-bedroom 1837 house built of square-cut logs. Local cottagers arrive by boat to sample the Swissinfluenced cuisine. There is a spa, tennis courts, and an interesting nine-hole golf course. www.eganridge.com 0÷zh

HALIBURTON Delta Pinestone Resort

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4252 County Road 21, Haliburton, Ontario, K0M 1S0 Tel (705) 457 1800 Fax (705) 457 1783 Rooms 103 A mecca for golfers and outdoor enthusiasts, this resort has over 250 acres in scenic Haliburton Highlands, an 18hole championship golf course, tennis courts, an indoor and outdoor pool, and fitness facilities. Accommodations are in villas, chalets, and resort rooms, with fine dining and a casual restaurant and lounge. www.deltahotels.com 0S÷h

HALIBURTON Sir Sam’s Inn & Waterspa

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Eagle Lake, Ontario, K0M 1N0 Tel (705) 754 2188 Fax (705) 754 4262 Rooms 25 Historic, elegant inn on Eagle Lake, in Haliburton Highlands, with beachfront activities: water-ski, windsurf, sail, kayak, and canoe. Outdoor pool and indoor sauna. Dining room with wine cellar. Original stone and timber mansion, also 16 lakeside rooms, most with fireplace and whirlpool. Conference wing. Luxurious WaterSpa. www.sirsamsinn.com

HUNTSVILLE Arowhon Pines Lodge

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Algonquin Park, Box 10001, Huntsville, Ontario, P1H 2G5 Tel (705) 633 5661 Fax (705) 633 5795 Rooms 60 This historic family-owned summer resort in Alonquin Park is 3 hours’ scenic drive from Toronto. In a natural setting on a private lake, it has rustic log cabins and luxury suites along the lake shore. Food is well prepared from a renowned kitchen, and there are canoes, sailboats, kayaks, trails, tennis courts, and a sauna for use. Meals included. www.arowhonpines.ca

HUNTSVILLE Delta Grandview Resort

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939 Hwy 60, Grandview Drive, Huntsville, Ontario, P1H 1Z4 Tel (705) 789 4417 Fax (705) 789 1674 Rooms 123 A luxury Muskoka resort on Fairy Lake dating from 1911, with daily nature activities, including wildlife watching, canoe excursions, and expert-guided hikes. Accommodations are in contemporary condos and luxury suites with wood-burning fireplaces. The spa offers facials and massages. www.deltahotels.com

KINGSTON Days Inn Kingston Hotel & Convention Centre

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33 Benson Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7K 5W2 Tel (613) 546 3661 Fax (613) 544 4126 Rooms 161 A large hotel in downtown Kingston, near major highway 401. Some rooms have balcony and refrigerator. There is a seasonal outdoor pool, lobby business center, fitness facility, and 24-hour Denny’s Restaurant. There are Custom Business and Group packages for groups from 5 to 500 people. www.daysinnkingston.com

KINGSTON Confederation Place Hotel

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237 Ontario Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 2Z4 Tel (613) 549 6300 Fax (613) 549 1508 Rooms 95 A modern 5-story hotel in downtown Kingston, on the waterfront, within walking distance to Confederation Place park, stores, and theaters. There are conference facilities, casual fine dining at WJ’s Waterfront Restaurant, and Internet access. Popular stopover for student groups, hockey tournaments, and business travelers. www.confederationplace.com

KINGSTON Four Points by Sheraton Kingston

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285 King Street East, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3B1 Tel (613) 544 4434 Fax (613) 548 1782 Rooms 171 A new nine-story modern hotel in downtown Kingston, near the waterfront and Norman Rogers Kingston Airport and highway 401. Deluxe rooms and suites have high-speed Internet and Four Comfort Beds. The King Street Sizzle Restaurant & Bar has an open kitchen and outside patio. There is a pool, sauna, and whirpool. www.starwoodhotels.com Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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KINGSTON Holiday Inn Kingston Waterfront Hotel

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2 Princess Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 1A2 Tel (613) 549 8400 Fax (613) 549 3508 Rooms 197 A renovated waterfront hotel with conference facilities in Ontario’s Thousand Island area with a roof garden dining room and close to Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River. Annual events include the Kingston Buskers Rendezvous, Kingston Blues Festival, and the Kingston Film Festival. www.hikingstonwaterfront.com

MARKHAM Howard Johnson Hotel

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555 Cochrane Dr (Hwy 404 & Hwy 7), Markham, Ontario, L3R 8E3 Tel (905) 479 5000 Fax (905) 479 1186 Rooms 172 Near highways 404, 7, and 401, and close to Toronto, this hotel has free Internet access, morning newspapers, parking, and a 24-hour business center. It also has an indoor pool, sauna, whirlpool, and exercise room. Rooms have a refrigerator. Deluxe Junior Suites have a microwave. www.hojomarkham.com

NORTH BAY Best Western North Bay Hotel & Conference Centre

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700 Lakeshore Drive, North Bay, Ontario, P1A 2G4 Tel (705) 474 5800 Fax (705) 474 8699 Rooms 130 This conference hotel across from Lake Nipissing is 12 miles (19 km) from Jack Garland Airport. Facilities include an indoor pool, exercise facility, hot tub, and sauna, Joso’s restaurant for dinner, and Courtyard Café for breakfast or lunch. Near museums, Chief Commanda Cruises, Celtfest, and Capitol Centre for the Arts. www.bestwesternnorthbay.com z

OTTAWA Gasthaus Switzerland Inn

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89 Daly Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6E6 Tel (613) 237 0335 Fax (613) 594 3327 Rooms 22 This family-run boutique hotel in downtown Ottawa is situated amid restaurants, boutiques, world-renowned museums, the Rideau Canal, and the Parliament buildings. There are fireplaces in some rooms, Jacuzzi tubs in honeymoon suites, a large garden, and free high-speed wireless Internet access. Environmentally friendly. www.gasthausswitzerlandinn.com

OTTAWA Days Inn – Ottawa Airport

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365 Hunt Club Road, Ottawa, Ontario, K1V 1C1 Tel (613) 739 7555 Fax (613) 739 7005 Rooms 81 This modern hotel is very near Macdonald Cartier International Airport and capital city attractions such as Parliament Hill, Ottawa Carleton Race Tracks, Ottawa Flying Club, and downtown shopping, theater, and nightclubs. Honeymoon suites have Jacuzzis. There is a swimming pool, spa and fitness room. www.daysinnottawa.com

OTTAWA Lord Elgin Hotel

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100 Elgin Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 5K8 Tel (613) 235 3333 Fax (613) 235 3223 Rooms 355 This downtown hotel across from Confederation Park, the National Arts Centre, the Rideau Canal, Parliament Buildings, and Ottawa Rideau Centre has picture windows and Biedermeier-style luxury furnishings. Facilities include a lap pool, whirlpool, sauna, and fitness equipment. www.lordelginhotel.ca

OTTAWA Sheraton Ottawa

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150 Albert Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 5G2 Tel (613) 238 1500 Fax (613) 235 2723 Rooms 236 A modern downtown hotel close to Ottawa International Airport and near Parliament Hill, the National Arts Centre, and the National Gallery of Canada. There is free Internet access, a Starbuck’s Coffee Bar, light meals at Sasha’s Bar, and formal dining at the Carleton Grill, as well as an indoor heated pool and fitness center. www.starwoodhotels.com

OTTAWA Delta Ottawa

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361 Queen Street, ottawa, Ontario, K1R 7S9 Tel (613) 238 6000 Fax (613) 238 2290 Rooms 328 This large hotel in downtown Ottawa has studio kitchenettes and bedroom suites with balconies. There is a health club with an indoor pool, whirlpool, children’s activity and creative center, and two-story waterslide. The Trendy Sparks Lounge and Mystique Café serve dinners, and the 5-star Capital Dining Room has international cuisine. www.deltahotel.com

OTTAWA Fairmont Château Laurier

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1 Rideau Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 8S7 Tel (613) 241 1414 Fax (613) 562 7030 Rooms 428 This landmark hotel (built in 1912 to resemble a French chateau) is steps away from Parliament Hill and the Rideau Canal. It has hosted royalty, heads of state, and celebrities. Facilities include an indoor swimming pool, landscaped outdoor gardens, wood-burning fireplaces, free wireless Internet, and massage. www.fairmont.com

SAULTE STE MARIE Days Inn Sault Ste. Marie

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320 Bay Street, Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, P6A 1X1 Tel (705) 759 8200 Fax (705) 942 9500 Rooms 115 A downtown hotel opposite Station Mall, adjacent to Steelback Centre and near the Agawa Canyon Tour Train. The Daybreak Café serves a continental buffet. There is an indoor pool, sauna, and fitness center and a business center with computer and Internet access. 24-hour front desk. www.daysinnsault.com

THUNDER BAY Best Western Nor’ Wester Resort

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2080 Highway 61, Thunder Bay, Ontario, P7J 1B8 Tel (807) 473 9123 Fax (807) 473 9600 Rooms 91 This modern hotel close to Thunder Bay International Airport, Fort William Historical Park, and the Loch Lomond Ski Area, has a huge amethyst fireplace and is near golfing, fishing, dog sledding, downhill and cross-country skiing. Amenities include Internet access, a fitness center, a heated indoor pool, sauna, and steam room. www.bestwestern.com

TOBERMORY Blue Bay Motel

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32 Bay Street Little Tub Harbour Tobermory, Ontario, N0H 2R0 Tel (519) 596 2392 Fax (519) 596 2335 Rooms 16 This spacious motel has balconies overlooking Little Tub Harbour in Tobermory and is centrally located in the heart of a beautiful historic fishing village, within walking distance of stores, restaurants, tour boat docks, the Ferry dock, and the head of the Bruce Trail. www.bluebay-motel.com

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THE GREAT G LAKES S BAYFIELD The Little Inn of Bayfield

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26 Main Street, Bayfield, Ontario, N0M 1G0 Tel (519) 565 2611 Fax (519) 565 5474 Rooms 28 A pretty boutique hotel with a veranda and traditional rooms in a historic Main House or contemporary Guest Cottage. With unique beds, custom-made duvets, and antique furnishings, many rooms also have large whirlpool tubs and gas fireplaces. Babysitting/dog walking services available. The menu features local Huron County products. www.littleinn.com

GUELPH Ramada Guelph

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716 Gordon Street, Guelph, Ontario, N1G 1Y6 Tel (519) 836 1240 Fax (519) 763 5225 Rooms 104 Across from the University of Guelph in parklike grounds, the Ramada offers high-speed Internet, free parking, the Gordon restaurant, and a renovated Library Lounge. Rooms have windows that open or a balcony with sliding door. There is an outdoor swimming pool and sundeck, open from May to September. www.ramadaguelph.com

HAMILTON Sheraton Hotel, Hamilton

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116 King Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, L8P 4V3 Tel (905) 529 5515 Fax (905) 529 8266 Rooms 301 Located downtown in the business district, this Sheraton is close to Copps Coliseum and shopping malls. Rooms have views of Lake Ontario or the Niagara Escarpment. Chagall’s On Two T restaurant offers relaxed dining and Sunday Jazz brunch, and the Tonic Lounge has dancing. There is a pool, sun deck, and fitness center. www.starwoodhotels.com

LONDON Four Points by Sheraton London

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1150 Wellington Road South, London, Ontario, N6E 1M3 Tel (519) 681 0600 Fax (519) 681 8222 Rooms 181 This modern hotel is located less than a mile north of major highway 401, and within walking distance of downtown White Oaks shopping mall, restaurants, and movie theaters. Rooms include suites with separate living rooms and king bed or two double beds. There is a heated indoor pool and sauna. www.starwoodhotels.com

LONDON Hilton London Ontario

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300 King Street, London, Ontario, N6B 1S2 Tel (519) 439 1661 Fax (519) 439 9672 Rooms 323 In a downtown location, close to London International Airport , VIA Rail Station, the Greyhound Bus Terminal, and highway 401, this Hilton offers business-class accommodations with complimentary breakfast and hors d’oeuvres. www.hilton.com

MIDLAND Red Carpet Inn/Park-Villa Motel

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751 Yonge Street, Midland, Ontario, L4R 2E1 Tel (705) 526 2219 Fax (705) 526 1346 Rooms 41 This two-story building close to downtown overlooks Midland’s Little Lake Park and has a sandy beach and lake activities. There are standard and deluxe rooms, executive suites, and a utility suite with two queen beds, sofa bed, full kitchen, dinning room, 27-inch cable TV, VCR, and Jacuzzi. www.parkvillamotel.com

NIAGARA FALLS Comfort Inn Clifton Hill

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4960 Clifton Hill, Niagara Falls, Ontario, L2E 6S8 Tel (905) 358 3293 or (800) 263 2557 Fax (905) 358 3818 Rooms 185 This modern hotel in the vibrant, colorful Clifton Hill Tourist District, ’The Hill’, is close to museums, restaurants, nightlife, and the Niagara Falls. There is a tropical indoor pool, complimentary wireless Internet, and deluxe continental breakfast. www.comfortniagara.com

NIAGARA FALLS Sheraton on the Falls

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5875 Falls Avenue, Niagara Falls, Ontario, L2G 3K7 Tel (905) 374 4444 Fax (905) 371 0157 Rooms 670 Directly across from the Niagara Falls, the Sheraton is connected to the 20-acre Falls Avenue complex – Casino Niagara, Rainforest Café, Hard Rock Café and Hard Rock Club, MGM Studio Plaza, Hershey Store, and 4-D movie theaters. There is a workout room, a spa, and Fallsview Restaurant. Rooms have floor to ceiling windows. www.niagarafallshotel.com

NIAGARA ON THE LAKE Charles Inn

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209 Queen Street, Niagara on the Lake, Ontario, L0S 1J0 Tel (905) 468 4588 Fax (905) 468 4588 Rooms 12 This two-story 1832 manor house inn with original Georgian architecture has private verandas overlooking a golf course, main street, and Lake Ontario. Many guestrooms have wood burning/gas fireplaces and guests can enjoy breakfast in bed, in the dining room, or on the veranda. Casual, relaxed, and romantic. www.charlesinn.ca

NIAGARA ON THE LAKE Harbour House

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85 Melville Street, Niagara on the Lake, Ontario, L0S 1J0 Tel (905) 468 4683 Fax (905) 468 0366 Rooms 31 A luxurious hotel in historic Niagara-on-the-Lake offering king-sized feather-top beds, quality linens, down duvet, a fireplace, whirlpool bath, flat screen TV, and DVD/CD players. Breakfast is served in the conservatory with baked goods and Niagara produce. There is wine and cheese sampling in the afternoons. www.harbourhousehotel.ca

SAULT STE MARIE Quality Inn Bay Front

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180 Bay Street, Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, P6A 6S2 Tel (705) 945 9264 Fax (705) 945 9766 Rooms 110 This modern hotel is located directly across from Station Mall and Agawa Canyon train depot and near Casino Sault Ste. Marie. Facilities include an Indoor pool, whirlpool, sauna, exercise room, in-room coffee, wireless Internet access, and the Grand Festa Restaurant and lounge. www.choicehotels.ca Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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ST. CATHERINES Four Points by Sheraton St. Catherines

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3530 Schmon Parkway, St. Catherines, Ontario, L2V 4Y6 Tel (905) 984 8484 Rooms 129 This is an all-suites hotel in the center of the Niagara region, across from Brock University, near the Falls. There are suites for families and the physically challenged. Golf packages are available at Peninsula Lakes GC, Royal Niagara GC, Hunters Pointe GC, Rockway Glen GC, Whirlpool GC and Legends on the Niagara. www.fourpointsuites.com e0S÷zh

WINDSOR Hilton Windsor

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277 Riverside Drive, Windsor, Ontario, N9A 5K4 Tel (519) 973 5555 Fax (519) 973 1600 Rooms 305 A modern hotel in downtown Windsor across from Detroit, USA. All rooms have river views. There are suites on the top three floors with exclusive access to a private lounge with breakfast and evening reception. This hotel is connected to Cleary International Centre and is close to Casino Windsor. www.hilton.com

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DRUMHELLER Newcastle Country Inn

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1130 Newcastle Trail, Drumheller, Alberta, T0J 0Y2 Tel (403) 823 8356 Fax (403) 823 2373 Rooms 11 This quiet country inn is just 1 mile (1.7 km) west of downtown Drumheller in dinosaur country. A non-smoking environment, this 3-star inn has wireless Internet and rooms include a small fridge. There are two decks with chairs. Price includes a self-serve continental breakfast. Check-in is generally 4–6pm. www.bbalberta.com/newcastle 0zh

EDMONTON Glenora Inn Bed & Breakfast

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12327-102 Ave. NW, Edmonton, Alberta, T5N 0L8 Tel (780) 488 6766 Fax (780) 488 5168 Rooms 25 Originally an apartment building in the heart of Edmonton’s historic West End, the former Buena Vista Building has hosted colorful characters such as World War I pilot Wop May. Price includes a full breakfast served in the Glenora Bistro. Each room has its own Victorian decor. The inn also has a guest parlor and patio. www.glenorabnb.com e0:÷zh

EDMONTON Union Bank Inn

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10053 Jasper Ave., Edmonton, Alberta, T5J 1S5 Tel (780) 423 3600 Fax (780) 423 4623 Rooms 34 The price includes a hot breakfast, and wine and a cheese and fruit plate delivered to the rooms nightly. This boutique hotel near Edmonton’s arts and business district was built in 1911. It has a heritage designation for refurbishing the historic Union Bank buillding. Room service 4–10pm. www.unionbankinn.com e0:÷zh

EDMONTON Fantasyland Hotel

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17700-87 Ave. (West Edmonton Mall), Edmonton, Alberta, T5T 4V4 Tel (780) 444 3000 Fax (780) 444 3294 Rooms 355 You can stay here and enjoy West Edmonton Mall’s amenities – including an amusement park, water park, minigolf, and a skating rink – without setting foot outside. There are 120 themed rooms in 12 different styles including Hollywood, Polynesian, Roman, and Western. Room service available 6:30am–2am. www.fantasylandhotel.com e0÷zh

LETHBRIDGE Best Western Heidelberg Inn

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1303 Mayor Magrath Drive S., Lethbridge, Alberta, T1K 2R1 Tel (403) 329 0555 Fax (403) 328 8846 Rooms 66 Conveniently located near highways 3, 4, and 5. The rooms facing west on high floors have a mountain view on a clear day. Rooms have high-speed Internet and a complimentary newspaper delivered Monday–Saturday. The Fitness center has a steam room, sauna, and exercise equipment. Carmichael’s Pub is located downstairs. www.bestwestern.com 0h

CHURCHILL Churchill Motel Ltd.

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P.O. Box 218, Churchill, Manitoba, R0B 0E0 Tel (204) 675 8853 Fax (204) 675 8228 Rooms 26 This recently renovated motel is located on Kelsey Boulevard and Franklin Street. The rooms are on one floor, which is particularly good for people with limited mobility. Rooms are clean and comfortable. Staff are friendly and helpful. A shuttle is offered to/from the airport and train station. A good spot to use as a base. [emailprotected] Sh

RIDING MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK Clear Lake Lodge

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Wasagaming, Manitoba, R0J 2H0 Tel (204) 848 2345 Fax (204) 848 2209 Rooms 16 In Riding Mountain National Park the lodge is a short walk from the beach, boat rentals, stores, restaurants, and the park interpretive center. The main lobby has a piano, and fireplace. A hot tub, barbecues, and picnic tables are in the back. Guests are welcome to use the guest kitchen for cooking and the dining area. www.clearlakelodge.com zh

WINNIPEG Maison Grosvenor Bed & Breakfast

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824 Grosvenor Ave., Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3M 0N2 Tel (204) 475 9630 Rooms 4 The price includes full breakfast but the host can offer vegetarian options and accommodate diet restrictions. This 1912 Queen Anne home is minutes from Corydon Ave and Osborne Village, a 25-minute walk to Forks market, and 5 minutes’ walk from the water taxi. There is an outdoor hot tub and wireless Internet. www.bbcanada.com/maison

WINNIPEG Fort Garry Hotel

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222 Broadway Ave., Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3C 0R3 Tel (204) 942 8251 Fax (204) 956 2351 Rooms 246 Situated near the Forks, this hotel was built in 1913 and is a national historic site. The Palm Lounge has live jazz nightly. The hotel has a spa. The Assiniboine Athletic Club is across the skywalk. There is a pool, hot tub, steam room, and workout facilities. Room service 6am–midnight. www.fortgarryhotel.com

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MAPLE CREEK Historic Reesor Ranch

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Box 1001, Maple Creek, Saskatchewan, S0N 1N0 Tel (306) 662 3498 Rooms 4 This ranch house B&B is tucked away in the Cypress Hills. Two rooms have a private balcony. The large shared bathroom has an antique tub and the kitchen features an old stove. This cattle ranch has been in the Reesor family for five generations. There is a cowboy poet in residence. Breakfast is included in the price. www.bbcanada.com/reesorranch

MOOSE JAW Temple Gardens Mineral Spa Hotel

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24 Fairford St. East, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, S6H 0C7 Tel (306) 694 5055 Fax (306) 694 8310 Rooms 179 This downtown hotel offers different packages. Swim inside or out at the natural geothermal mineral pool on the top floor. Some rooms have views of Crescent Park. Parking is $5 per car per day. There is an outside terrace on the fourth floor by the Morningsides Café. Room service 7am–11pm. www.templegardens.sk.ca ¤h

REGINA Fieldstone Inn Vacation Farm

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P.O. Box 37130, Regina, Saskatchewan, S4S 7K3 Tel (306) 731 2377 Rooms 2 Built in 1903 from fieldstone found in the nearby hills, the Fieldstone Inn is located about 25 minutes’ drive from Regina. The veranda offers views of the Qu’Appelle Valley. A full breakfast is included in the price, served on the veranda or in the dining room which has a fireplace. [emailprotected]

REGINA Radisson Plaza Hotel Saskatchewan

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2125 Victoria Avenue, Regina, Saskatchewan, S4P 0S3 Tel (306) 522 7691 Fax (306) 757 5521 Rooms 224 This deluxe hotel was renovated in 1992. The rate includes a continental breakfast but there are different room packages. Built in 1927, the hotel is downtown and overlooks Victoria Park. It has a day spa, whirlpool, and sauna in the fitness center. There is Internet access and valet parking. Room service is 6am–midnight. www.hotelsask.com

REGINA Delta Bessborough Hotel

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601 Spadina Crescent East, Regina, Saskatchewan, S7K 3G8 Tel (306) 244 5521 Fax (306) 665 7262 Rooms 225 Wander around the hotel’s five-acre Elizabethan gardens overlooking the South Saskatchewan River. This stately historic hotel first opened in 1935. It offers complimentary high-speed Internet, an outdoor atrium with pool, whirlpool, and children’s pool. There is a Japanese restaurant, café, and a lounge. www.deltahotels.com

VANCOUVER AND VANCOUVER ISLAND MALAHAT The Aerie

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600 Ebedora Lane, British Columbia, V0R 2L0 Tel (250) 743 7115 or (800) 518 1933 Rooms 35 A terraced inn on 85 acres of landscaped mountainside perched 1,200 ft (366 m) above sea level, overlooking one of Vancouver Island’s most spectacular vistas: the Saanich Inlet, and Washington State’s San Juan Islands and snowcapped Olympic Mountains. Luxurious rooms in three different buildings. Outdoor hot tub. www.aerie.bc.ca

NORTH VANCOUVER Thistledown House

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3910 Capilano Rd, British Columbia, V7R 4J2 Tel (604) 986 7173 or (888) 633 7173 Fax (604) 980 2939 Rooms 6 Pretty 1920 craftsman-style heritage home with airy, bright rooms, some with fireplaces, some opening onto a balcony or private patio, where comfortable deck chairs await. European and Canadian antiques decorate the entire B&B. The garden awaits gentle exploration or enjoyment with a book or beverage. www.thistle-down.com

PORT ALBERNI Eagle Nook Wilderness Resort & Spa

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Box 575, Port Alberni, British Columbia, V9Y 7M9 Tel (250) 728 2370 or (800) 760 2777 Fax (250) 728 2376 Rooms 23 Stunning cedar lodge. Floor to ceiling windows bring the outside inside: where bald eagles soar above forest-clad shorelines offset by stunning mountain backdrops. Spy ocean views of Vernon and Jane bays from luxurious rooms. Rates include all meals plus access (seaplane, water taxis). Minimum stay of two nights. www.eaglenook.com

SOOKE Sooke Harbour House

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1528 Whiffen Spit Rd, British Columbia, V0S 1N0 Tel (250) 642 3421 or (800) 889 9688 Fax (250) 642 6988 Rooms 28 The oldest B&B on the island, most of the spacious, individually designed rooms at this award-winning clapboard inn overlook the ocean. Activities include kayaking, biking, and hiking, or enjoying the art gallery. The menu changes daily in the outstanding restaurant. Pets welcome (extra charge). www.sookeharbourhouse.com

TOFINO Middle Beach Lodge

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400 Mackenzie Beach Rd, British Columbia, V0R 2Z0 Tel (250) 725 2900 Fax (250) 725 2901 Rooms 64 In a fabulous setting on a stretch of private beach amid mountains, forests and ocean, this consists of two rustic lodges and 20 housekeeping cabins on 40 acres (16 ha). One resort is for families, one strictly for adults. Hike rainforest paths where ancient trees still exist; explore rocky shoreline where kids find sea life in tidal pools. www.middlebeach.com

TOFINO Clayoquot Wilderness Resorts & The Outpost at Bedwell River

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Box 130, Tofino, British Columbia, V0R 2Z0 Tel (250) 726 8235 or (888) 333 5405 Fax (250) 726 8558 Rooms 23 A “21st century-eco-safari.” An enclave of deluxe suite, dining, spa, and lounge tents offers a unique interpretation on discovering the wilderness. Families welcome. Center of “camp” is a cedar log ranch-style cookhouse with an open kitchen and stone fireplace. Horses on-site. Rates include meals and are based on a 3-night stay. www.wildretreat.com Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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Off Osprey Lane, Chesterman Beach, Box 250, British Columbia, V0R 2Z0 Tel (250) 725 3100 Fax (250) 725 3110 Rooms 75 This elegant Relais and Châteaux property features the octagonal Pointe Restaurant jutting over rocks on the ocean. Famous for winter storm watching, “the Wick” offers supreme rest and relaxation in a spectacular setting. Cedar construction throughout emphasizes Zen-like rooms where balconies overlook the ocean. www.wickinn.com

VANCOUVER Best Western Sands by the Sea

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1755 Davie St., British Columbia, V6G 1W5 Tel (604) 682 1831 or (800) 663 9400 Fax (604) 682 3546 Rooms 120 In a perfect location adjacent to a bike and pedestrian haven leading to English Bay, Stanley Park, and city stores and restaurants on Davie Street, the rooms here boast ocean or mountain view; some are pet friendly. Bayside Lounge for drinks and pub food offers view of Vancouver’s inner harbor. www.bestwesternsandshotelvancouver.com

VANCOUVER Days Inn Downtown

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921 W Pender St, British Columbia, V6C 1M2 Tel (604) 681 4335 Fax (604) 681 7808 Rooms 85 This boutique-style hotel has cozy, small, and clean rooms and is conveniently close to the YMCA (passes available), Stanley Park, Gastown, and all stores, museums, and galleries. There is a complimentary shuttle service into the downtown area and a restaurant and pub. www.daysinnvancouver.com

VANCOUVER Georgian Court Hotel

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773 Beatty St, British Columbia, V6B 2M4 Tel (604) 682 5555 Fax (604) 682 8830 Rooms 180 An intimate European-style boutique hotel, where high-ceilinged rooms with opening windows emphasize the feeling of luxury. Three on-site restaurants include award-winning The William Tell – a city landmark serving Swiss cuisine. The hotel features in-room spa service; close to jogging/walking/biking paths. www.georgiancourt.com

VANCOUVER Quality Hotel Downtown

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1335 Howe St. British Columbia, V6Z 1R7 Tel (604) 682 0229 or (800) 663 8474 Fax (604) 662 7566 Rooms 157 Located downtown, this trendy boutique hotel’s decor features Mexican and Santa Fe art. There are 15 rooms suitable for families. The 24-hour restaurant includes a child-friendly menu. Long stays are possible. There is a complimentary pass to the nearby fitness center. www.innatfalsecreek.com

VANCOUVER Metropolitan Hotel Vancouver

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645 Howe St, British Columbia, V6C 2Y9 Tel (604) 687 1122 or (800) 667 2300 Fax (604) 602 7846 Rooms 197 A member of the “Boutique Preferred Hotel” group, this is primarily a business traveler’s hotel with quiet, intimate rooms. It provides traditional luxury. Squash courts are included in the health facilities. Diva-at-the-Met, serving Pacific Coast cuisine, is one of Vancouver’s finest restaurants. Pets allowed. www.metropolitan.com

VANCOUVER Fairmont Waterfront

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900 Canada Pl. Way, British Columbia, V6C 3L5 Tel (604) 691 1991 or (800) 441 1414 Fax (604) 691 1828 Rooms 489 A spectacular glass-and-steel hotel across from the Vancouver Convention and Exhibition Center. Ocean, mountain, and city views can be stunning, depending on your floor: ask when you reserve. The hotel is located beside pretty walkways. An outdoor pool allows you to swim and watch the mountain views. www.fairmont.com

VANCOUVER Four Seasons

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791 West Georgia St, British Columbia, V6C 2T4 Tel (604) 689 9333 Fax (604) 684 4555 Rooms 372 A white tower rising above the Pacific Centre with its stores and conference facilities, this modern luxurious hotel is close to Stanley Park with its bike paths and walking trails. Also features the Chartwell Restaurant. Children are well looked after here. There is an indoor-outdoor pool. www.fourseasons.com/vancouver

VANCOUVER Hotel Vancouver

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900 W. Georgia St, British Columbia, V6C 2W6 Tel (604) 684 3131 or (866) 540 4452 Fax (604) 662 1929 Rooms 556 The Fairmont chain evokes an old-time traditional ambience in its stately properties, as does this downtown, elegant site in a great location for shopping. There are marble floors in the bathrooms. The state-of-the-art spa is fabulous after a hike up the Lions or ski trip to Whistler. There are rooms for the hearing- or mobility-impaired. www.fairmont.com

VANCOUVER Hyatt Regency Vancouver

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655 Burrard St, British Columbia, V6C 2R7 Tel (604) 683 1234 Fax (604) 689 3707 Rooms 644 The usual Hyatt amenities belong to this upscale hotel within walking distance of major downtown shopping and sightseeing attractions. The outdoor pool may be closed in winter months. There is an excellent fitness center. The higher the floor, the better the views of downtown, the mountains, or the harbor. www.hyatt.com

VANCOUVER Pan Pacific Hotel Vancouver

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Suite 300, 999 Canada Place, British Columbia, V6C 3B5 Tel (604) 662 8111 Fax (604) 685 8690 Rooms 506 This 23-story luxury hotel towers above the “white sails” of Canada Place, across the harbor from Stanley Park. There are bike, walking, and jogging paths nearby. There is a fee for the fitness room but it is well worth it. Best views of Vancouver here include snow-capped peaks through to float planes taking off and landing in Burrard Inlet. www.panpacific.com

VANCOUVER Sutton Place Hotel

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845 Burrard St, British Columbia, V6Z 2K6 Tel (604) 682 5511 Fax (604) 682 5513 Rooms 397 A 5-diamond, 4-star luxury modern high-rise hotel with all the amenities including a VIDA wellness spa with indoor heated pool and outside terrace. Please note that Robson Street can be noisy at night so avoid rooms overlooking it. Gerard Lounge attracts cinema celebrities so people watchers may be lucky. www.suttonplace.com

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VICTORIA Humboldt House Bed & Breakfast

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867 Humboldt St, British Columbia, V8V 2Z6 Tel (250) 383 0152 or (888) 383 0327 Fax (250) 383 6402 Rooms 6 This romantic hideaway in an 1893 Victorian clapboard B&B is a short walk from downtown Victoria. A gourmet champagne breakfast is delivered to your room. Themed rooms (Japanese, Victorian, Gazebo, etc.) feature Jacuzzi and wood-burning fireplace; views from rooms of apple orchard. Wireless Internet access. www.humboldthouse.com

VICTORIA Laurel Point Inn

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680 Montreal Street, British Columbia, V8V 1Z8 Tel (250) 386 8721 or (800) 663 7667 Fax (250) 386 9547 Rooms 200 Stunning contemporary waterfront hotel overlooks Victoria’s protected Inner Harbour. From your bed look through glassed balcony walls to see nautical views of sailboats, busy tugboats, and float planes landing and taking off. Stroll Japanese gardens often chosen for weddings and sip a cocktail in the lounge overlooking ocean. www.laurelpoint.com

VICTORIA Ramada Victoria

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123 Gorge Rd East, British Columbia, V9A 1L1 Tel (250) 386 1422 or (888) 468 3514 Fax (250) 386 1254 Rooms 93 Modern brick hotel offers comfortable, spacious, and peaceful rooms, suites, and apartments only a 5-minute drive from downtown Victoria. Suites have balconies, a bedroom and a hide-a-bed in living room: convenient for families. Welcoming family style restaurant and a pub on-site. Heated outdoor pool good for children. www.victoriaramada.com

VICTORIA Delta Victoria Ocean Point

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45 Songhees Rd, British Columbia, V9A 6T3 Tel (250) 360 2999 or (800) 667 4677 Fax (250) 360 1041 Rooms 239 Modern hotel with spectacular lobby boasting floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Victoria’s famous Inner Harbour with only the boardwalk between the hotel and the water’s edge. World-class full-service European spa, excellent pool, outdoor tennis courts, some rooms accommodate persons of limited mobility; child-friendly. www.deltahotels.com

VICTORIA Empress Hotel

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721 Government St, British Columbia, V8W 1W5 Tel (250) 384 8111 or (800) 257 7544 Fax (250) 389 2747 Rooms 477 Built in 1908, this elegant, ivy-clad grande dame regally commands what is undoubtedly the best location overlooking the Inner Harbour. Pricey, excellent High Tea served daily in the grand lobby. Rose-beds and lawns slip down to the boardwalk surrounding harbour. Spectacular ambience. Caution: rooms are small and views limited. www.fairmont.com

WHITE ROCK/SURREY Aston Pacific Inn

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1160 King George Hwy, British Columbia, V4A 4Z2 Tel (604) 535 1432 or (800) 667 2248 Fax (604) 531 6979 Rooms 150 Tropical-style hotel features variety of simply designed rooms: some have private balconies overlooking a glass-roofed atrium with a swimming pool in the center. Families can choose over-sized rooms suitable for four. Outside, stroll White Rock’s beaches and breathe in the ocean fresh air. Free parking also available for RVs. www.pacificinn.com

THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS BANFF Rundlestone Lodge

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537 Banff Ave, Alberta, T0L 0C0 Tel (403) 762 2201 or (800) 661 8630 Fax (403) 762 4501 Rooms 95 Modern interpretation of Rocky Mountain architecture complete with rugged stone fireplaces and an interior of rich natural shades, inspiring tranquility. Swiss chefs at the award-winning Jack Pine Bistro have created a delectable menu inspired by the slow food movement, specializing in regional foods. www.rundlestone.com

BANFF Banff Springs Hotel

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405 Spray Ave, Alberta, T1L 1J4 Tel (403) 762 2211 or (800) 257 7544 Fax (403) 762 5755 Rooms 770 The “Castle of the Rockies” offers unmatched views of the Bow River Valley and Mount Rundle from many rooms and from the Rundle Lounge and outdoor pool. Rocky Mountain ambience is emphasized by rugged stone walls and fireplaces. Top-notch amenities include a golf course and Willow Stream Spa. Ask about naturalist-led hikes. www.fairmont.com

CALGARY Hotel Arts

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119 - 12th Ave SW, Alberta, T2R 0G8 Tel (403) 266 4611 or (800) 661 9378 Rooms 185 A very hip “South Beach North” pool adds an extra perk to this chic boutique hotel located in downtown Calgary. Some rooms have marble bathrooms and two-person Jacuzzi tubs. There is a trendy Raw Bar and restaurant serving award-winning Saint Germain French regional cuisine. www.hotelarts.ca

CANMORE Quality Resort Chateau Canmore

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1720 Bow Valley Trail, Alberta, T1W 2X3 Tel (403) 678 6699 or (800) 261 8551 Fax (403) 678 6954 Rooms 93 There are great views of Three Sisters and other Rocky Mountains from this renovated all-suite resort hotel. Suites have microwaves, not full kitchens; all feature stone gas fireplaces. Satori Day Spa offers esthetic as well as massage treatments and personal training. Children welcome: kids 17 and under stay free when with adult(s). www.chateaucanmore.com

LAKE LOUISE Chateau Lake Louise

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111 Lake Louise Drive, Alberta, T0L 1E0 Tel (403) 522 3511 or (800) 257 7544 Fax (403) 522 3834 Rooms 555 Since 1890, Chateau Lake Louise has attracted adventurers to view the world-famous lake and explore breathtaking mountain scenery. Visitors can enjoy canoe rentals, a spa, and trail rides. Ask about the Heritage Mountain Guide program where naturalists lead hour/half-day trips (extra fee). Children, pets welcome. www.fairmont.com Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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LAKE LOUISE Simpson’s Num-Ti-Jah Lodge

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Mile 22, Bow Lake Icefield Parkway, Alberta, T0L 1E0 Tel (403) 522 2167 Fax (403) 522 2425 Rooms 25 An authentic log cabin off Icefields Parkway on the shore of spectacular Bow Lake originally built in 1937 by legendary guide Jimmy Simpson. There is no telephone or TV. Special events such as artists-in-residence programs take place here. Price includes breakfast, lunch, and three-course dinner. www.num-ti-jah.com

WATERTON LAKES Prince of Wales Hotel

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Waterton Lakes National Park, Alberta, T0K 2M0 Tel (403) 236 3400 Fax (406) 892 7375 Rooms 37 This 1927 historic hotel enjoys a resplendent setting amid the grandeur of the Rocky Mountains in Waterton Lakes National Park. The gable roofline and ornate balconies create a stately alpine lodge look on a bluff overlooking the lake. Rooms are small but well maintained with oak wainscoting. Closed Oct–Apr. www.glacierparkinc.com/princeofwaleshotel.htm ¤zh

CRANBROOK Kootenay Country Comfort Inn

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1111 Cranbrook St. N., British Columbia, V1C 3S4 Tel (250) 426 2296 or (800) 862 2823 Fax (250) 426 3533 Rooms 36 A favorite with anglers fishing for trout in nearby Premier Lake, this two-story, clean, country style motel offers comfort yet no frills. There is a high-speed Internet service and television in rooms. A whirlpool bath and and sauna are available. Within walking distance to the village malls and restaurants. www.country-comfort.com 0÷h

FIELD Emerald Lake Lodge

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PO Box 10, British Columbia, V0A 1G0 Tel (403) 410 7417 or (800) 663 6336 Fax (403) 410 7406 Rooms 109 Originally a Canadian Pacific Railway hotel, this log cabin resort is in spectacular Yoho National Park. The oak bar came from an 1890s Yukon saloon. Rustic luxury with exposed wood beams, stone fireplaces, chess sets, billiard table and cozy chairs establish mood for total relaxation. Rooms are in the lodge or newly built cabins. www.emeraldlakelodge.com ÷zh

FORT NELSON The Blue Bell Inn

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4203 50th Ave. S., British Columbia, V0C 1R0 Tel (250) 774 6961 or (800) 663 5267 Fax (250) 774 6983 Rooms 57 A bright, modern, two-story motel on Mile 300 on the Alaska Highway. The complete complex includes a 24-hour convenience store with stamp sales and mailbox, laundromat, fuel station, and RV park with 47 sites. Rooms are basic, comfortable, and clean, half with kitchenettes. Pets permitted in smoking rooms. Airport shuttle. www.bluebellinn.ca h

GOLDEN Vagabond Lodge

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1581 Cache Close, Golden, British Columbia, V0A 1H0 Tel (250) 344 2622 or (866) 944 2622 Fax (250) 344 2668 Rooms 10 Spectacular log lodge tucked into the mountainside at the base of a ski hill. Some rooms have private balconies or lofts. There are no telephones or TVs. There is a split-log bar for serving the alcohol you bring (no liquor licence). No children; no pets. Price includes breakfasts. There is a restaurant next door. www.vagabondlodge.ca zh

PRINCE GEORGE Economy Inn

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1915 Third Ave., British Columbia, V2M 1G6 Tel (250) 563 7106 or (888) 566 6333 Fax (250) 561 7216 Rooms 30 This is a two-story motel with comfortable and clean rooms and very basic amenities, but you are minutes from downtown Prince George with its museums, heritage river trail, parks, bookstore, and café. Quiet downtown location with a choice of smoking and non-smoking rooms. Free wireless Internet access. www.economyinn.ca

RADIUM HOT SPRINGS The Springs at Radium Golf Resort

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8100 Golf Course Rd., Hwy 93/95, British Columbia, V0A 1M0 Tel (250) 347 9311 Fax (250) 347 6299 Rooms 500 This is a golf restort. A three-story boutique hotel features mountain views. All rooms face one of two golf courses. Tennis and squash courts are on site. Good for bird watching. The Golf academy offers lessons (for a fee). There is a 2-day minimum booking on weekends. www.radiumresort.com

SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA BARKERVILLE King and Kelly House B&B

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2nd St., British Columbia, V0K 1B0 Tel (250) 994 3328 Rooms 6 Lodging is in two heritage buildings in this authentically restored gold rush town. Highlights include delicious breakfasts and the sound of music from the nearby theater or from stagecoach rides going past. The whole bed & breakfast (sleeps eight) can be rented for $245 and breakfast is made for you. Some rooms share bathrooms. www.kellyhouse.ca

CARIBOU The Hills Health Ranch

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4871 Caribou Hwy 97, 108 Ranch St., British Columbia, V0K 2Z0 Tel (250) 791 5225 Fax (250) 791 6384 Rooms 45 This is a Western ranchhouse on sprawling acreage where gentle horses wander. “Dude ranch” trail riding, cowboy cookouts, and a health spa are all on site. The rate is for 2 nights, including six gourmet meals, full use of spa pools, fitness centre, and one massage. www.thehillshealthranch.com

CHASE Quaaout Resort & Conference Centre

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PO 1215 Chase, British Columbia, V0E 1M0 Tel (250) 679 3090 or (800) 663 4303 Fax (250) 679 3039 Rooms 72 This Shuswap First Nations’ People resort overlooks Little Shuswap Lake and sandy beach. Many rooms overlook the lake. The restaurant menu features native foods while the Shuswap interpretation center provides insight into native culture. Activities include horseback riding, canoeing, fishing, hiking, and golfing. www.quaaout.com

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HOPE Manning Park Resort

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Manning Provincial Park, British Columbia, V0X 1L0 Tel (250) 840 8822 or (800) 330 3321 Fax (250) 840 8848 Rooms 73 In this year-round family resort choose from cabins, chalets, or lodge rooms. Superb activities include tennis and volleyball courts, ping pong, bocce, croquet, and horseshoes, plus video games, billiards, and movies. Loon Lagoon features a heated indoor pool. In winter there is a skating rink, and cross-country and downhill skiing. www.manningparkresort.com

KAMLOOPS Comfort Inn

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1810 Rogers Place, British Columbia, V1S 1T7 Tel (250) 372 0987 or (888) 556 3111 Fax (250) 372 0967 Rooms 128 Comfortable rooms are spacious in this three-story stucco property. Kitchen units and Jacuzzis are available in some suites. There is a choice of smoking or non-smoking rooms. Rates include continental breakfast. A waterslide in the pool and a family restaurant make this inn ideal for families. www.comfortinnkamloops.com

KELOWNA Lake Okanagan Resort

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2751 Westside Rd, British Columbia, V1Z 3T1 Tel (250) 769 3511 or (800) 663 3273 Fax (250) 769 6665 Rooms 146 This family-oriented destination borders the beach on Lake Okanagan. Activities include horseback riding, golf, tennis, interpretive trails, mountain bike trails, and a children’s playground. There is a full service spa. Spacious rooms have kitchen, balconies, and lake views. Rate is for a minimum 2 nights. www.lakeokanagan.com

PENTICTON Penticton Lakeside Resort

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21 Lakeshore Drive West, British Columbia, V2A 7M5 Tel (250) 493 8221 or (800) 663 9400 Fax (250) 493 0607 Rooms 204 A family resort in the center of Penticton with a private beach, pier, jet-skiing, and parasailing on Lake Okanagan. Suites have Jacuzzis. All rooms feature balconies. Equipment rental is available for all watersports. There is a children’s play center and a casino. Pet friendly. www.pentictonlakesideresort.com

PRINCE RUPERT Prince Rupert Crest Hotel

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222 W First Ave, British Columbia, V8J 1A8 Tel (250) 624 6771 or (800) 663 8150 Fax (250) 627 7666 Rooms 102 Situated on a bluff close to historic Cow Bay area, this is the only 4-star hotel in the north with wonderful harbor views especially of Kaien Island. Choose your view: harbor, city, or mountain. Most rooms have a window seat. There are smoking and non-smoking rooms. Pet-friendly – “any size or shape” for a $10 fee. www.cresthotel.bc.ca

WELLS White Cap Motor Inn & RV Park

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3885 Ski Hill Rd, British Columbia, V0K 2R0 Tel (250) 994 3489 or (800) 377 2028 Rooms 34 Two-story motel with comfortable, clean rooms. Two-bedroom suites have full kitchen and living room. A propane barbeque is available at outdoor cooking facilities that include a shelter, picnic grounds, and tables. There is a children’s playground. The RV park has public showers and towels (for a fee). www.whitecapinn.com

WHISTLER Holiday Inn SunSpree Resort

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4295 Blackcomb Way, British Columbia, V0N 1B4 Tel (604) 938 0878 or (800) 229 3188 Fax (604) 938 9943 Rooms 114 A modern hotel located right in the heart of Whistler Village and a 5-minute walk from Blackcomb Village lifts. All rooms are equipped with kitchenettes, jetted soaker tubs, and gas or electric fireplaces. Deluxe suites have washers and dryers. Some have lofts, dens, and balconies. Children are welcome and eat for free. www.whistlerhi.com

WHISTLER Fairmont Chateau Whistler

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4599 Chateau Boulevard, British Columbia, V0N 1B4 Tel (604) 938 8000 or (800) 606 8244 Fax (604) 938 2291 Rooms 556 Copper-roofed, gabled, castle-like luxury resort situated adjacent to Whistler and Blackcomb ski hills and gondolas as well as hiking trails and golf course. The only ski-in, ski-out hotel in Whistler. Nanny Network Ltd. provides childcare including storytime and crafts. www.fairmont.com

WHISTLER Pan Pacific Whistler Mountainside

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4320 Sundial Crescent, British Columbia, V0N 1B4 Tel (604) 905 2999 Fax (604) 905 2995 Rooms 121 Pedestrian-only Whistler Village is home to this luxurious boutique-hotel property featuring floor-to-ceiling windows. Suites all come with fireplaces and a full kitchen, as well as stunning valley and mountain views. Float in the outdoor heated saltwater pool and watch dawn or a canopy of stars. www.panpacific.com

NORTHERN CANADA FORT PROVIDENCE Snowshoe Inn

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1 Mackenzie Drive, Fort Providence, Northwest Territories, X0E 0LO Tel (867) 699 3511 Fax (867) 699 4300 Rooms 35 Located on the banks of the Mackenzie River, this family-owned inn has an arts and crafts store featuring traditional local crafts such as moose hair tuftings and porcupine quill work and prints by area artists. Rooms have satellite television, and some have kitchen facilities. The restaurant is just across the street. www.ssimicro.com/snowshoe

FORT SIMPSON Janor Guest House

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P.O. Box 491, Fort Simpson, Northwest Territories, X0E 0N0 Tel (867) 695 2077 Fax (867) 695 2077 Rooms 6 The price of this centrally located guest house includes a continental breakfast and a large vegetable garden for the use of guests. The owners live next door in this side-by-side duplex. The house is wired up with satellite television, movie channels, and wireless Internet. There is a free on-site laundromat. Airport pickup is available for a fee. www.janor.ca Key to Price Guide see p346 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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10 J Gagnier Street, Hay River, Northwest Territories, X0E 1G1 Tel (867) 874 6781 Fax (867) 874 3392 Rooms 41 Located in the center of town, this hotel has newly renovated rooms. The Keys Dining Room and Doghouse Sports Bar provide two dining and entertainment options. The fitness center has a sauna. There is no pool but guests receive a complimentary pass to the town’s aquatic center. www.ptarmiganinn.com 0h

INUVIK Eskimo Inn

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133 Mackenzie Road, Box 1740, Inuvik, Northwest Territories, X0E 0T0 Tel (867) 777 2801 Fax (867) 777 3234 Rooms 72 The Eskimo Inn is in the heart of downtown. It is a good option for the budget-conscious who want to be comfortable. Rooms have Internet. Some have air conditioning. Laundry facilities and a restaurant are on-site. The hotel is part of the Inuvialuit-owned Mackenzie Delta Hotel Group. www.inuvikhotels.com/eskimo.htm h

YELLOWKNIFE Bayside Bed & Breakfast

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3505 MacDonald Drive, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, X1A 2H2 Tel (867) 669 8844 Fax (867) 669 8843 Rooms 4 The price includes a nice hot breakfast served in the lovely sunny tearoom overlooking Yellowknife Bay. The house has a wraparound deck and dockside views. A guest lounge is upstairs. Located in the heart of scenic and historic Old Town with buildings full of character, it is a 20-minute walk to downtown. www.bbcanada.com/4822.html

YELLOWKNIFE Explorer Hotel

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4825 49th Avenue, Box 7000, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, X1A 2R3 Tel (867) 873 3531 Fax (867) 873 2789 Rooms 127 Situated downtown near Frame Lake and the Legislative Assembly, a major upgrade and renovations were done to the Explorer in 2005. Good food is served at the Traders Grill and Trapline Lounge restaurants. Prominent guests have included Queen Elizabeth, Prince Phillip, Prince Charles, and actor Leonard Nimoy from Star Trek. www.explorerhotel.nt.ca 0

CAMBRIDGE BAY Arctic Island Lodge

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26 Omingmak, P.O. Box 38, Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, X0B 0C0 Tel (867) 983 2345 Fax (867) 983 2480 Rooms 26 This lodge sits on the banks of the river that forms the historic and coveted Northwest Passage. The Northwest Passage meeting room has rare artifacts from the famed Franklin expedition. An airport shuttle service is available. This hotel is known for its range of sporting activities, including guided hunting trips. www.cambridgebayhotel.com

IQALUIT Frobisher Inn

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P.O. Box 4209, Iqaluit, Nunavut, X0A 0H0 Tel (867) 979 2222 Fax (867) 979 0427 Rooms 95 This inn has deluxe rooms that feature original Inuit artwork and views of Baffin Island and Iqaluit. Rooms have wireless Internet and coffeemakers. Some have kitchenettes. The complex in which the hotel is located has a pool, movie theater, drugstore, stores, restaurants, and a café. Room service is available 7am–8:30pm. www.frobisherinn.com

DAWSON CITY Downtown Hotel

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Box 780, Dawson City, Yukon, Y0B 1G0 Tel (867) 993 5346 Fax (867) 993 5076 Rooms 59 Locally owned and operated, this hotel has a Klondike-era look. Rooms are in the main building or annex. There is a jacuzzi and glass-roofed atrium with plants. Room service is available 7am–9pm. Sourdough Saloon has swinging doors and is home to the famed “Sourtoe Cocktail.” www.downtownhotel.ca

DAWSON CITY Midnight Sun Hotel

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P.O. Box 840, Dawson City, Yukon, Y0B 1G0 Tel (867) 993 5495 Fax (867) 993 6425 Rooms 44 Open since 1972, this three-story building was rebuilt in 1984. The hotel has a historic gold rush-era look. Located downtown, it has a variety store and business services. The Midnight Sun lounge offers nightly entertainment and a signature drink menu. Room service is available 6am–1am. www.midnightsunhotel.com

HAINES JUNCTION Raven Hotel

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Box 5470, 181 Alaska Highway, Haines Junction, Yukon, Y0B 1L0 Tel (867) 634 2500 Fax (867) 634 2517 Rooms 12 The price at this family-run hotel includes a German-style gourmet breakfast. The hotel has a 4-star rating from Canada Select and is located at the base of the spectacular St. Elias Mountains near Kluane National Park. Open May–Sep. www.yukonweb.com/tourism/raven

WHITEHORSE Best Western Gold Rush Inn

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411 Main Street, Whitehorse, Yukon, Y1A 2B6 Tel (867) 668 4500 Fax (867) 668 7432 Rooms 106 Within walking distance of numerous attractions some rooms in this hotel have Jacuzzis and some have kitchens. Bunk beds are available for kids. The decor is 1898 gold rush style, including a lobby filled with relics from the goldfields. The hotel has the Gold Pan Saloon and YXY Underground Martini Lounge. www.goldrushinn.ca

WHITEHORSE Edgewater Hotel

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101 Main St., Whitehorse, Yukon, Y1A 2A7 Tel (867) 667 2572 Fax (867) 668 3014 Rooms 30 This downtown vintage hotel overlooks the Yukon River and is across from the historic White Pass Railway depot. A boutique hotel, it has been operated by the same family for three generations. Rooms are comfortable, with high-speed Internet. There is a nice steakhouse and a wine bar downstairs. www.edgewaterhotelwhitehorse.com

WHITEHORSE High Country Inn

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4051 Fourth Ave., Whitehorse, Yukon, Y1A 1H1 Tel (867) 667 4471 Fax (867) 667 6457 Rooms 84 A 40-ft (12-m) wooden Mountie guards the hotel’s entrance. Located near walking trails, three blocks from the waterfront and six blocks from downtown, this stylish and comfortable hotel in a quiet part of town has antique furniture, a grand piano, and brick fireplace in the elegant lobby. Complimentary hotel shuttle. www.highcountryinn.yk.ca

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WHERE TO EAT are common everywhere. hat makes Canadian German, Greek, Chinese, cuisine unique is its Thai, Indian, Ukrainian, regional specialties: African, and Italian cuisines, Alberta beef, goldeye fish in along with other internaManitoba, salmon from BC, tional favorites, provide a Nova Scotia lobster, and wide range of choice at a Quebec French pies and pasSeafood f d on offer ff in price to suit every budget. tries. Game, including rabbit, Atlantic Canada Regional specialties can be caribou, and bison, which sampled in their place of have been served in aboriginal homes for centuries, are now con- origin, but most of the larger towns will sidered gourmet dishes at cosmopoli- also offer a choice of the country’s best tan restaurants. A tradition of French local produce, and in some areas this haute cuisine is evident in most of the includes Canadian wines and beers (see country’s major cities, particularly in p369). The listings on pp370–91 describe top hotels. However, as Canada is a a selection of restaurants chosen for nation of immigrants, ethnic restaurants their variety, service, and good value.

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Elegant Zoë’s Lounge in Château Laurier, Ottawa (see p357)

TYPES OF RESTAURANTS Eating out in Canada is surprisingly easy on the pocket, particularly compared to European and American prices. This makes a trip to a top restaurant to sample international cuisine (often made with local produce) very worthwhile. Eating places are extremely varied, with the tearoom, bistro, brasserie, and theater café competing with the more usual café, restaurant, and fast food outlet. Many pubs also serve excellent bar food, at reasonable prices. More unusual, but no less worthwhile, is the uniquely Canadian dining experience of the delicious lobster supper. Held throughout the summer on Prince Edward Island, these lively gatherings usually take place in church grounds

on wooden tables surrounded by local fishermen. Equally unique, though by no means public, are Inuit dinners. Traveling through the Arctic north may result in an invitation to join an Inuit family for the evening meal. Traditional dishes might include sundried caribou sweetened with berry sauces or smoked and dried local fish. These family dinners are usually alcoholfree and very lively.

effect in the 1990s. Restaurants that subscribe to the plan sign menus with a heart symbol denoting low-fat dishes. Anyone on a special or weight-loss diet can feel free to ask the chef to leave out certain high-calorie ingredients. Fresh fruits are easily obtained throughout the south of the country, and are abundant and often day-old in the main growing areas of Ontario and BC’s Okanagan Valley. Some of the best berries and peaches in the world can be enjoyed here in the summer. It is worth remembering that most food in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut is imported, and largely canned or frozen; apart from Inuit game kills, fresh food is hard to obtain, and very expensive, in these distant Arctic regions.

VEGETARIAN Vegetarian options are on the increase throughout the country. Expect to see at least one vegetarian dish on each menu. For those who eat fish, seafood has something of a national reputation. “Health Canada,” the government plan for healthy eating, took

Open-air dining in downtown Montreal (see pp373–5)

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Arowhon Pines Lodge in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario (see p356)

ALCOHOL The minimum age of public purchase and consumption of alcohol is 19 throughout the country, except in Quebec where it is 18. Canada produces some fine wines (see p369), which are becoming more widely available. Throughout much of Canada, the distribution of alcohol is controlled by the provincial government. It is not sold in corner stores or supermarkets, but liquor stores sell a good range of wine and spirits. A separate government run store sells only beer. Beer and liquor stores are not usually open on Sundays, so expect long line-ups before long weekends and holidays. EATING HOURS AND RESERVATIONS Lunch tables are usually available from noon to 2pm, and dinner reservations from 6pm to 9pm, although later bookings should be accepted in larger cities. Reserving a table in advance is generally a good idea. It is considered polite to call ahead and cancel if you are unable to make your reservation.

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with wine often costs between Can$30–$60. Even gourmet dinners can start at Can$50. Luncheon items are generally less expensive, and are often similar to the evening menu. Restaurant tax is the 6 percent GST (Goods and Services Tax), plus a varying provincial sales tax, applicable everywhere except Alberta. Some provinces also add a separate liquor tax. Taxes are included on the final check. Tipping is generally expected, and should be about 15 percent of the check. Service charges are rarely included, but might be included in the bill for a large group. In common with most countries, a tip should increase if you are bringing a larger party to a restaurant and for any exceptional service. Europeans should note that tipping is expected in bars and nightclubs. Penalizing staff for bad service is not common. CHILDREN Canada is a child-friendly society. Most restaurants offer high chairs or booster seats. The more upscale the venue, the more parents are required to keep children seated at table and to take noisy or upset youngsters outside until they calm down. A children’s menu or half-portions may well be available for those under eight years old.

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DISABLED FACILITIES All new restaurants, as well as existing establishments undergoing renovation, have made their sites accessible to wheelchair users. A wide bathroom door and no interior steps from entrance to dining table are now compulsory across the country in new buildings. However, older, rural establishments should be checked out in advance. DRESS CODE Vacationers need not worry unduly about bringing formal clothes with them on a trip. Most restaurants operate “smart-casual” policy, especially at lunchtime, but exceptions to this can include sneakers (trainers), cut-off jeans, and dirty or ripped clothes. The rule generally runs as follows: the more expensive and exclusive the restaurant, the more formal the attire required. Evening dress is very rarely required in any venue. SMOKING Over 70 percent of Canadians do not smoke, and local bylaws restrict where the dwindling minority of smokers can smoke. In some cities, including Toronto, smoking is not allowed in bars and cafés, and this trend is spreading. Cigars are generally not popular in restaurants, so ask before lighting up. A note of caution: when picnicking in a park, be sure to extinguish your cigarette for fear of starting a forest fire.

PAYING AND TIPPING It is possible to eat well in Canada for a bargain price. A snack in a café seldom costs more than Can$5. In a good restaurant, a three-course meal

Café-bars in cities are always inexpensive and popular options

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The Flavors of Canada With a rich history of multiculturalism, Canada’s culinary heritage is as diverse as it is intriguing. Although ther is no national cuisine as such, regional specialties hav their own strong identities. Seafood dominates Atlanti Canada and BC menus, while steaks and burgers are be in the ranching areas of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Acadian cuisine, reminiscent of French country food, found in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. In Norther Canada, age-old Inuit techniques produce a variety of sundried caribou and fish dishes. But the Canadian specialty that is famous the world over is maple syrup. who don't like crustacea can try Atlantic salmon. Pacific salmon, crab, shellfish, and shrimp (prawns) dominate British Columbian fare, along with a typically northern fish, Arctic char. More unusual dishes, often incorporating historic preserving methods, include Solomon Grundy (Nova Scotia’s fine marinated herring), and cod tongues, as well as tasty seal flipper pie from Newfoundland. Pacific salmon, caught in the Khutzeymateen River, BC

Scallop

Crab

Vegetable squash

Freshwater fish, both the farmed and wild versions, is caught in the two million lakes dotted across Canada, and offers a delicate contrast to seafood. In the west of the country, the tender Winnipeg goldeye, trout, and pickerel, which is often cooked over open fires at informal summer outdoor shore lunches throughout the central region, are a uniquely Canadian treat. Sardines

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Lobster

FISH AND SEAFOOD Bordered by oceans on three sides, Canada offers great seafood, particularly on its east and west coasts. Produce from here can easily make it from the ocean to the dinnerplate within 24 hours. Oysters, clams, and scallops are a main feature of East Coast menus. Prince Edward Island is famous for its lobster; those FRENCH-CANADIAN DISHES AND SPECIALTIES French-style gourmet cuisine in bec. Dishes here are reminiscent ropean food. For some more rench-Canadian dishes, cities in the province usually serve These include creton, tourtière, varieties of pâtisserie. Smoked other popular local delicacy. The rovinces offer excellent, originally adian dishes from recipes which ds of years old. As well as meat and stews, rich desserts and in their filling menus. VieuxMontréal’s bistros offer many classic delights, such as escargots à la bourguignonne. French-Canadians are known for their rich desserts, such as trempettes (fried bread soaked in maple syrup) and pudding au chomeur.

Creton is a coarse, spicy, pork

pâté. It is delicious served on hunks of fresh baguette with cornichons (gherkins).

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FRUIT AND VEGETABLES

Baskets of rosy apples outside a Nova Scotia farm shop

MEAT AND GAME Alberta’s cattle ranches are the source of Canada’s finest beef. Most beef in rural areas is served simply, with salad and fries, but one muchloved local dish is Calgary beef hash – corned beef with baked beans and fried potatoes. Lamb and buffalo are also farmed, in smaller numbers. The Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut supply much of the country’s game; caribou, musk ox, and moose are all sent south to be cooked in the European style. Local people, especially the Inuit, smoke meat for the winter months. Their smoked caribou is delicious and very popular. Famous for making the most of a kill, native people use every part of the animal for either clothing or food – even moose fleas are

Escargots à la bourguignonne

are snails cooked in garlic and parsley butter and served in their shells.

something of a delicacy. Goose, duck, and fish are all smoked or sundried too, providing staples for the very long, harsh winter. Caribou and birds are preserved by being hung out on lines to dry in the Arctic sun.

Fiddlehead fern shoots for sale in a New Bruskwick market

Tourtière, a pastry-topped pie filled with meat and vegetables flavored with spices, is country fare.

Ontario is the fruitbowl of Canada. In addition to its burgeoning wine industry, the area is famous for its strawberries and cranberries. Peaches and apples are also cultivated here in large quantities, as are blueberries, which also flourish in Nova Scotia and Quebec. Corn, black beans, and vegetable squash (collectively known as the “three sisters”) are produced in Ontario alongside zucchini (courgettes), huge tomatoes, and fresh herbs. In New Brunswick, fiddleheads (fern shoots) and dulse (seaweed) are sautéed as a vegetable side dish. WHAT TO DRINK Canada’s two favorite beers, always served chilled, are the lagers Molson “Canadian” and Labatt “Blue”. Canadian wine was first sold in 1811, and the country now produces some excellent wines from hybrid grapes, thanks largely to European winemakers who have emigrated here. Most wine comes from two areas: a pocket in the southern Okanagan Valley of British Columbia (see p317), 7 and a narrow strip along the Niagara Peninsula of southern Ontario. Grape varieties include such familiar names as Chardonnay, Riesling, and Pinot Noir. Rye whisky is distilled in BC; Canadian Club is the most popular brand, but local distilleries produce specialties.

Pudding au chomeur (literally

“unemployed pudding”) is an upside-down cake with a rich caramel base.

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Choosing a Restaurant The restaurants in this guide have been selected across a range of prices for their exceptional food, good value, or interesting location. This chart lists restaurants under the region chapter headings in the same order as the rest of the guide, grouped alphabetically by province and then by town. Entries are alphabetical within the price category.

PRICE CATEGORIES IN CANADIAN DOLLARS (CAN $) For a three-course meal for one, including half a bottle of house wine (where served) and service. \ Under $30 \\ $30–$40 \\\ $40–$60 \\\\ $60–$80 \\\\\ Over $80

NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR L’ANSE AU CLAIR Northern Light Inn

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82–86 Main Street, L’Anse Au Clair, Labrador, A0K 3K0 Tel (709) 931 2332 At this popular family restaurant you’ll find everything from pizza and fried chicken to a large assortment of scrumptious seafood. Ask for traditional Newfoundland fare like salmon, halibut, or cod, and their famous bread pudding with plum sauce. In the summer try the popular house specialty, roasted caribou. There is a historic lighthouse nearby.

CORNER BROOK Sorrento

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18 Park Street, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, A2H 2W9 Tel (709) 639 3555 A feast for the eyes and ears as well as a feast for the body, with an upscale decor, lovely outdoor (screened) patio, and live musicians on the weekends, the menu at the Sorrento features unique pizzas, hand kneaded pastas, a great grill, and European specialties. Tiramisu, the original Italian “pick-me-up,” is a must.

COW HEAD Bayview Restaurant at Shallow Bay Motel

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193 Main Street, Cow Head, Newfoundland, A0K 2A0 Tel (709) 243 2471 Its location in Gros Morne National Park, overlooking the Atlantic Ocean a few feet away, is just one of the perks here. Newfoundland fare, cheesecakes and parfaits laced with Newfoundland bakeapple and partridge are a huge hit here. There are frequent stage shows on site, and dinner theater performances accompany codfish dinners.

FERRYLAND Lighthouse Picnics

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Lighthouse Road, Ferryland, Newfoundland, A0A 2H0 Tel (709) 363 7456 This award-winning eating experience consists of a historic lighthouse, magical scenery, and gourmet picnics. After ordering, guests are given a picnic blanket and books of local interest and are asked to find the perfect spot. The distinctive menu ranges from crab cakes to curried chicken salad. There are complimentary interpretive tours of the lighthouse.

LA SCIE The Outport Tea Room

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101 Water Street, La Scie, Newfoundland, A0K 3M0 Tel (709) 675 2720 Located inside a small museum, this cozy restaurant is surrounded by local history and relics and provides a great view of the harbor. Meals are served in period costume. The amazing food is traditional Newfoundland cooking at its best: fish cakes, chowder, fisherman’s brewis, pea soup, and more. Incredible value. No alcohol served.

PORT AU CHOIX Point Riche Restaurant

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41 Fisher Street, Port Au Choix, Newfoundland, A0K 4C0 Tel (709) 861 3777 This family restaurant with a wide menu selection, famous for Fish Chowder, home-style cooking, and homemade desserts, is proud to offer “a taste of Newfoundland.” The decor throughout has a lighthouse theme. The service is fast and efficient. There is a lounge attached to the restaurant. Both lounge and restaurant have great views of the harbor.

PORT BLANDFORD The Clode Sound Dining Room

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Port Blandford, Newfoundland, A0C 2G0 Tel (709) 543 2525 There is a breathtaking view of Clode Sound from this restaurant with cathedral ceiling, and Newfoundland artwork. Wait staff are knowledgeable about the area. The varied menu focuses on regional fare. House specialty “Steak Oscar” is grilled to perfection, topped with shrimp and scallop in hollandaise sauce. Mouthwatering lobster is a big hit.

ST. JOHN’S The Gypsy Tea Room

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195 Water Street, St. John’s, Newfoundland, A1C 6J9 Tel (709) 739 4766 Smack in the middle of town this popular restaurant with old brick walls, hardwood floors, and casual decor really hums. European style dishes are prepared with a Mediterranean flair. Duck Confit (marinated for 24 hours and slowly cooked for 6 hours) is hugely popular, along with fresh seafood straight from the boats.

ST. JOHN’S Velma’s

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264 Water Street, St. John’s, Newfoundland, A1C 1B7 Tel (709) 576 2264 Velma’s captures the spirit of Newfoundland. Located in the downtown core, it is a busy family restaurant frequented by locals and visitors. It has a homey atmosphere and an odd collection of bric-a-brac for decor. You will be called “me love” and treated as if you were family. Cod tongues and scrunchions are all-time favorites. Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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NEW BRUNSWICK BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA, SCOTIA AND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BLACKVILLE Darlene’s Family Restaurant and Tea House

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186 Barnettville Road, Barnettville, New Brunswick, E9B 1X6 Tel (506) 843 7979 This charming restored 1896 grocery store is perky, bright, and colorful. The tried and true family recipes (sorry, nothing deep fried!) are truly amazing, including fiddlehead chowder and freshly baked blueberry pie. Rustic antiques, lace and hand-embroidered tablecloths, and bone china tea cups add to the ambience. Tasty food. Exceptional value.

CARAQUET Le Caraquette

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89 Boulevard St.-Pierre Est., Caraquet, New Brunswick, E1W 1B6 Tel (506) 727 6009 This newly renovated restaurant always amazes visitors with the quality of food and the friendly service. Its big bonus is eating on the large terrace overlooking the Bay of Challeur and watching the activity at the wharves. Renowned for the seafood omelet, lobster club sandwich, and seafood platter. Bring a big appetite.

DALHOUSIE Le Menuet Dining Room and Restaurant

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385 Adelaide Street, Dalhousie, New Brunswick, E8C 1B4 Tel (506) 684 5681 Elegant, cozy, fine dining. Large solarium windows, spectacular views of Bay des Chaleurs, Gaspé Coast, Appalachian Moutains. Wide variety of homemade Canadian dishes, from seafood and steaks to mouthwatering desserts. Hungry patrons go for the Fisherman Platter or the Surf and Turf. Excellent service. Bilingual. Scenic and cultural experience.

FREDERICTON Asia Beef Noodles

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624 Queen Street, Fredericton, New Brunswick, E3B 1C2 Tel (506) 472 6240 Situated in the downtown core, Asia Beef Noodles is a popular addition on the restaurant scene. It serves an excellent selection of Viet Thai food at modest prices, the staff are friendly, and the portions are large and very tasty. Any soup with noodles is a meal in itself. For fun, sit by the large fish tank.

FREDERICTON Luna Pizza

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91 York Street, Fredericton, New Brunswick, B3B 3N4 Tel (506) 455 4020 Soft peach walls, tasteful decor, and white leather chairs say it all. A classy place with great Italian food in the downtown core, yet a surprisingly modest price tag. Food is prepared from scratch. Local favorites are the Caesar Salad, Seafood Lasagna, and Marguerita Pizza. Accommodating and friendly service.

KINGS LANDING Kings Head Inn, Kings Landing

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Exit 253 Route 2, Kings Landing, New Brunswick, E6K 3W3 Tel (506) 363 4952 In an 1855 setting, with candlelight ambience, and costumed staff, there is always a mouthwatering aroma from the scrumptious meals served here that feature traditional and tempting Loyalist feasts such as beggar’s purse, Acadian tourtiêre, ploughman’s lunch, fish cakes, and maple brandy squash pie. A cultural experience with exceptional food.

MONCTON McGinnis Landing

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499 Paul Street, Moncton, New Brunswick, B1A 6S5 Tel (506) 856 6995 McGinnis Landing Restaurant, one of Moncton’s most popular restaurants, is known for its great food including the award-winning Seafood chowder. Located in Crystal Palace together with the Ramada Plaza hotel and Convention Center, it offers a menu for all appetites.

QUISPAMSIS Hammond River Country Café

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954 Hampton Road, Quispamsis, New Brunswick, E2G 1Z5 Tel (506) 849 4726 This is Polish cuisine at its best. Indulge in aromatic soups and meats prepared in unique ways. Specialties include borscht, pierogi, goulash, beef rolady, stuffed cabbage, schnitzel, and crepes. You will need a hearty appetite for the Polish sausage platter. In a comfortable setting, with Polish folk art, the river is close by with lots of migratory birds.

SAINT JOHN Billy’s

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Saint John City Market 49-51 Charlotte Street, Saint John, New Brunswick, E2L 2H8 Tel (506) 672 3474 Seafood lover’s heaven. A fish market is part of the restaurant and fresh fish is delivered daily. They also pack live or cooked lobsters to go. Billy’s is where the Maritime custom of cooking “cedar planked salmon” originated. This is a gastronomical delight in a relaxed, casual atmosphere in the historical Farmer’s Market with lovely outdoor dining.

ST. ANDREWS Kingsbrae Arms

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219 King Street, St. Andrews, New Brunswick, E5B 1Y1 Tel (506) 529 1897 This is fine dining featuring local and regional fare at its best in a tasteful heritage estate home. The chef raises organic and heirloom vegetables like purple peacock beans and Aztec red spinach. The menu reflects his simple “slow food” philosophy and features wild game and farmed sturgeon with osetra-style caviar. Attentive staff. Memorable food.

SUSSEX Broadway Café

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73 Broadstreet, Sussex, New Brunswick, E4E 2J7 Tel (506) 433 5414 Broadway Café exudes a rustic atmosphere with warm earth tones, lovely local art, wide planked floors with tile inserts, and large wooden booths. The menu changes frequently to reflect the seasons. Everything is made from scratch including blends of curry. The seafood is exceptional. Vegetarian friendly. Home to a definitive carrot cake.

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ANTIGONISH Gabrieau’s Bistro

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350 Main Street, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, B2G 2C5 Tel (902) 863 1925 Picture this: creamy custard walls, inset burgundy ceiling, lots of fine art. Cuisine is international in flavors with a creative edge. Lunch features hearty sandwiches, fresh salads, thin crust pizzas, and flavorful pastas. At night, the Bistro transforms to fine dining replete with creative appetizers, delicious entrees, and decadent desserts. Δf˚

BADDECK Telegraph House

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479 Chebucto Street, Baddeck, Nova Scotia, B0E 1B0 Tel (902) 295 1100 Huge, beautifully decorated dining room in an old Victorian styled inn (circa 1860) serves superb seafood including fresh seafood every evening. An old-fashioned turkey dinner replete with dressing and cranberry sauce is another daily feature. Telegraph House is famous for its oatcakes. Celtic artists (fiddle and keyboard) perform from July. 7f

EARLTOWN Sugar Moon Farm

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221 Alex MacDonald Road, Earltown, Nova Scotia, B0K 1V0 Tel (902) 657 3348 Organic buttermilk pancakes, artisanal sausages, maple baked beans, maple butter, organic coffee, and more make up a wholesome traditional all-day breakfast with a gourmet twist at this eaterie housed in a hand-crafted log cabin with a stone fireplace and trestle tables, also attached to a working maple sugar camp and interpretive center (seasonal hours). 7f

FREEPORT Lavena’s Catch Café

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15 Highway 217, Freeport, Nova Scotia, B0V 1B0 Tel (902) 839 2517 A step from the ferry to Briar Island, this small restaurant has a big heart and a great reputation. Menu has interesting comments from visitors. Simple tasty food prepared by good cooks. Seafood fresh from the boats. Generous portions. Try the Solomon Gundy for appetizer. It’s unique. Great kids’ menu. ¤Δ

GLEN HAVEN White Sails Bakery and Tea Room

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12930 Peggy’s Cove Road, Tantallon, Nova Scotia, B3Z 2S2 Tel (902) 826 1966 They are experts at serving simple and hearty food. People from all over the world have found this small restaurant tucked away on the ocean. You can’t go wrong with their homestyle chili, baked beans, soups, and chowders. The bakery has a full line of goodies including diabetic and gluten-free specialties. 7Δ

GUYSBOROUGH Days Gone By Bakery

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143 Main Street, Guysborough, Nova Scotia, B0H 1N0 Tel (902) 533 2762 You won’t find a deep-fat fryer here but you’ll find lots of great “down-home” cooking like moist panfried haddock and roast turkey dinners. The view of the river is lovely from this 1790 home filled with antiques. All the baking is done from scratch. No preservatives are used. The breads, cakes, and pies are worth writing home about. z

HALIFAX Talay Thai Restaurant

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1261 Barrington Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3J 1Y2 Tel (902) 404 3700 Thai cuisine is extremely popular in Halifax and this is the best of the best spots. Unpretentious surroundings, simple Thai motifs for decor. Staff are often too busy to give attentive service but they ooze enthusiasm and efficiency. The most popular dishes include cashew chicken, Pad Thai, and red curry. The restaurant has won many awards. z˚

HALIFAX The Five Fishermen

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1740 Argyle Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3J 2W1 Tel (902) 422 4421 Providing popular fine dining for over 30 years, the building originally housed the first National Art School in North America and is full of character. Good spirits match the superb food. Seafood is delivered daily from dayboats. This multiple award-winning restaurant includes a world-famous mussel bar and features Nova Scotia wines.

PUBNICO Red Cap Restaurant and Motel

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1034 Route 335 South, Middle West Pubnico, Nova Scotia, B0W 2M0 Tel (902) 762 2112 Spacious and inviting, the Red Cap Restaurant has been serving great food for 60 years. Located in a fishing community, fresh fish is popular. The menu also features Acadian cuisine like its famous “rappie pie.” Large windows overlook Pubnico Harbour. The restaurant showcases local art and photographs of the region.

SHELBURNE Charlotte Lane Café

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13 Charlotte Lane, Shelburne, Nova Scotia, B0T 1W0 Tel (902) 875 3314 An innovative menu features seafood, creative meat dishes, flavorful pastas, Swiss specialties, and luscious desserts. There is an outstanding wine selection. Housed in a 160 year-old heritage building, the Charlotte Lane Café has a welcoming interior and a peaceful garden patio. An in-house gift store has a great selection of hand-crafted Nova Scotian items.

WOLFVILLE Blomidon Inn

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195 Main Street, Wolfville, Nova Scotia, B4P 1C3 Tel (902) 542 2291 Best described as “country gourmet,” everything in this 1881 restored sea captain’s mansion is prepared on site. Specialties are fish and wild game. Ask about the game cookbook written by Sean Laceby. Signature dishes include lobster linguine with fresh, hand-cut pasta and ragout of caribou. There are stunning gardens. Impressive wine list.

CHARLOTTETOWN Piece A Cake Restaurant

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119 Grafton Street, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 1K9 Tel (902) 894 4585 Eclectic, fun menu featuring steak, seafood, and pasta. Hugely popular is ginger tiger prawn penne with cashews and dates. Dietary concern? No problem. The chefs can adapt any recipe, and they specialize in gluten-free pastas. The restaurant has an airy bistro feel, lots of windows, and funky unusual decor. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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CHARLOTTETOWN Sirenella Ristorante

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83 Water Street, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 1A5 Tel (902) 628 2271 Northern Italian cuisine at its best, featuring homemade ravioli and gnocchi as well as grilled fish dishes. Warm and cozy decor, with large paintings on the walls. Located in the historic part of town, Sirenella chefs use fresh, local ingredients whenever possible. Try the tasty Vitello Pizzaiola and Mussels “In Love.” 7z

FORTUNE Sheltered Harbour Café

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2065, Highway 2, Fortune, Prince Edward Island, C0A 2B0 Tel (902) 687 1997 Known far and wide, this open concept kitchen uses locally grown ingredients. The Island Bar Clam Chowder is superb. You’ll need a bowl since a cup is just a tease. The daily “alternative” menu, offered from 4 until 8pm, allows the owner/cook to step things up a notch, providing upscale selections at downscale prices. Large portions.

MONTAGUE Windows On The Water Restaurant

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106 Sackville Street, Montague, Prince Edward Island, C0A 1R0 Tel (902) 838 2080 You will want to return again and again: first for excellent, fresh seafood, lobster, and fine steaks; second for the pleasure of eating out on the deck next to two large maple trees; and third for the view of Montegue Harbour. Be sure to have some seafood chowder, one of their signature dishes. 7z

NEW GLASGOW New Glasgow Suppers

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604 Route 258, New Glasgow, Prince Edward Island, C0A 1N0 Tel (902) 964 2870 Famous for preparing community-hall style lobster suppers for almost 50 years. Two level dining areas overlook the River Clyde. Checkered tablecloths and a large painted mural add to the decor. Fresh rolls are baked daily, and hot or cold lobster is served in the shell. Your meal includes PEI mussels and mile-high lemon meringue pie.

RUSTICO Dayboat

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5033 Rustico Rd, Hunter River, Prince Edward Island, C0A 1N0 Tel (902) 963 3833 This upscale, simple, modern, casual restaurant with rave reviews and sparkling, intelligent service has a million-dollar view of Rustico Bay. A creative menu features PEI produce, meats, and lobster prepared three different ways. Meats are cooked to perfection, including their famous ribs. Great deck dining. Enjoy nature and the antics of the osprey.

SUMMERSIDE Brothers Two Restaurant

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618 Water Street East, Summerside, Prince Edward Island, C1N 4K2 Tel (902) 436 9654 With informal dining, cozy booths, Tiffany lamps, and a log room with a fireplace, the Brothers Two offers over 75 items and a menu just for kids. There is a great selection of beef, chicken, and seafood. Steamed lobster dinners are popular. The restaurant is home to Feast Dinner Theatres, where actors and actresses serve a four-course meal between hilarious scenes.

WEST POINT West Point Lighthouse Inn, Restaurant and Museum

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159 Cedar Dunes Park Road, West Point, Prince Edward Island, C0B 1V0 Tel (902) 859 3605 Sixty-five feet (20 m) from the beach, this lighthouse restaurant has a historical significance that the staff love to talk about. Take a tour to the top! It is family oriented, with a fast service, but a casual and relaxed atmosphere. There is a big deck for sunny day eating. The chowder and fish burgers are a treat.

MONTREAL CHINATOWN Maison Kam Fung

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1111 Rue Saint Urbain, H2Z 1Y6 Tel (514) 878 2888 The best dim sum in Montreal in a vast space adorned with pillars entwined with dragons, Chinese posters, and embroidery that fittingly sets the mood for the famous Peking Duck. Choose from a varied menu of Szechwan and Cantonese dishes that feature lots of dinner-for-two combinations and many tofu, chicken, pork, and other dishes.

DOWNTOWN Schwartz’s (Montréal Hebrew) Delicatessen

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3895 Blvd. Saint-Laurent, H2W 1X9 Tel (514) 842 4813 Jewish immigrants from Romania made smoked brisket a staple of the Montreal diet in 1928 when they opened this Montreal classic deli. Expect long lines. Choose from delicious lean, medium, or fatty smoked meat (lean can be dry). They have good rye bread though there is no seeded rye. No alcohol served.

DOWNTOWN Phayathai

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1235 Rue Guy, H3H 2K5 Tel (514) 933 9949 Classic, delicious Thai dishes are served in a friendly ambience where staff are helpful and the seating is spaced for privacy. Try warming soups in which pungent fragrances of ginger, coriander, and lemon refresh the senses. The pad thai is excellent, and the curried chicken (gaeng gai sai nor mai) is also good.

DOWNTOWN Le Caveau

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2063 Rue Victoria, H3A 2A3 Tel (514) 844 1624 An oasis in Montreal’s downtown business core, this 1901 Victorian residence features intimate dining rooms spread over three floors where superb French meals are served. Specialties include fish, steak, rack of lamb, and the best liver in town. The pastry chef creates temptations such as Quebec maple pie.

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DOWNTOWN L’Orchidée de Chine

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2017 Rue Peel, H3A 1T6 Tel (514) 287 1878 Renowned for its Hunan Pekinese and Szechwan cuisine, this restaurant boldly offers non-standard, more upscale Chinese decor with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the street. Diners in romantic booths feast on Chinese delicacies such as Crispy duck in pastry or sautéed lamb with spicy sauce. The lemon chicken is delicious. Closed Sunday.

DOWNTOWN Restaurant & Taverne Magnan

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2602 Rue Saint-Patrick, H3K 1B8 Tel (514) 935 9647 This legendary Montreal tavern used to serve gigantic platters to Lachine dockworkers. Nowadays, aficionados claim it has the best roast beef (Alberta beef) in North America. This is a sports bar where a wide-screen TV lets you catch up on the teams. There is a good selection of draft beers.

DOWNTOWN L’Actuel

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1194 Rue Peel, H3B 2T6 Tel (514) 866 1537 This cheerful Belgian-style brasserie serves several dozen variations of mussels and French fries as well as other classic dishes such as smoked herring with potatoes. Daily luncheon and dinner table d’hôte offers three choices. Come for a drink (good choice of Belgian beers) at the lounge. Closed Sunday.

DOWNTOWN Chez la Mère Michel

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1209 Rue Guy, H3H 2K5 Tel (514) 934 0473 Opened in 1965, this is one of the most traditional French restaurants in Montreal. Located in a Victorian residence, today’s style is Provençale, where exposed wooden beams with copper detailing evoke countrified elegance. Try Dover sole à la meunière or classic coq au vin. Select from more than 7,000 mostly French wines.

DOWNTOWN Moishe’s

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3961 Blvd. Saint-Laurent, H2W 1Y4 Tel (514) 845 3509 The Jewish Quarter is home to this local tradition. Yes it’s noisy; yes the staff are harried. But the Lighter family keep on serving their excellent thick steaks to an appreciative host of carnivores. Try the popular appetizer of chopped liver but don’t miss a side of twice-baked Monte Carlo potatoes.

DOWNTOWN Restaurant Julien

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1191 Union, H3B 3C3 Tel (514) 871 1581 Parisian-influenced decor plus, in summer, a generous canopied terrace make this French restaurant a charming dining spot. The traditionally inspired menu features salmon fillet with sorrel cream sauce, or duck-breast tournedos. Desserts include the delicious chocolate marquise. There is an extensive wine list.

DOWNTOWN Café de Paris

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Ritz-Carlton Hotel, 1228 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, H3G 1H6 Tel (514) 842 4212 Whether you want afternoon tea or a romantic dinner, the formal Edwardian dining room in the luxurious Ritz serves exquisite elegance along with impeccable service. In summertime, doors are opened and you can dine overlooking the garden. The wine cellar is superlative. This is classic French interpretation of Quebecois regional foods.

DOWNTOWN Café Méliès

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3540 Boulevard Saint-Laurent, H2X 2V1 Tel (514) 847 9218 Located in the city’s best indy film center, Ex-centris, at the Sherbrooke Metro, you can enjoy a coffee and sandwich for lunch or a glass of wine before or after seeing the show at this bistro-café. On weekends, it’s popular for generous breakfasts. Alternatively, go for bistro-dinners such as duck confit or quiches.

DOWNTOWN Nuances

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Casino de Montréal, 1 Ave. du Casino, H3C 4W7 Tel (514) 392 2708 This elegant, modern French restaurant with a magnificent panorama of the city marries taste, aroma and color in a new way. Nuances promises its guests a memorable culinary experience that will awaken the senses. The air of sophistication is well matched by an excellent by-the-glass wine selection.

DOWNTOWN Queue de cheval

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1221 René-Lêvesque Ouest, H3G 1T1 Tel (514) 390 0090 Very popular restaurant in heritage building, so reservations are recommended. Locals go for steaks, service, and ambience. Beef is from Colorado and comes in many forms: the specialty, the Kansas cut, is either a sirloin or filet mignon. In summertime 80 people can dine on the outdoor terrace.

DOWNTOWN The Beaver Club

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Fairmont La Reine Elizabeth, 900 René-Lévesque Ouest, H3B 4A5 Tel (514) 861 3511 The Queen’s popular landmark restaurant, The Beaver Club, exudes elegant sophistication, where jackets for men are suggested and reservations recommended. Exquisite dishes highlighting seasonal, regional fare are prepared with inspiration, served by knowledgeable staff. Choose from classic roast beef, grilled salmon, or lamb. Best martinis in town.

HOCHELAGA-MAISONNEUVE Chez Clo

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3199 Rue Ontario Est, H1W 1P1 Tel (514) 522 5348 Locals pack this boisterous eatery where hurried staff serve traditional Quebecois favorites. Enjoy the rush, as well as hearty servings of shepherd’s pie, pork and beans, and “pouding chômeur,” a hearty “poor man’s pudding” featuring a thick caramelized maple syrup topping. Poutine is a specialty – really! Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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200 Tour-de-l’Isle, H3C 4G8 Tel (514) 395 2424 Opened in 1983, this French restaurant situated in a historic mansion on Parc Jean-Drapeau boasts an incredible setting and fabulous food. The terrace, which is open for lunch and evening cocktails, offers a lovely view of the rose garden. During evenings a pianist underscores the mood of elegance.

OUTREMONT Maïko Sushi

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387 Rue Bernard Ouest, H2V 1T6 Tel (514) 490 1225 Diners enjoy more than just sushi here: steaks, tempura, and teriyaki are also available. Service may be slow, so watch the chefs prepare tastefully designed morsels at the sushi bar. Glass-encased lighting and sparse blue tones evoke a modern mood. Other “fusion” items have crept onto the menu, such as flambéed scallops. Reservations advisable.

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL Café Santropol

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3990 Rue Saint-Urbain, H2W 1T7 Tel (514) 842 3110 A hippy atmosphere in a funky home with beautiful gardens. In summer tables spill out onto the lawn where you can dine beside the fish pond. Huge salads and sandwiches feature eclectic combinations, such as Hazel Brown, with bananas, cream cheese and other ingredients to tantalize the taste buds. No alcohol served. Exotic selections of tea.

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL L’Anecdote

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801 Rue Rachel Est, H2J 2H7 Tel (514) 526 7967 Touted as serving the “best burgers in town,” homemade mayonnaise gives L’Anecdote the edge over some stiff competition. Movie posters and chrome fittings lend this burger joint a 1950s feel but concessions to modern tastes include a vegetarian club sandwich. There is a strong wine list.

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL Faros

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362 Ave. Fairmount Ouest, H2V 2G4 Tel (514) 270 8437 Fine fresh seafood prepared Greek style is served in this down-to-earth cozy restaurant full of nooks and crannies for romantic meals where gracious but friendly staff help make this a city favorite.Choose from seafood such as crab, lobster, and grilled squid. Faros Feast allows pairings of appetizer and main course. Reservations recommended.

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL Au Pied de Cochon

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536 Ave. Duluth Est, H2L 1A9 Tel (514) 281 1114 Soothing pleasures of tender meat, succulent sauces, and crisp salads await at this packed bistro serving traditional Quebecois cuisine, so make a reservation. Tuck into ample portions of venison, duck, bison, pork, or lamb roasted in a wood-fired oven. End your evening with sweet sugar pie. Closed Monday.

PLATEAU MONT-ROYAL L’Express

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3927 Rue Saint-Denis, H2W 2M4 Tel (514) 845 5333 This almost perfect re-creation of a Paris bistro is extremely popular for its lively ambience with good and reasonably priced food, plus a great wine cellar containing many varieties available by the glass or half bottle. The long bar is the perfect setting for drinks before or after dinner. The specialty is fish soup with Gruyère croutons.

SAINT URBAIN Wilensky’s Light Lunch

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34 Rue Fairmount Ouest., H2T 2M1 Tel (514) 271 0247 Inexpensive Jewish corner-shop and tiny diner. Order the “special:” mustardy salami and Bologna served in a roll, along with a hand-pulled cherry cola. Or, try the chopped egg sandwich. Featured in Canadian author Mordecai Richler’s classic The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, Wilensky’s harks back to the 1930s. A true Montreal experience. \\\

VIEUX-MONTREAL Stash’s Cafe Bazaar 200 Rue Saint-Paul Ouest, H2Y 1Z9 Tel (514) 845 6611

Casual Stash’s Polish kitchen serves rib-sticking soul food, such as hot borscht, pierogis, nalesniki, and a deliciously unusual sausage salad. Don’t know Polish food? No worries: that’s why “le debutant” exists. This menu offers combinations so guests can sample different items. Diners sit at pews from a demolished convent.

VIEUX-MONTREAL Le Club Chasse et Pêche

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423 Rue Saint-Claude, H2Y 3B6 Tel (514) 861 1112 The coat of arms over the doorway depicting moose antlers and flying fish introduces the cavernous interior where exceptional game and fish dishes are served. The leather-bound menu features iconic Canadian fare: deer, duck, salmon, oysters, and scallops. An affordable wine list complements the offerings: a don’t-miss experience. Closed Sun–Mon.

VIEUX-MONTREAL Les Remparts

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93 Rue de la Commune Est, H2Y 1J1 Tel (514) 392 1649 The name of this elegant restaurant in Old Montreal comes from the discovery of part of the city’s rampart defenses during the building’s renovation: therefore, you will dine amid history! The chef prepares contemporary French seasonal delights. The menu changes every week.

VIEUX-MONTREAL Toqué!

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900 Place Jean-Paul-Riopelle, H2Z 2B2 Tel (514) 499 2084 Normand Laprise and Christine Lamarche reign as Montreal’s most innovative chefs for more than a decade so reservations are de rigeur here. Memorably flavorful, beautifully presented fusion meals fashioned from duck, venison, Arctic Char, lamb, and salmon are served. There is an excellent wine list. Dress up and enjoy. Closed Sun–Mon.

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Q UEBEC CITY AND THE ST QUEBEC ST. LAWRENCE RIVER BAIE SAINT-PAUL Le Mouton Noir

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43 Rue Sainte-Anne, G3Z 1N9 Tel (418) 240 3030 The “Black Sheep”, a small unpretentious restaurant, overlooks the Gouffre River: in summer request a table on the terrace overlooking the water. The European menu lists dishes such as seared tuna with tomato ratatouille as an entrée, and crème brulée for dessert. The staff are welcoming. Reservations (particularly in summer) are prudent.

BAS ST. LAURENT, NOTRE-DAME-DU-LAC Auberge Marie Blanc

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1112 Rue Commerciale S., G0L 1X0 Tel (418) 899 6747 William Bishop, a New York lawyer, built this romantic clapboard lodge on the shores of Lake Temiscouta for his Creole mistress, Marie Blanc Charlier. In summer, a beautiful terrace overlooks the lake. The restaurant with regional Quebecois cuisine focuses on locally grown produce “pour votre santé” (for your health). No wine. Closed mid-Oct–May.

CHARLEVOIX, SAINT-SIMEON Auberge sur Mer

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109 Rue du Quai, G0T 1X0 Tel (418) 638 2674 Unpretentious, family style Canadian restaurant with a children’s menu that also serves beer and wine. Find basic meals such as salads, sandwiches, and soups along with pasta. Table d’hôte may include soups such as crab bisque, Matane shrimps, fresh lobster, or Doré (local fish), followed by Quebecois specialty, sugar pie.

HAVRE-SAINT-PIERRE Restaurant Chez Julie

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1023 Rue Dulcinée, G0G 1P0 Tel (418) 538 3070 This quaint, popular local seafood restaurant in what was once a tiny fishing village has absolutely no pretensions and you receive a genuine welcome and friendly service here. Look forward to generous portions of local seafood – try either the smoked salmon pizza or seafood pizza with béchamel sauce. \\\\

ILE D’ORLEANS, SAINT PIERRE Le Vieux-Presbytère 1247 Ave. Msgr-d’Esgly, G0A 4E0 Tel (418) 828 9723

This former priests’ stone presbytery offers grand views of the St. Lawrence River. The dining room in the solarium provides a panorama of the Laurentian Mountains. View buffalo and elk wandering about the game farm next door – the source of the delicious steaks you’ll be enjoying, probably as part of the daily table d’hôte specialties.

ILES-DE-LA-MADELEINE, CAP-AUX-MEULES Auberge Les Pas Perdus

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169 Chemin Principale, G4T 1C4 Tel (418) 986 5151 Cheerful owner Sebastien Cummings runs a funky hostel with deliciously creative bistro food. The staff are friendly and bilingual. Guests are invited to play the piano, wander with coffee and read the library of books, or view local art. A “don’t miss” hangout with a spectacular view of the ocean as well as busy ferry docks.

LAC-SAINT-JEAN, SAINT-GEDEON Restaurant le Parcours des Saveurs

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255 Rue Dequen, G0W 2P0 Tel (418) 345 2115 An old-fashioned dining room where dark hardwood floor and wainscoting contrast pleasantly with sunflower-colored walls. This restaurant prides itself on being a certified “terroir cuisine,” meaning “cuisine of the country,” where health, seasonality, and freshness are paramount. Local game, meats, herbs, and vegetables are delectably prepared.

METIS-SUR-MER Au Coin de la Baie

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336 Route 132, G0J 1S0 Tel (418) 936 3855 This unpretentious motel dining room overlooks a lawn slipping down to Métis Bay, a view particularly lovely in summer. The scallops and cod filets are excellent. The motel also sells “produits du terroir” such as carrot marmalade and rillettes de lapin – so fill up your picnic hamper here. Closed mid-Sep–mid-May.

PERCE La Maison du Pêcheur

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155 Place du Quai, G0C 2L0 Tel (819) 782 5331 Located on a boardwalk overlooking the Atlantic, this cheerful establishment serves generous portions of fresh seafood. See and hear the ocean waves while dining on lobster, or specialties such as cod’s tongue and seaweed soups. The extensive menu includes pasta, pizza, venison burgers, raclette, and grilled meats. Closed Nov–May. \\

QUEBEC CITY Restaurant-Bistro Le Hobbit 700 Rue Saint-Jean, G1R 1P9 Tel (418) 647 2677 Hobbit-inspired artworks decorate this casual city-center hangout frequented by locals wanting affordable, delicious bistro fare. The menu changes regularly, but includes both international and French dishes. Quaff a refreshing McAuglan microbrew with your meal.

QUEBEC CITY Le Cochon Dingue

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46 Blvd. Champlain, G1K 4H7 Tel (418) 692 2013 Local institution that buzzes with activity. Children under 10 receive a special menu and games. In good weather, the Parisian style terrace lets everyone people watch while enjoying steak frites, mussel trios, spare ribs – or the Cochon’s (Piggy’s) famous hearty breakfast. A fun if eccentric choice. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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34 Rue Saint-Louis, G1R 4P3 Tel (418) 692 1627 The oldest house in Quebec (1675) lets you step through its threshold into a different century. Staff dressed in period costumes serve authentic, traditional Quebecois dishes such as venison in blueberry wine and ham in maple syrup, followed by sweets such as delicious maple syrup pie.

QUEBEC CITY Café de la Paix

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44 Rue des Jardins, G1R 4L7 Tel (418) 692 1430 Several intimate rooms and dependably excellent service offer a good balance of elegant yet casual dining inside the fortifications of Quebec. Reserve in advance: locals love the escargots, Caesar salad, caribou with juniper berries, beef Wellington, and other mouth-watering French dishes. Lingering is de rigeur over fine coffee and dessert.

LA MALBAIE Auberge des Peupliers

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381 Rue Saint-Raphaël, G5A 2N8 Tel (418) 665 4423 This gabled farmhouse is one of Charlevoix’s oldest auberges, with a gracious lawn overlooking the St. Lawrence River. Gastronome chef Dominique Truchon creates inventive dishes obtained fresh from regional producers. He is a founder of “La Route des saveurs” – the Charlevoix Flavor Trail, and this establishment is, of course, a member.

LES EBOULEMENTS Les Saveurs Oubliées

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350 rang Saint-Godefroy (route 362), G0A 2M0 Tel (418) 635 9888 Basque chef Régis Hervé offers a warm welcome to his airy restaurant overlooking “la mer” – the St. Lawrence River. This is a perfect setting for sampling traditional Charlevoix recipes that Hervé researched with assistance from older residents – hence the name, which means “Forgotten Flavors.” Organic salt-grass-fed lamb and pine jelly are a specialty.

SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN Q QUEBEC CHAMBLY Fourquet-fourchette

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1887 Ave. Bourgogne, J3L 1Y8 Tel (450) 447 6370 A summertime terrace overlooks historic Fort Chambly in this unique restaurant serving native foods along with recipes from early settlers and explorers. Wait staff are dressed in First Nation’s and other early pioneers’ or coureur-du-bois costumes. Unibroue microbrewery beer (the brewery is down the street and can be visited) is well matched to the foods.

GATINEAU Le Pied de cochon

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248 Montcalm, J8Y 3C1 Tel (819) 777 5808 A Gatineau institution for 30 years, this French bistro’s white linens set the tone for romantic dining. Gracious wait staff serve you in the dining room, or on the terrace in summer. Fine dining at its best, with the “goût-du-jour” (taste of the day) being a special delight. Closed Sun–Mon.

GATINEAU Le Twist Café Restaurant Bar

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88 Montcalm, J8X 2L7 Tel (819) 777 8886 All-you-can-eat mussels on Sunday and Monday attract locals to this trendy café/bistro where contemporary music plays. Mussels, salmon pie, and homemade Belgian mayonnaise are specialties. The choice of the day often features fresh fish. There is also a range of microbrewery beers to try.

LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS, VAL-DAVID A la Chocolaterie Marie-Claude

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1090 Rue Valiquette, J8B 2M3 Tel (450) 229 3991 A charming house of small pleasures where over 30 varieties of quality chocolates are made the old-fashioned way. The menu includes waffles, croissants, salads, soups, and desserts like Italian gelato or chocolate fondue. Excellent espresso and café au lait. Closed Mon, Wed, Thu.

LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS, SAINTE-ADELE L’Eau à la Bouche

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3003 Blvd. Sainte-Adele, J8B 2N6 Tel (450) 229 2991 The discovery menu lets you explore new taste sensations coupled with fine wine. The fare is regional cuisine, with organic foods, game, and plants foraged from the wild are used whenever possible. Experience this restaurant’s name, “mouth watering,” while dining on such meals as roast veal in Xerxes sauce with wild mushroom risotto.

LAVAL Derrière les fagots

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166 Boulevard Sainte-Rose, Laval, H7L 1L4 Tel (450) 622 2522 White-clothed tables and warm earth tones in a Quebec-style house establish an atmosphere of relaxed elegance. In summer, dine outside on the small terrace. Seafood and fresh produce are the specialties. The mouth-watering Frenchinspired menu changes frequently. Superb sommelier, attentive service.

MONTEREGIE, SAINTE-MARTHE L’Auberge des Gallants

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1171 Chemin Saint-Henri, J0P 1W0 Tel (450) 459 4241 With a spa, hotel, restaurant, and sugar shack, this gracious inn situated in the heart of a wildlife sanctuary offers delicious food amid tranquility. Sugar shack (open late Feb to end Apr) serves traditional meals of maple sausages, beans, and pancakes while the gastronomical menu emphasizes regional, seasonal Quebec fare.

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OUTAOUAIS, SHAWVILLE Café 349

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349 Rue Main, J0X 2Y0 Tel (819) 647 6424 Owner Ruth Smiley-Hahn bakes muffins, mouthwatering desserts, and serves tasty all-natural country-style meals seasoned with fresh herbs. Portions are generous. From quiches with salad to hearty soups, Ruth’s menu changes every 6 weeks, celebrating the seasons. Local musicians entertain some Thursday nights, while local artists’ creations are for sale.

OUTAOUAIS, WAKEFIELD Chez Eric Café

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28 Valley Drive, Wakefield, J0X 3G0 Tel (819) 459 3747 Named after a fish from a Monty Python skit, this quirky restaurant in an old house is a popular local hangout so reservations are advisable. Delicious homemade bistro food: try grilled salmon sandwich or wild boar ragout served by friendly staff. In summer, dine at tables in the flower garden.

OUTAOUAIS, CHELSEA Les Fougères

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783 route 105, Chelsea, J9B 1P1 Tel (819) 827 8942 This is country elegance in the forested Gatineau Hills, popular with discerning locals who share a passion for fresh regional foods partnered with sommelier-selected fine wines. Staff are extremely knowledgeable. Les Fougeres is renowned for its 11-course tasting menu. The monthly table d’hôte features seasonal, organic local foods. There is a children’s menu. \\\\

OUTAOUAIS, CHELSEA L’Orée du Bois 15 Chemin Kingsmere, J9B 1A1 Tel (819) 827 0332

A log building tucked into mature hardwood forest beside the entrance to Gatineau Park. The French menu features seasonal foods such as asparagus, mushrooms, raspberries, and regional meat wherever possible, as well as herbs from the kitchen garden and homemade chocolate desserts. The on-site smokehouse uses maple to season fish, poultry, and meat. \\\

RIGAUD Sucrerie de la Montagne 300 Rang Saint-Georges, J0P 1P0 Tel (450) 451 0831

One of Quebec’s first “sugar shacks” to remain open year-round. In season (late Feb to end Apr), there is tour sap gathering and syrup production. This is an all-you-can-eat sugaring-off feast of maple-cured sausages and ham, beans, or pancakes with maple syrup (different grades: you choose). Finish with sugar pie.

ROUYN-NORANDA Restaurant Brochetterie Grecque

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152 Rue Principale, J9X 4P7 Tel (819) 797 0086 Welcoming atmosphere with Greek music playing in background where you can sample delicious homemade Greek fare such as locally smoked fish, grilled meats, and baklava dripping with honey. The specialty is brochettes – a variety of kebabs (usually meat roasted on skewers) – such as rosemary-rubbed lamb. Service is attentive, not fussy.

SHERBROOKE L’Arlequin

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875 Belvédère Sud, J1H 4B9 Tel (819) 573 2818 Reasonably priced table d’hôtes attracts regulars who bring their own wine to this French restaurant known for its adventurous gastronomique menu. Seasonal creations include such foods as smoked venison or lamb with five pepper sauce. For dessert, try Quebec’s famous regional cheeses such as Charlevoix region’s Le Migneron.

SHERBROOKE La Mare au Diable Microbrewery

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151 Rue King Ouest, J1H 1P4 Tel (819) 562 1001 There is a great view from this hillside French restaurant, which is also the first microbrewery in the city’s downtown core. In summertime, the terrace affords panoramic views of the surrounding countryside. All beers are brewed onsite (tours available). Wait staff are well trained to assist you in matching your menu selection to the right beer.

TROIS-RIVIERES Il Circo Pâtes et passion

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1140 Saint Prosper, G9A 3V9 Tel (819) 374 0008 The cheerful bright yellow and royal blue exterior is matched by a bright interior, where the owner’s passion for the circus is evident by his collection of clowns and other artifacts. Serves fabulous breakfasts (such as crepes with strawberries and bananas), delectable Italian food – pastas (salmon, shrimp, or carbonara) or tempting chicken dishes.

TORONTO DOWNTOWN Café 668

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668 Dundas St. West Toronto, Ontario, M5T 1H9 Tel (416) 703 0668 Vegetarian cuisine of Southeast Asia with Vietnamese, Thai, and Chinese influences is served in a small space. The extensive menu includes tempura platters, seaweed tofu soup, julienne salad of shredded deep-fried tofu with grilled cashews in vinaigrette, and the House Special – Lor-Hon Style (mixed vegetables, tofu). No alcohol served.

DOWNTOWN Ethiopian House

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4 Irwin Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4E 1E4 Tel (416) 923 5438 A quaint restaurant where food is eaten with fingers. Pickled achards and stewed meats are scooped up with injera bread. Service can be slow but prices are reasonable and portions generous. A great introduction to the cuisine. Vegetarian dishes include spicy split peas, chick peas in garlic, lentils, crunchy collard greens, and smooth-roasted potatoes. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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DOWNTOWN Shopsy’s

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33 Yonge Street Toronto, Ontario, M5E 1G4 Tel (416) 365 3333 A traditional delicatessen/diner founded over 85 years ago as an ice-cream parlor by the Shopsowtzs’, now synonymous with excellent service, great food, and upscale decor. Specialties include wonderful corned beef and pastrami, double rye bread, macaroni and cheese, and carrot cake. All-day breakfast is served. A large patio draws summer crowds.

DOWNTOWN Jamie Kennedy Wine Bar

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9 Church Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5E 1M2 Tel (416) 362 1957 Casual, contemporary restaurant/wine bar. The menu is based on seasonal, slow-food philosophy and includes rustic soups, artisan cheeses, and charcuterie. Lunch reservations are recommended. Cocktails and tapas are served in the comfortable lounge while you wait for a table. No evening reservations.

DOWNTOWN 309 Dhaba

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309 King Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 1J5 Tel (416) 740 6622 Traditional Indian food is served in a friendly, unpretentious location in the downtown theater/entertainment district. Pre-theater prix fixe or an extensive menu with butter chicken, sizzling tandoori dishes, lamb aubergine, okra chicken, or all-you-can-eat buffet (more than 50 items). There is a six-course tasting menu. Reservations recommended.

DOWNTOWN Amadeus Bavarian Beer Stube

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111 Richmond Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2G4 Tel (416) 366 3500 Large, sometimes noisy, 300-seat bierkeller opposite downtown Sheraton and Hilton Hotels and the Four Seasons Centre. Staff wear traditional costume. There is a bar with tall tables, regular seating, and secluded booths. The traditional menu includes Nürnberger bratwurst, cabbage slaw, schnitzel, Farmer’s Feast, and beef roulade.

DOWNTOWN Big Daddy’s Crab Shack

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212 King Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 1K5 Tel (416) 599 5200 In the downtown theater district, this spicy Cajun and Creole seafood restaurant decorated with images of jazz singers and New Orleans streetscapes is good for casual dinner before a show. Bar specialties include New Orleans Hurricane Cocktail. A courtyard dining area serves lunch and dinner.

DOWNTOWN Fressen

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478 Queen Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 2B2 Tel (416) 504 5127 Modern American vegan meals are prepared to order from fresh ingredients at Fressen. The front opens in summer onto Queen Street. The Tapas-style menu is good for sharing. Other items include exotic salads, sweet potatococonut milk soup, freshly squeezed juices, and organic wines. Bring your own bottle – corkage $25.

DOWNTOWN Marcel’s Bistro

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315 King Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 1J5 Tel (416) 591 8600 Above Saint Tropez restaurant on trendy King Street West, downtown Toronto. Marcel’s Bistro serves authentic southern French cooking, bouillabaisse-style fresh fish and seafood stew, mussels, pheasant, snails, venison, and frites. Classical music is played. Good for casual chic lunches or a romantic evening rendezvous.

DOWNTOWN N’Awlins

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299 King Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 1J5 Tel (416) 595 1958 Popular downtown bar and grill in the entertainment district with live jazz, excellent Cajun-Creole food, and a romantic, eclectic atmosphere. House specials include spicy seafood, Surf’N’Turf, jambalaya, and pasta. There is also excellent gumbo, blackened catfish, rack of lamb, and cajun-seasoned alligator.

DOWNTOWN Niagara Street Café

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169 Niagara Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 1C9 Tel (416) 703 4222 Niagara Street Café is an unpretentious but stylish café/bistro with French Mediterranean cuisine, great for Sunday brunch and vegetarian dishes. It has an organically based menu, and uses naturally raised meats and local products. The diining room is warm/romantic and service is excellent. The seasonal menu includes wild fish, squid, pork.

DOWNTOWN Segovia

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5 St. Nicholas Street, Toronto, Ontario, M4Y 1W5 Tel (416) 960 1010 The decor is cheerful and colorful in this casual Spanish restaurant in mid-town Toronto. Favorites include tapas, snails in wine and cream, mussels in saffron, and squid with traditional aioli. Entrees include paella, scallops, and lamb. Portions are generous. There is live music and dancing. Reservations recommended.

DOWNTOWN 5th Elementt

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1033 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3A5 Tel (416) 923 8159 In stylish Yorkville, the heart of the Film Festival District, this fusion Indo-Italian restaurant with a large space and two tier patio is good for business lunches and large parties. Original dishes include Goan-style sirloin steak, coriandercrusted halibut, and rack of venison.

DOWNTOWN Benihana

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100 Front Street West, Royal York Hotel, Toronto, Ontario, M5J 1E3 Tel (416) 860 5002 Part of the global Japanese restaurant chain, Benihana Toronto is located inside the Fairmont Royal York Hotel and is a traditional Japanese-style hibachi steakhouse (“teppanyaki.”) Meals are prepared in front of you, from steak, to chicken, seafood, fresh vegetables, or sushi, in traditional Japanese style on a hibachi table. Reservations recommended.

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DOWNTOWN Biagio

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155 King Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M5C 1G9 Tel (416) 366 4040 Inside St. Lawrence Town Hall, the Biagio serves classic Italian food and has a formal dining room with a beautiful ceiling, and intimate garden patio with a fountain. Lunch choices include Risotto Tre Funghi, Rigatoni Amatriciana, and Cannelloni Pasticciati; dinner choices include Sella D’Agnello, Osso Bucco, and Dover Sole.

DOWNTOWN Rodney’s Oyster House

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469 King Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 1K4 Tel (416) 363 8105 Popular with downtown sophisticates, and busy at weekends, the specialty here is oysters – raw and in chowder – but there are also clams, mussels, lobsters, scallops, crab, and shrimp. Fresh salt and freshwater fish include halibut, salmon, walleye, and arctic char. There is a good wine list and cocktails. Open after midnight on weekends. Closed Sun.

DOWNTOWN Sultan’s Tent and Café Moroc

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49 Front Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5E 1B3 Tel (416) 961 0601 On touristy Front Street, the Sultan’s Tent has sophisticated, elegant Moroccan decor. Beautifully decorated tents serve as dining areas for groups, offering a traditional “diffa” (lavish banquet). Couples sit in the aisle outside the tents areas. The menu includes Keskesu Casablanca and rack of lamb. There are belly dancing performances.

DOWNTOWN Bymark

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66 Wellington Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M5K 1J3 Tel (416) 777 1144 The Bymark is located in the Toronto Dominion Centre and was designed by Yabu Pushelberg. Main dining is on the concourse level with three separate dining rooms, a focal four-pillar sculpture fountain, and glassed-in wine cellar. There is a courtyard bar with views of Modernist Mies Van der Rohe towers.

DOWNTOWN Monsoon

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100 Simcoe Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 3G2 Tel (416) 979 7172 In Toronto’s Entertainment district, this elegant Asian-fusion restaurant has dining areas, a 1960’s style lounge, and subdued lighting. The menu includes asian beef tartar, togarashi salmon, daily bento boxes, pan-seared red snapper, and vegetarian hot pot. Catering and event design are available for meetings and special occasions.

EAST END Pulp Kitchen

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898 Queen Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4M 1J3 Tel (416) 461 4612 An East Toronto healthy vegan eatery and juice bar (over 30 blends) has airy decor. Organic coffee, lattes and espresso, vegan treats, and loose leaf teas, are all served. The breakfast menu includes homemade granola, muesli, oatmeal, and toasted sandwiches. The brunch menu includes daily soup special, panfried dumplings, and homemade fruit salad.

EAST END Beacher Café

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2162 Queen Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4E 1 E4 Tel (416) 699 3874 A popular, busy landmark restaurant with a relaxing family atmosphere in Toronto’s Beaches area with a seasonal patio and lines for Saturday and Sunday brunch. Original paintings and artwork (often for sale) are on display. The Beacher Café is famous for its homemade hollandaise sauce.

EAST END Kalyvia

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420 Danforth Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4K 1P3 Tel (416) 463 3333 Home-style Mediterranean cuisine, taverna-style is served on a 'people-watching' patio in ethnic Greektown. Specialty dishes include seafood platter, Poikilia Kalyvia with spiced meats, onions, green peppers, mushrooms, tomatoes, hot peppers sautéed in white wine, and Melitzanosalata – a puree of eggplant dip, oil, garlic, onion and Greek spices.

EAST END Red Violin Brazilian Steakhouse

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95 Danforth Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4K 1N2 Tel (416) 465 0969 Toronto’s first authentic Brazilian Rodizio, with an all-you-can-eat Brazilian menu and live music. The menu includes fried plantains, cheese breads, barbequed entrées, fish, roasted pineapple, and Brazilian Churrascaria. Within an authentic vintage building, this offers a unique dining experience. The Caipirinha cocktails are a speciality.

EAST END Soma Restaurant and Lounge

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703 Queen Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4M 1G6 Tel (416) 778 7662 Spacious, relaxed riverside restaurant with a lounge and full-length bar opposite the dining area. Cocktails include classic martinis. Try the sweet chilli prawn cakes or Hoisin pork with green onion crepes appetizers, or main dishes of mushroom risotto or quince-glazed lamb. Friendly service. Reservations recommended.

EAST END Embrujo Flamenco

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97 Danforth Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4K 1N2 Tel (416) 778 0007 Originally established over 35 years ago, but located on Danforth since 2002, the regional Spanish dishes served include tapas and paella. The atmosphere is bohemian, with live flamenco Wed–Sun. There is an eclectic menu and a good selection of Spanish sherries and wines.

EAST END Lolita’s Lust & The Chinchilla Lounge

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513 Danforth Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4K 1M8 Tel (416) 465 1751 Intimate, romantic, and trendy, with an upscale yet bohemian atmosphere and namesake martinis, this is the place to be seen – celebrities have been glimpsed dining here – in the heart of the Greek district. The Coach House (a retrofitted brick garage) extends the cozy space. The upstairs Chinchilla lounge is available for private parties. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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NORTH Asian Legend

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5188 Yonge Street, North York, Ontario, M7A 2k2 Tel (416) 221 9797 Located in trendy Chinatown west in a narrow space with modern decor, the menu serves traditional Northern dim sum and stir fry. Specialties include House Special Crispy Pancake with shredded shrimp, Chinese chives, and scallions; beef short ribs; Szechuan smoked duck; and bean curd with vegetables. There is a good range of tsingtao and jasmine teas.

NORTH Zaffron Ristorante

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6200 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario, M2M 3X1 Tel (416) 223 7070 Authentic, upscale Italian and Persian restaurant, with California-style decor, stucco walls, and tiled floors and a wood oven. Specialties include Iranian flatbread, eggplant purée with goat yogurt cheese and deep-fried mint, Fusilli Saraceno, and skewers of lamb, tenderloin, sirloin and chicken, Persian tea, good wine list, and popular yogurt soda.

NORTH Wildfire Steakhouse & Wine Bar

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3438 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario, M4N 2N2 Tel (416) 483 4800 Upscale, uptown steakhouse with cozy, romantic candlelit atmosphere. Food is a combination of Portuguese and Californian cuisine. The house specialty is Sterling Silver steaks (aged for at least 4 weeks, enhanced with spices); churrasco meals include ribs, chicken, lamb dishes, and seafood.

NORTH Auberge Du Pommier

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4150 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario, M2P 2C6 Tel (416) 222 2220 Formal, elegant, upscale French dining in a building erected around rustic 1860s woodcutters cottages in Yonge Corporate Centre. There are wood-burning fireplaces in winter and lush gardens in summer. Over 500 wine labels, mostly French and Californian, are on offer. The menu includes Tranche de Foie Gras Saute and Grenoulles à la Provençal.

NORTH North 44

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2537 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario, M4P 2H9 Tel (416) 487 4897 Named after Toronto city’s latitude, North 44 serves excellent gourmet food in an elegant, contemporary setting with a neutral color scheme, wood, and accent lighting. A bar and lounge are on the upper level; there are private rooms for 14–20 people; and the upper level dining room seats 75.

WEST END Piri-Piri Churrasqueira Grillhouse

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1444 Dupont Street, Toronto, Ontario, M6P 4H3 Tel (416) 536 5100 Authentic Portuguese traditional dishes including fresh grilled fish, seafood, grilled sardines, sausages, and chicken are served at the Piri-Piri. Okra and mixed vegetables are particularly recommended. There is a wide selection of Portuguese wines and ports. Take-outs are available too.

WEST END Irie Food Joint

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745 Queen Street West Toronto, Ontario, M6J 1G1 Tel (416) 366 4743 A relaxed Jamaican restaurant in trendy Queen west, with reggae music and a seasonal back patio, garden, and tiki lights. There is a small bar area. Traditional menu favorites include jerk wings, sweet corn, seafood gumbo, rice and peas, curried chicken, and homemade mango cheesecake. Corkage is $15.

FARTHER AFIELD On the Curve Hot Stove & Wine Bar

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55 City Centre Drive, Missisauga, Ontario, L5B 1M3 Tel (905) 804 9582 In Missisauga, next to Square One Shopping Mall, is this upscale, hip restaurant/lounge with elegant candlelit dining, curved bar area, dance floor, plush sofas, and busy summer patio. Wednesday night is Latin Heat night with free dance lessons. Private party room available.

FARTHER AFIELD The Doctor’s House

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21 Nashville Road, Kleinberg, Ontario, L0J 1C0 Tel (416) 234 8080 In picturesque Kleinburg is this elegant restaurant with superb food, favored for banquets, weddings, and film shoots. Restored to the original 1867 design, with a non-denominational wedding chapel on site, the dining room with patio and veranda overlook manicured lawns and flowers. Famous for Sunday brunch. Reservations recommended.

OTTAWA AND EASTERN ONTARIO KINGSTON Candlelight Dining

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Fort Henry National Historic Site, Kingston, Ontario Tel (613) 530 2550 Travel back in time in the Officers’ Dining Rooms at Fort Henry, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Soldier servants answer to a finger snap and guests dine on traditional British cuisine prepared from heritage recipes. Open for dinner during the months of July, August, December, and on major holidays.

KINGSTON Chez Piggy

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68-R Princess Street, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 1A5 Tel (613) 549 7673 Affectionately named by locals as “the pig”, this restaurant in a secluded courtyard location in historic downtown Kingston was originally an abandoned limestone stable. It provides a great atmosphere for brunch, lunch, or dinner. There is also a related bakery, Pan Chancho, nearby at 44 Princess St.

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KINGSTON River Mill Restaurant

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2 Cataraqui Street, The Woolen Mill, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 1Z7 Tel (613) 549 5759 In a historic woollen mill building, this elegant, relaxed restaurant serves contemporary cuisine with waterfront views. The wine selection is extensive, with vintage and private-order wines and an emphasis on French and Canadian wines. Sampling plate includes smoked breast of duck, bison carpaccio, smoked salmon, and roasted rack of lamb.

MUSKOKA Top of the Cove

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375 South Bay Road, Honey Harbour, Ontario, M5H 2G4 Tel (705) 756 3399 Reached by water or road, this quaint, seasonal restaurant offers affordable waterside dining, overlooking South Bay Cove Marina on Georgian Bay. There are spectacular sunsets throughout the summer. Menus include pasta, burgers, prime steak, and international dishes in a casual dining atmosphere. Open Jun–Sep.

MUSKOKA Bartlett’s Lodge

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PO Box 10004, Algonquin Park, Ontario, P1H 2G8 Tel (705) 633 5543 Favored by gourmet diners, and located in Algonquin Provincial Park on the shoreline of Cache Lake, a short ferry ride by motorized freighter canoe, this restaurant serves contemporary cuisine. The table d’hote includes venison with port wine and cherry reduction, foie gras terrine, and chocolate and walnut tart. Open mid-May–mid-Oct.

MUSKOKA Bigwin Island Golf Club – Marine Dining Room

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P.O. Box 5611, Huntsville, Ontario, P1H 2L5 Tel (705) 635 2582 In a building dating from the Roaring Twenties, visited by 1940s stars Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, the restaurant in the original dining room overlooks the Lake of Bays and serves 4-Diamond-rated classic French cuisine. Bigwin Island ferry departs Norway Point off Old Highway 117, 10 miles (16 km) east of Baysville. Reservations recommended.

OTTAWA D’Arcy Mc Gee’s

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44 Sparks Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 5A8 Tel (613) 230 4433 This Irish-style pub near Parliament Hill and the War Memorial was shipped to Canada from Ireland and reassembled in Ottawa, with hand-crafted wood and mosaic tile floors in the bar and dining areas. There is live entertainment three nights a week – Celtic, Irish, and contemporary. The menu includes sandwiches, burgers, salads, and soups.

OTTAWA Caveau de Szechwan Le Ottawa

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129 York Street Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 5T4 Tel (613) 562 2882 A popular restaurant in the touristy ByWard market, with Hunan and Szechwan food and an Art Deco atmosphere. There are all-you-can-eat menus which include hot and sour soup, appetizers, chicken, pork, beef, shrimp, Peking Duck (24 hours notice). Busy on weekends.

OTTAWA Yang Shen Cantonese

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662 Somerset St. West, Ottawa, Ontario, K1R 5K4 Tel (613) 235 5794 Serving an authentic Cantonese/Szechuan menu, this fully licensed restaurant has a take-out service too. Traditional T dim sum is served daily. It is popular with locals. The menu includes homemade rice noodle dishes, barbecued duck and pork, rice with chicken in curry sauce, and stir-fried Chinese vegetables. Open daily 11am–1pm

OTTAWA Yangtze

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700 Somerset Street West, Ottawa, Ontario, K1R 6P6 Tel (613) 236 0555 Slightly more expensive than normal, but good Chinese food is served at the Yangze. Notable dishes include dim sum. The menu has everything from beef to shrimp, bean curd, pork, and squid. There is a late-night snack menu with smaller poritions from 8:30pm. Take-out food is also available.

OTTAWA Haveli

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39 Clarence Street Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 2C2 Tel (613) 241 1700 Family-owned and operated, with an extensive Indian menu, including tandoori and curries, the Haveli serves a daily lunch buffet and Sunday lunch/dinner buffets featuring Masala Dosa (potato-filled thin rice crepes served with tangy lentil soup). Spiciness ranges from mild to extra hot.

OTTAWA La Tartuffe

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133 Notre-Dame-de-l’île, Ottawa, Ontario, J8X 3T2 Tel (819) 776 6424 An unpretentious French restaurant in a small historical house in Ottawa/Hull close to the Canadian Museum of Civilization, Palais du Congrès (Convention Centre), and downtown Ottawa. The menu is French origins with Outaouais influences, based on Quebec local/seasonal products, including Charlevoix veal, venison, lamb, and duck.

OTTAWA The Fish Market

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54 York Street, Byward Market, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 5T1 Tel (613) 241 3474 A renowned restaurant in historical ByWard Market, with a colorful, nautical theme, trout and lobster tanks and a fireplace in a heritage building. Generous portions of seafood, lobster, shrimp, crab, oysters, mussels, and scallop are served. The menu also includes salads, crusted fish, chowders, and cajun dishes. There is an extensive, eclectic wine list.

OTTAWA Wilfrid’s

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1 Rideau Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 8S7 Tel (613) 241 1414 Located in the Fairmont Château Laurier hotel, here you will find upscale fine dining, including a popular buffet lunch which can be noisy. Large picture windows overlook Parliament Hill. There is a Canadian-themed menu which includes sautéed veal, Montreal smoked meat sandwiches, seafood chowder, and amazing desserts. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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THE GREAT G LAKES S BAYFIELD The Little Inn of Bayfield

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26 Main Street, Bayfield, Ontario, N0M 1G0 Tel (519) 565 2611 This restaurant at this pretty Colonial style inn is open to non-guests. It serves award-winning locally sourced cuisine, including air-dried bison proscuitto, seared duck foie gras brioche, and a fresh ginger crème caramel. There is a good wine cellar and a snug bar. Reservations recommended.

JORDAN On The Twenty

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3845 Main Street, Jordan, Ontario, L0R 1S0 Tel (905) 562 7313 Nestled in charming Jordan Village, with a panoramic view over Twenty Mile Creek, On the Twenty is known for its excellent regional cuisine and exclusive Vintner’s Quality Alliance wine list. There are tours of Cave Spring Cellars next door, with wine samples. A five-course Winemaker’s Dinner is available.

KITCHENER 20 King

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41 King Street West, Kitchenere, Ontario, N2G 1A1 Tel (519) 745 8939 A downtown restaurant in a historic 1800s building with upscale seasonal Canadian cuisine, leather booths, a rustic finish, and two private dining rooms. The eclectic menu includes bouillabaisse, vension, ossobuco, white chocolate and lavender cheesecake, and a cheese plate. There is an extensive wine list. A fee is charged for corkage.

LONDON The Waltzing Weasel

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1324 Adelaide Street, North London, Ontario, N5X 1J9 Tel (519) 663 9194 Traditional pub food is served in this refurbished 1860s farmhouse. There is a bar area with high top tables and a private upstairs room with dartboards. A partially covered courtyard patio overlooking the North London Golf Center makes for pleasant al fresco eating. The menu includes finger foods, soups, salads, sandwiches, and steaks.

NIAGARA FALLS Table Rock Restaurant

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6650 Niagara Parkway, Niagara Falls, Ontario Tel (905) 354 3631 On the upper level of Table Rock Center, close to the Niagara Falls, and with panoramic views, this casual restaurant serves fresh regional products. There is a children’s menu, seasonal Sunday brunch, and early dinner specials. In the summer months you can eat outside on Horseshoe Landing patio.

NIAGARA FALLS Skylon Tower Summit Suite Dining Room

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5200 Robinson Street, Niagara Falls, Ontario, L2G 2A3 Tel (905) 356 2651 A famous Niagara Falls landmark tower 775 ft (236 m) above the Niagara Falls this elegant restaurant provides a unique night atmosphere as the Falls are illuminated. A seasonal double-sided daily buffet consists of roast beef, fresh seafood, and French pastries. The revolving dining room is one floor down.

NIAGARA FALLS Watermark Restaurant

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6361 Fallsview Boulevard, Niagara Falls, Ontario, L2G 3V9 Tel (905) 353 7138 A rooftop restaurant with a view of the Niagara Falls, the Watermark has a water theme including two aquariums, huge windows, and wave entrance. It is the best place to view the fireworks over the Falls. Continental cuisine, with breakfast buffet, lunch and dinner menus are served. The lounge offers cocktails and appetizers.

NIAGARA FALLS A Cut Above SteakHouse

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6755 Fallsview Boulevard, Niagara Falls, Ontario, L2G 3W7 Tel (905) 358 4720 Formerly the Fallsview Dining Room, this restaurant on the second floor of the Sheraton Hotel has panoramic views of the Niagara Falls and offers a relaxed dining atmosphere with upscale decor and award-winning staff. Steakhouse specials include certified Angus beef, seafood, and pasta. A buffet is served 5–8pm.

NIAGARA ON THE LAKE Shaw Café & Wine Bar

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92 Queen Street, Niagara on the Lake, Ontario, L0S 1J0 Tel (905) 468 4772 Casual but elegant French café-style cuisine is served here. There is an inviting patio with abundant plants and flowers. The Shaw Café & Wine Bar is open daily for lunch and dinner year round and serves soup, sandwiches, salads, homemade entrées, decadent pastries, and cakes.

STRATFORD Bijou Restaurant

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105 Erie Street, Stratford, Ontario, N5A 2M5 Tel (519) 273 5000 A popular restaurant serving modern French cuisine with Asian and Italian influences in a Parisian bistro setting. Local seasonal ingredients are used. The menu changes daily and may include chilled pea shoot soup, scallops with sliced shiitakes, spinach, zucchini, and a small wine list.

STRATFORD Church Restaurant

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70 Brunswick Street, Stratford, Ontario, N5A 3M1 Tel (519) 273 3424 This is an upscale restaurant in a converted church with high ceilings and stained-glass windows that serves unusual food combinations. The varied à la carte menu changes frequently, with a focus on local flavors. There is a wine list of champagnes, burgundies, and California reds. Closed Mon.

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STRATFORD Rundles

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9 Cobourg Street, Stratford, Ontario, N5A 3E4 Tel (519) 271 6442 Modern French cuisine is served here in a 100-seat pre-theater restaurant with stylish, elegant decor and service. There are also some influences on the menu from Italy, Japan, and Morocco. There are à la carte and three-course menus. Reservations recommended.

THUNDER BAY Hoito Restaurant

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314 Bay Street, Thunder Bay, Ontario, P7B 1S1 Tel (807) 345 6323 This authentic Finnish restaurant in Big Finn Hall historic landmark building was established in 1918 to offer hearty meals at low prices to the Finnish bushworkers. It is now a café-style restaurant with individual tables and home-style food, including many Finnish dishes. Specialties include piles of Finnish pancakes for a hearty breakfast.

THUNDER BAY Bistro One

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555 Dunlop Street, Thunder Bay, Ontario, P7B 6S1 Tel (807) 622 2478 A comfortable, upscale bistro with elegant decor and a private dining area. Menu highlights include sea scallops in a maple syrup champagne sauce and rosemary roasted rack of New Zealand lamb with gorgonzola butter. It is known for its decadent desserts, including warm chocolate gateau.

WINDSOR Noi

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888 Erie Street East, Windsor, Ontario, N9A 3Y6 Tel (519) 252 8004 This minimalist Italian-Mediterranean restaurant (Noi means “Us” in Italian) is frequented by patrons from Windsor and Detroit, USA. The menu includes pheasant breast stuffed with figs, apricots, spinach, and prosciutto and habanero pepper-infused chocolate cake with cinnamon ice cream. Reservations recommended.

CENTRAL CANADA EDMONTON Sherlock Holmes

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West Edmonton Mall, Edmonton, Alberta, T5T 4V4 Tel (780) 444 1752 Part of a locally owned chain of restaurants, this old British-style pub has traditional fare such as fish and chips and 17 types of beer on tap. There is live music nightly and karaoke on Sundays. The walls are adorned with British memorabilia, photos, and team jerseys. Open 11:30am–2am daily.

EDMONTON La Ronde

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10111 Bellamy Hill, Edmonton, Alberta, T5J 1N7 Tel (780) 428 6611 La Ronde sits atop the Crowne-Plaza Château Lacombe Hotel downtown. It takes 90 minutes for this revolving rooftop restaurant to make a full rotation offering a panoramic view of the city. The menu features local Alberta cuisine including bison, venison, beef, and Arctic char. Open for dinner Mon–Sat and for brunch Sun.

EDMONTON Unheardof Restaurant

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9620 Whyte Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta, T6C 1A1 Tel (780) 432 0480 In business since 1980, the menu at the Unheardof Restaurant includes salmon, chicken, tuna, bison, and caribou. It uses symbols to help customers tailor their meal to their dietary restrictions such as gluten-free food. Open Tue–Sun dinner only. Reservations recommended.

RED DEER La Casa Pergola

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4909 48 St., Red Deer, Alberta, T4N 1S8 Tel (403) 342 2404 The Casa features Italian decor and tantalizing dishes made with care. The menu includes Al Tartufo ravioli with truffle brandy cream sauce and rack of lamb with rosemary raspberry vinaigrette. There is a patio just off the lounge and live music on occasion. Open for lunch and dinner.

STEINBACH Livery Barn Restaurant

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Mennonite Heritage Village, Steinbach, Manitoba, R5G 1T8 Tel (204) 326 9661 Learn about the Mennonite lifestyle from the 16th century to the present in the Heritage Village. Then try the food at the red Livery Barn, reminiscent of the old rest stops for weary travelers. Eat locally prepared Foarma Worscht, vereniki, Komst Borscht, and stoneground bread.

WINNIPEG Wagon Wheel Restaurant

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305 Hargrave St., Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3B 2J7 Tel (204) 942 6695 This lunch stop is best known for its clubhouse sandwiches. Open about 50 years, it has an old-time feel with orange booths and one-legged yellow tabletops. There are wagon wheels on the ceiling and a spot for people to sit at the counter. Open weekdays 6am–6pm.

WINNIPEG La Vieille Gare

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630 Des Meurons, St. Boniface, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R2H 2P9 Tel (204) 237 7072 Serving a menu of French cuisine that changes with the seasons this elegant restaurant is in the old St. Boniface train station in Winnipeg’s French Quarter. Built in 1913, it became a restaurant in 1970. The lounge is in a former rail car, and there is a trained sommelier. Open for dinner daily. Lunch weekdays only. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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WINNIPEG Restaurant Dubrovnik

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390 Assiniboine Ave., Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3C 0Y1 Tel (204) 944 0594 Located in an elegant mansion on the Assiniboine River, this restaurant offers French and international dishes ranging from bison and lamb to New York steak, venison, and vegetarian options. There are three dining rooms and live piano music is played in the lobby on Fri and Sat evenings. Winner of Wine Spectator Award. Open for dinner only.

MOOSE JAW Harwood’s Dining Room

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24 Fairford St., Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, S6H 0C7 Tel (306) 693 7778 Set inside the Temple Gardens Mineral Spa Hotel, the menu at Harwood’s Dining Room includes fish, pasta, and beef. It also serves Sunday brunch. This restaurant has a relaxing atmosphere but dresses up in the evening with linens and fine china for a touch of elegance. Open 7am–11pm.

REGINA John’s Place

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379 Albert St., Regina, Saskatchewan, S4R 2N6 Tel (306) 545 3777 The menu at John’s Place features prime rib steak, seafood, pasta, and pizza. The restaurant is decorated with live trees inside, lots of plants, two large fireplaces, and skylights. There are also antiques on display, including an old butter churn. Open 11am–10pm Mon–Sat and 4pm–9pm Sun.

REGINA Willow on Wascana

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3000 Wascana Drive, Regina, Saskatchewan, S4P 3B2 Tel (306) 585 3663 In a beautiful setting on Wascana Lake, the patio here at Willow on Wascana offers a good spot from which to enjoy the view. The menu focuses on Prairie cuisine, using local ingredients as much as possible. A tasting menu is offered. Open Mon-Sat for lunch and dinner. Open Sun for dinner only.

REGINA Diplomat Steak House

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2032 Broad St., Regina, Saskatchewan, S4P 1Y3 Tel (306) 359 3366 This elegant restaurant has a fireplace and lounge, polished oak and red velour booths. Pictures of Canadian prime ministers adorn the walls. The menu offers fine dining, and features steak and seafood. The Diplomat has received eight Wine Spectator awards. Open for lunch and dinner weekdays and only for dinner on weekends.

SASKATOON Wanuskewin Restaurant

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Wanuskewin Heritage Park RR 4, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7K 3J7 Tel (306) 931 6767 or (877) 547 6546 This eatery in Wanuskewin Heritage Park 3 miles (5 km) north of Saskatoon overlooks a scenic valley. Buffalo signs mark the way as you get closer to the park. The cafeteria-style service features First Nations cuisine such as bison burgers, bannock, and wild rice. Open 9am–5pm (to 8pm in summer).

SASKATOON Saskatoon Station Place

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221 Idylwyld Drive N., Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7L 6V6 Tel (306) 244 7777 The decor here evokes the golden age of train travel with its vintage rail dining car. Step into the past with period artwork and antiques such as an English street clock and Victorian era chandeliers. The menu features Greek specialties and offers a luxury dining experience. Open for lunch and dinner.

SASKATOON The Granary

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2806 8th St. East, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7H 0V9 Tel (306) 373 6655 This Saskatoon landmark is in a building shaped like a country grain elevator – the sentinels of the prairies. Highlights on the menu are prime rib, steak and seafood. The funky decor has a prairie theme – the walls showcase antique farm memorabilia such as old tools. Open for dinner only.

VANCOUVER AND VANCOUVER ISLAND CAMPBELL RIVER Legends Dining Room

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1625 McDonald Rd, British Columbia, V9W 4S5 Tel (250) 286 1102 Overlooking Discovery Passage, at Legends patrons indulge in delectably fresh, exquisitely prepared and finished West Coast fare while watching ships cruise by. Waiters are on hand to suggest excellent local wines. Brandy is served in the fireside lounge. Sunday brunch is a local tradition. Reservations recommended.

MALAHAT The Aerie

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600 Ebedora Lane, British Columbia, V0R 2L0 Tel (250) 743 7115 or (800) 518 1933 Sample an excellent menu of local meats (choices include guinea fowl, ostrich, pheasant, quail, rabbit, venison, and lamb) or Canadian seafood. However delicious your meal and BC wine, it will be hard pressed to surpass the spectacular views, overlooking ocean fjords and snow-capped mountains.

NANAIMO Wesley Street Restaurant

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321 Wesley St, British Columbia, V9R 2T5 Tel (250) 753 6057 An intimate café with pretty harbor views. The contemporary cuisine focuses on Vancouver Island produce, including a tasting menu featuring locally farmed products. With its excellent, prompt service, good food and wine list, this restaurant has been voted one of the top five restaurants on Vancouver Island.

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NANAIMO Mahle House Restaurant

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2104 Hemer Rd, British Columbia, V9X 1L8 Tel (250) 722 3621 This 1904 farmhouse set in an English garden includes “Adventure Wednesday” when the chef cooks a five-course surprise dinner. Even so, the main menu changes every week. Owner-chefs use their garden herbs with locally raised meats such as rabbit, venison, and chicken. Try porcupine prawns or calamari dijonnaise.

SALT SPRING ISLAND Hastings House

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160 Upper Ganges Rd, British Columbia, V8K 2S2 Tel (250) 537 2362 or (800) 661 9255 Set in a historic English manor overlooking Ganges’ harbor, the homegrown cuisine here includes herbs, fruits, and greens grown in the estate’s orchards and gardens. Island produce features such as highly regarded Salt Spring Island lamb, served elegantly in a wood-beamed dining room. There is an award-winning wine cellar.

SOOKE Sooke Harbour House

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1528 Whiffen Spit Rd, British Columbia, V0S 1N0 Tel (250) 642 3421 or (800) 889 9688 An unusual, innovative culinary adventure awaits here, where the award-winning menu changes daily in order to present absolutely fresh ingredients. Choices will include marine edibles such as sea asparagus and sea urchins, partnered with vegetables and herbs from the seashore and gardens on the site.

TOFINO SoBo Catering Truck

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1084 Pacific Rim Highway, British Columbia, V0R 2Z0 Tel (250) 725 2341 The name of this former catering truck derives from “Sophisticated Bohemian.” Owner-chefs select organic vegetables, wild-caught BC salmon, and island-raised poultry, transforming them into tempting sensations such as “Gringo soft chicken tacos,” and crispy shrimp cakes. Eat and then have a stroll in the Tofino Botanical Gardens. Open mid-Oct–mid-Apr.

TOFINO Wickaninnish Inn & Pointe Restaurant

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Osprey Lane at Chesterman’s Beach, British Columbia, V0R 2Z0 Tel (250) 725 3100 This Relais and Châteaux property features a stunning dining room of West Coast cedar featuring a circular fireplace. Octagonal room juts out over the Pacific Ocean, providing an extraordinary setting in which to enjoy fresh seafood or exquisite lamb or beef dishes well-married with Pacific Northwest wines.

VANCOUVER Pink Pearl

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1132 East Hastings Street, British Columbia, V6A 1S2 Tel (604) 253 4316 Possibly the city’s most popular albeit unassuming Chinese eatery, bustling Pink Pearl serves dim sum from 9am every day. Get here very early – the line gets very long. Specialties include hot and spicy prawns in chilli sauce. You can select fresh lobsters or rock cod from live tanks.

VANCOUVER Planet Veg

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1941 Cornwall, British Columbia, V6J 1C8 Tel (604) 734 1001 With an uncompromisingly plain ambience, this cafeteria-style little nook dishes up tasty vegetarian fare such as delicious roti rolls (including a basmati rice pot), or a yam and apple veggie burger – voted the city’s best. Service is extremely friendly with staff who patiently wait while you try to decide what to order. No alcohol served.

VANCOUVER Nyala

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4148 Main St., British Columbia, V5V 3P7 Tel (604) 876 9919 A local favorite for more than 20 years, Nyala serves Ethiopian, Moroccan, and South African meals with wine or beer from South Africa and BC. Highlights include fresh ingredients, exotic spices, and a warm ambience featuring North African decor. There is a wide selection of vegetarian dishes. Closed Mon.

VANCOUVER Rasputin Russian Cuisine

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457 West Broadway British Columbia, V5Y 1R4 Tel (604) 879 6675 Most evenings you can listen to live traditional balalaika music – or violin or voice – while Rasputin glares down at you from the wall. Choose Beluga black caviar, beef stroganoff, or chicken Kiev from the menu. If you are tempted to try the Russian tipple (vodka), there are more than 20 labels to select from.

VANCOUVER Gastropod

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1938 4th Ave. W, British Columbia, V6J 1M5 Tel (604) 730 5579 The ambience of understated elegance is a fitting backdrop for the playful menu of fresh seasonal fare at Gastropod. Look for local oysters with horseradish snow and wild spring salmon. Unusual desserts include potato millefeuille with white chocolate and coffee butter cream. Closed Mon.

VANCOUVER Havana

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1212 Commercial Drive, British Columbia, V5L 3X4 Tel (604) 253 9119 This authentic Cuban restaurant shares space with an art gallery and theater, located in a diverse, bustling neighborhood. Breakfast is served (until 2pm), as well as sandwiches, tapas, and entrées. This popular spot simulates a lively slice of Havana, a feeling enhanced by old photographs haphazardly hung on graffiti-clad walls.

VANCOUVER Stepho’s Souvlaki Greek Taverna

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1124 Davie Street, British Columbia, V6E 1N1 Tel (604) 683 2555 Come very early to avoid the lines at this highly popular local favorite where portions are huge. Greek salad is “the city’s best,” while roasted potatoes jostle for room amid the lamb. Authentic dishes and crowds of happy customers means this is a fun if noisy place to eat. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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VANCOUVER The Fish House

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8901 Stanley Park Drive, British Columbia, V6G 3E2 Tel (604) 681 7275 This fine fish restaurant is a Vancouver institution in Stanley Park, surrounded by greenery and panoramic views of English Bay. There is an excellent oyster bar. Superb flaming prawns (ouzo fuels the fire) are served. There is a choice of 13 wines served by the glass.

VANCOUVER The Naam Restaurant

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2724 4th Ave. W, British Columbia, V6K 1R1 Tel (604) 738 7151 Vegetarians flock to this funky Kitsilano institution open 24/7 (except Christmas day). In summer dine outside on the patio; in winter stay cozy beside the crackling wood fire. During the evening (roughly 7–10pm) while you dine on favorites such as sesame fries, you can groove to live blues, folk tunes, or jazz.

VANCOUVER Chambar

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562 Beatty Street, British Columbia, V6B 2L3 Tel (604) 879 7119 Hip Chambar offers Belgian dishes such as an exquisite interpretation of Coquille St.-Jacques – maple-seared scallops served with lentils and sweet potato crisps. Specialties include Concolaise, where smoked chillies, cilantro, lime, and coconut cream create a mouthwatering sensation. Belgian waffles for dessert are a highlight.

VANCOUVER Cin Cin Restaurant

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1154 Robson St, British Columbia, V6E 1B5 Tel (604) 688 7338 Pronounced chin-chin (a toast to good health), this popular restaurant featuring tasting menus is decorated in Italian style. A clattering open kitchen features a rotisserie, wood-fired oven, and a sizzling grill. Here both local and imported Italian ingredients become mouthwatering sensations. Pasta (such as hand-rolled gnocchi) is homemade.

VANCOUVER Villa Del Lupo

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869 Hamilton St, British Columbia, V6B 2R7 Tel (604) 688 7436 Romance is in the air in this downtown Victorian-era building with large bay windows overlooking the city and an open fireplace. It is a favorite with local diners intent on mouthwatering Italian food such as risotto with fresh chives, free-range stuffed chicken, and olive oil-poached tomatoes.

VANCOUVER Bishop’s

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2183 W. 4th Ave, British Columbia, V6K 1N7 Tel (604) 738 2025 Owned by Welsh chef John Bishop, the West Coast menu here changes weekly, so all the organic ingredients are fresh and reflect the season. Highlights include smoked wild sockeye salmon, duck confit, and desserts such as butterscotch rhubarb tart with mascarpone cream. Closed 1–15 Jan and 24–6 Dec.

VANCOUVER C Restaurant

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2-1600 Howe St, British Columbia, V6Z 2L9 Tel (604) 681 1164 With minimalist decor that emphasizes the old warehouse architecture, trendy, contemporary C also claims an attractive waterfront patio featuring white linens and tiles. Not limiting itself only to local ingredients, discover classical foods (especially seafood) with a contemporary flair: celeriac soup with cured halibut, slow-poached hen’s egg and black truffle.

VANCOUVER Diva at the Met

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Metropolitan Hotel, 645 Howe St, British Columbia, V6C 2Y9 Tel (604) 687 1122 The terraced floors and open-style Waldorf kitchen at this restaurant create a casual flair. Pre-theater menus feature eclectic takes on seafood and game such as black cod. Here you’ll find Vancouver’s largest selection of cheeses and decadent desserts – try warm upside-down chocolate soufflé.

VANCOUVER Gotham Steak House & Cocktail Bar

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615 Seymour St, British Columbia, V6B 3K4 Tel (604) 605 8282 Canadian prime beef produces exceptionally tender steaks here, under the attentive hands of Chef Jean Claude Douget. There is an elegant ambience in this steakhouse with Art Deco-inspired touches. Linger over juicy steaks – many with bone in – or else select from a wide variety of seafood, or pork, and lamb. Reservations recommended.

VANCOUVER Lumière

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2551 W. Broadway, British Columbia, V6K 2E9 Tel (604) 739 8185 This popular though pricey restaurant with minimalist decor serves a superbly presented selection of French cuisine, Asian minimalism, and North American flair. Choose from vegetarian or non-vegetarian tasting menus of 6–12 courses. Next door you can find a more reasonably priced menu at Lumière Tasting Bar, operated by the same Iron Chef Rob Feenie.

VANCOUVER Tojo’s Japanese

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1133 Broadway West, British Columbia, V6H 1G1 Tel (604) 872 8050 Since opening in 1988, chic Toja’s has served award-winning Japanese food that attracts diners from all over the world. Choose from 21 estate sakes while at the sushi or robata bar, or dine in semi-private enclaves on such delights as charcoal-grilled tapas, individually prepared sushi, or entrées such as Shiitake Shinjo.

VANCOUVER West

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2881 Granville St, British Columbia, V6H 3J4 Tel (604) 738 8938 West Coast takes on tradition in this award-winning restaurant with dramatic, modern decor. Fresh organic and local ingredients are used, with dishes such as crisp Princess Island ling cod and Wentzel duck breast marinated with orange and coriander. Martinis are a specialty here, made with juices pressed to order.

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VICTORIA Barb’s Place

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Fisherman’s Wharf, Erie St. Float, British Columbia, V8V 1Y4 Tel (250) 384 6515 This is a busy, bustling floating kitchen with a tent to shelter patrons dining at picnic tables while sitting on the docks of Victoria’s harbor. The unpretentious, open-air Barb’s Fish & Chips does exactly what it proclaims, serving tasty fare to a happy clientele. Closed Nov–Feb.

VICTORIA J & J Wonton Noodle House

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1012 Fort St, British Columbia, V8V 3K4 Tel (250) 383 0680 This noodle house has a cozy atmosphere and serves fresh homemade Chinese noodles to locals and those lucky tourists who go out of their way to find it. Handmade noodles are a specialty. The Sichuan braised beef hot pot is delicious. Closed Sun–Mon.

VICTORIA Spinnakers

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308 Catherine St, British Columbia, V9A 3S8 Tel (250) 386 2739 Spinnakers is the city’s foremost brewpub where knowledgeable staff help you marry the brew to your pub fare meal. Enjoy handcrafted artesinal ales and specialty beers on tap. The on-site bakery creates amazing herb, olive, tomato, and other breads, while main dishes include brick oven pizzas and chicken fettuccini.

VICTORIA Il Terrazzo

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555 Johnson St, British Columbia, V8W 1M2 Tel (250) 361 0028 In Old Town, in an original 1890 building, this restaurant has a fabulous courtyard patio with six fireplaces. Come for superb northern Italian fare where market- and seasonally-fresh foods are presented daily. The wood-burning oven turns out sensational Salmone al Forno – almond and black pepper encrusted salmon filet.

VICTORIA Empress Room

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Empress Hotel, 721 Government St, British Columbia, V8W 1W5 Tel (250) 389 2727 The Empress Room is an elegant tradition, in architect Frances Rattenby’s 1908 landmark hotel. You may pay handsomely for High Tea, but it is worth it simply for the sense of tradition and history, not to mention the scones, strawberry jam, and cream. In the evenings a harpist emphasizes the air of elegance.

THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS BANFF Buffalo Mountain Lodge Dining Room

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700 Tunnel Mountain Rd, Alberta, T1L 1B3 Tel (403) 762 2400 Airy, delightful wood-beamed Sleeping Buffalo Restaurant and Lounge is ever-so-slightly off the beaten track. The specialty is delectably prepared, beautifully presented Canadian Rockies fare: venison, caribou, deer, lamb, salmon, and beef. Game is raised at the Canadian Rocky Mountain Resorts own ranch.

BANFF Coyote’s Deli and Grill

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206 Caribou St, Alberta, T1L 1A2 Tel (403) 762 3963 A small but highly regarded restaurant that focuses on Southwestern cuisine. Arizona-style prints adorn the walls to complete the regional effect.The ambience is casual and the varied menu includes pizza or calzones with spicy peppers, barbequed flank steak, spice-rubbed beef tenderloin, a good selection of salads, and some vegetarian choices.

BANFF Typhoon

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211 Caribou Street, Alberta, T1L 1B5 Tel (403) 762 2000 Large brightly colored paintings adorn the walls of this hip café where Indian, Thai, and Chinese tastes await. Appetizers include tiger prawns in sweet chilli-lime sauce. Try the makhani chicken (butter chicken) or rice paper roll basa fish in ginger cream sauce.

BANFF The Bison Mountain Bistro

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The Bison Courtyard, 211 Bear Street, Alberta, T1L 1E4 Tel (403) 762 5550 Relax in summertime on an expansive patio, or during other seasons find cozy comfort in the lounge at this bistro where you can discover a choice of local beers or indulge in a signature cocktail before dinner. This is an elegant, airy, and trendy dining room where helpful wait staff serve organic and regional cuisine, with an emphasis on game.

CALGARY Ranchman

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9615 McLeod Trail South, Alberta, T2J 0P6 Tel (403) 253 1100 A Calgary tradition, this cowboy barbeque café and country music club displays trophy rodeo saddles and a chuck wagon above the stage. The menu features beef and chicken prepared in Texas-style smokers. Go here for the featured beer rather than for wine. This is a Calgary Stampede “place to be seen” for dining and dancing.

CALGARY River Café

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Prince’s Island Park, Alberta, T2P 4R5 Tel (403) 261 7670 This distinctly Canadian restaurant is located in Prince’s Island Park, surrounded by a peaceful wooded garden with no car access. Wild game and the very best, fresh, seasonal local produce are served. Try stinging nettle soup (a spring tonic and blood purifier) and grass-raised, grain finished Alberta beef. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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CALGARY Saltlik Steakhouse

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101 8th Ave. SW, Alberta, T2P 1B4 Tel (403) 537 1160 The portions are known for being generous at this upmarket, modern restaurant. As would be expected, the Alberta beef steaks are particularly noteworthy. This is an extremely popular restaurant, so reservations are recommended. Try the Almost Famous Dry Ribs with a tamarind honey glaze.

CALGARY Catch

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100 8th Avenue SE, Alberta, T2G 0K6 Tel (403) 206 0000 Located on the second level of the historic Bank of Canada building, at Catch you will discover succulent seafood such as wild spring salmon gravlax with Digby scallops. Fish and shellfish are extremely fresh and are flown in daily. There is an excellent wine cellar with a special, private “red wine” dining room. Closed Sun.

CALGARY Rouge

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1240 8th Avenue SE, Alberta, T2G 0M7 Tel (403) 531 2767 In the 1891 home of Calgary pioneer A.E. Cross on the Bow River embankment, this city landmark draws locals. The menu features home-grown herbs and vegetables, and fresh local ingredients. The specialties are black candied breast of duck or rack of lamb. Closed Sun.

JASPER The Emerald and Emerald Outdoor Patio

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1 Old Lodge Road, Alberta, T0E 1E0 Tel (780) 852 3301 With stunning views of Lake Beauvert and the Whistler Mountain Range, don’t miss The Emerald’s expansive patio in summer, or the log interior at other times. There’s a varied menu with delicious, beautifully presented grilled meats taking pride of place. Breakfast buffets are available: go with a hearty appetite, and hike around the lake afterward.

LAKE LOUISE Poppy Brasserie

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Château Lake Louise, 111 Lake Louise Dr, Alberta, T0L 1E0 Tel (403) 522 3511 Cheerful as a poppy in a wheat field, this airy family restaurant commands views of Lake Louise. Children are particularly welcome: they’ll find comfort foods like burgers, while adults select from salads, prime rib, or fish. This means Poppy’s caters splendidly to everyone. An excellent buffet-style breakfast offers a surfeit of choices. \\\\\

LAKE LOUISE Elkhorn Dining Room Mile 22 Bow Lake Icefield Parkway, Alberta, T0L 1E0 Tel (403) 522 2167

Don’t miss this authentic Canadian restaurant off the Icefields Parkway. The historic lodge was originally constructed by renowned guide, explorer, and tall-tale-spinner Jimmy Simpson. The Elkhorn’s walls are festooned with trophy heads of moose, mountain goats, and other game: vegetarians beware! Unsurprisingly, the superb cuisine focuses on local game.

LAKE LOUISE The Post Hotel Dining Room

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The Post Hotel, 200 Pipestone Road, Alberta, T0L 1E0 Tel (403) 522 3989 There is renowned fine dining at this Relais and Châteaux log-cabin luxury hotel, where wait staff are superbly informed about every nuance of your meal – and how to marry the perfect wine to your dinner. Swiss Executive Chef Hans Sauter produces memorable meals such as succulent rack of lamb.

FAUQUIER Mushroom Addition

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129 Oak St, British Columbia, V0G 1K0 Tel (250) 269 7467 Delectable, delicate wild mushrooms are harvested locally at the Arrow Lakes and transformed into succulent creations at this restaurant. The menu is seasonal, depending upon what is growing. In winter it is only open Friday through Sunday – contact the restaurant to ensure it is open. There are a few dishes without mushrooms.

GOLDEN The Eagle’s Eye

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1500 Kicking Horse, British Columbia, V0A 1H0 Tel (250) 344 8626 Take a gondola up to this eyrie 7,906 ft (2,410 m) above sea level for panoramic views of Purcell, Rocky, and Selkirk ranges while dining at Canada’s highest restaurant. Specialties include Alberta lamb, venison, buffalo, and BC salmon. Dogtooth Patio serves drinks with spectacular views. Closed mid-Oct–mid-Dec and mid-Apr–mid-May.

KIMBERLY The Old Bauernhaus

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280 Norton Avenue, British Columbia, V1A 1X9 Tel (250) 427 5133 This 17th-century Bavarian barn was disassembled, shipped to Canada, and rebuilt in 1989, so the owners mean it when they say their food – and ambience – features old world charm. Hearty fare is served. Specialties include the Bauernplatte (sliced meats and cheeses) and wild mushroom ravioli. Closed Tue–Wed.

NELSON The Outer Clove

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536 Stanley St, British Columbia, V1L 1N2 Tel (250) 354 1667 If you love “the stinking rose,” then rush here to sample garlicky treats, from appies to mains to desserts. Every day chefs here use 5 pounds of garlic in a variety of ways, including in the desserts, in this brightly painted old brick building. There is frequent live music. Closed Sun.

REVELSTOKE One Twelve Restaurant

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112 First St. E, British Columbia, V0E 2S0 Tel (250) 837 2107 With white linen, heritage photos of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and a fireplace, the “112” offers friendly elegance. Dine on BC salmon, charbroiled steaks, or East Coast lobster. Enjoy a locally brewed Mt. Begbie draft beer while admiring the world’s largest grizzly bear carved in soapstone.

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SOUTHERN AND NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA FORT LANGLEY Bedford House

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9272 Glover Rd, V1M 2R7 Tel (604) 888 2333 Located in historic Fort Langley, this restaurant with several little dining rooms is on a spacious lot with lovely river views. It is very popular with locals, so reservations are a must, particularly for Sunday brunch. Enjoy good Canadian food in a relaxed atmosphere with attentive staff and fine wines.

KELOWNA The Yellowhouse Restaurant

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526 Lawrence Avenue, V1Y 6L7 Tel (250) 763 5136 Everything is homemade here – the stock, soup, sauces, and desserts. Dine on mouthwatering entrées such as warm seafood salad, rack of lamb, or blackened red snapper with mango chardonnay cream. The casual ambience of this 1906 Victorian residence is enhanced before dinner while you sip a signature martini or award-winning BC wine.

LANGLEY Mélange Restaurant

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19955 Fraser Highway, V2Y 3J1 Tel (604) 530 5228 Top marks for this unassuming restaurant with particularly creative interpretations of seafood (miso scallops), along with succulent Moroccan lamb, salads (goat cheese spring salad), and desserts (crème brulée). The service is friendly but the music can be loud – simply ask staff to turn it down, which they will do promptly. Closed Mon.

OSOYOOS The Diamond Steak and Seafood House

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8903 Main St, V0H 1V0 Tel (250) 495 6223 Popular with local residents, The Diamond’s three dining rooms specialize in Greek and Italian cuisine with steaks, seafood, pasta, and many varieties of pizza. Prime rib is a house specialty but go for the Greek dishes such as calamari with Greek Salad.

PRINCE GEORGE Shogun

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770 Brunswick Ave, V2L 2C2 Tel (250) 563 0121 Go for the Shogun Combo at this excellent Japanese steakhouse where quality meets quantity. Reserve ahead so you can sit around the Teppan grill where the chef creates your meal. If a romantic meal is in order, book a private Shojii room. Specialties include fresh sushi, Shogon, or Ozeki combo platters.

PRINCE RUPERT Cow Bay Cafe

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205 Cow Bay Rd, V8J 3Y1 Tel (250) 627 1212 Locals love this casual spot located right on the docks overlooking the harbor. There are many vegetarian options here, including salads and soups as well as freshly caught fish of the day. Those in the know order dessert along with their entrée – otherwise you’ll find they may have sold out.

WHISTLER Black’s Restaurant Pub and Patio

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4270 Mountain Square, V0N 1B4 Tel (604) 932 6408 An open-style Mediterranean restaurant located in the Sundial Hotel at the base of Blackcomb and Whistler mountains, this is an après-ski favorite so check out the authentic local scene here. Turkey roast is served on Sundays and the Canadian pub upstairs specializes in a large selection of beer on tap.

WHISTLER Bearfoot Bistro

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4121 Village Green, V0N 1B4 Tel (604) 932 3433 Brown leather chairs, live jazz pianist, and a large selection of Cuban cigars create a sophisticated air. This bistro serves innovative French cuisine specializing in seafood and game, particularly caribou. Tasting menus feature seasonal regional food paired with BC and other wines. There are après-ski specials.

NORTHERN CANADA FORT PROVIDENCE Snowshoe Inn Café

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1 Mackenzie Drive, Northwest Territories, X0E 0L0 Tel (867) 699 3511 Located on the banks of the historic Mackenzie River, this café is across from the Snowshoe Inn. This local hangout serves Canadian fare including the Snowshoe burger, a bison meat patty. Open year round 7am–8pm (10am–8pm Sun & holidays). No alcohol served.

HAY RIVER Back Eddy Lounge & Restaurant

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6 Courtoreille St., Northwest Territories, X0E 1G2 Tel (867) 874 6680 This restaurant and lounge is open 11am–2am except on Sundays; the kitchen closes at 9pm. This local hangout is above Ring’s Pharmacy in the center of town. The menu includes steak, seafood, burgers, and fish in a relaxed atmosphere that is a mix of sports bar and restaurant. There is also a good choice of finger foods and lighter fare. Key to Price Guide see p370 Key to Symbols see back cover flap

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INUVIK Tominoes

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185 Mackenzie Road, Northwest Territories, X0E 0T0 Tel (867) 777 4900 This newly opened family steakhouse is in the Mackenzie Hotel across from the Igloo Church. There is a waterfall in the front and a fireplace in the back. The menu offers steaks, burgers, pasta, and fish and chips for Friday lunch. Open 7am–2pm and 5pm–9pm Mon–Sat, and 8am–2pm and 5pm–9pm Sun.

YELLOWKNIFE Bullock’s Bistro

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3534 Weaver Drive, Northwest Territories, X1A 3P7 Tel (867) 873 3474 With its hand-scrawled appreciation and stickers on the wall, this place oozes character. Sit at the bar and banter with the cook as he whips up muskox, caribou, bison, and fresh fish from Great Slave Lake, served with healthy portions of salad, fries, and bread. Select your own drinks from the fridge. Voted the top fish and chips in Canada by Readers’ Digest.

YELLOWKNIFE Wildcat Café

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Wiley Road, Northwest Territories, X1A 3P7 Tel (867) 813 4004 A real slice of northern Canadian life, the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa has a replica of this café. This institution in historic Old Town is a log cabin that opened as a restaurant in 1937. It serves local fare in a convivial atmosphere. Share tables and meet people. Closed in winter.

YELLOWKNIFE Old Town Landing

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3506 Wiley Road, Northwest Territories, X1A 3P7 Tel (867) 920 4473 Located in historic Old Town in a scenic spot overlooking Back Bay near the float plane base, the menu here offers meat, game, and seafood with a northern flare in elegant surroundings and a relaxed atmosphere. Good for an evening dining out. Open weekdays 11am–4pm and 5pm–10pm and weekends 10am–3pm and 5pm–10pm. \\\

CAMBRIDGE BAY Arctic Island Lodge Restaurant 26 Omingmak P.O. Box 38, Nunavat, X0B 0C0 Tel (867) 983 2345

Located inside Arctic Island Lodge, this restaurant has specials almost every night. It serves traditional and Canadian cuisine including char chowder, bannock, muskox steak, muskox stew, and Arctic Char fillets. A gift case displays carvings from local artists. Open weekdays 7am–7pm and weekends 9am–7pm.

IQALUIT Gallery Dining Room

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P.O. Box 4209, Nunavat, X0A 0H0 Tel (867) 979 2222 This restaurant is in the Frobisher Inn. It offers northern cuisine in a fine dining atmosphere. On Fridays it invites artists to come in and sell their wares in what amounts to a bit of a dinner and art show. A place to spend the evening, especially when artists are around.

IQALUIT The Granite Room

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P.O. Box 387, Iqaluit, Nunavut, X0A 0H0 Tel (867) 979 4433 Situated in the Discovery Lodge Hotel, the Granite Room serves up fine northern cuisine in elegant surroundings. The yellow walls give it a cheerful feel. The place offers table d’hôte specials and Sunday brunch. Signature dishes include Arctic char, caribou steak, Pangnirtung halibut, and tundra mushroom caps.

DAWSON CITY Bonanza Dining Room

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Box 338, Yukon, Y0B 1G0 Tel (867) 993 5451 This restaurant located in the Eldorado Hotel offers nothern fare such as Yukon salmon and Alaskan halibut alongside not-so-northern flambée desserts. The wait staff are dressed in gold rush era costumes. Evenings offer a fine dining experience. Open weekdays 6:30am–10pm and weekends 7am–9pm.

DAWSON CITY Klondike Kate’s

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Box 417, Yukon, Y0B 1G0 Tel (867) 993 6527 This popular family restaurant with a friendly atmosphere is located on 3rd and King Street. Serving Canadian and ethnic food, it is known for its $4.99 breakfast special, and a martini list. This gold rush era building dates back to 1904 and has an outdoor heated patio. Open Apr–Sep 7am–11pm.

HAINES JUNCTION Raven Gourmet Dining

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Box 5470, 181 Alaska Highway, Yukon, Y0B 1L0 Tel (867) 634 2500 Located in the Raven Hotel, this restaurant makes its own pasta, and food is cooked fresh to order. Choose from Italian, French, or Swiss/German cuisine of mostly organic meats and produce, and homemade European breads. It serves dinner only. Open May–Sep. Closed Mon.

WHITEHORSE The Deck

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4051 Fourth Ave., Yukon, Y1A 1H1 Tel (867) 667 4471 Located inside the High Country Inn, this restaurant offers northern cuisine such as caribou steak and fresh salmon in rustic surroundings. Among the beer on offer is Grizzly Beer, produced exclusively for the restaurant by the Yukon Brewing Company. There is a heated patio. Open 11:30am–1:30am.

WHITEHORSE Cellar Steakhouse and Wine Bar

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101 Main St., Yukon, Y1A 2A7 Tel (867) 667 2572 Located downstairs from the Edgewater Hotel, this newly renovated restaurant serves tapas, prime rib, crab, steak, lamb, and seafood in elegant surroundings and a relaxed atmosphere. There is also a wine bar. The steakhouse iis located downtown near the historic White Pass Railway depot. Open Tue–Sat 5pm–10pm.

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SHOPPING IN CANADA name a few. Native art inspired by hopping in Canada offers more centuries-old tradition, includes than the usual tourist fare of carvings by west-coast peoples Mountie dolls and maple and Inuit paintings and tapesleaf T-shirts. Visitors can choose tries. In each major city there from a wide range of products, are covered malls, chainstores, and buy everything from electronic specialty shops, and galleries, as equipment to clothes and jewelry. well as street markets to explore. In There is also a variety of goods country areas, beautifully-made unique to the country – maple Doll from syrup from Quebec, smoked Charlottetown crafts by local people can be found. Be aware that sales taxes salmon from British Columbia, and cowboy boots from Alberta, to are added to the price of many items.

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SHOPPING HOURS Store hours vary, but in larger cities most stores are open by 9am and close between 5pm and 9pm. However, some grocery and variety stores are open 24 hours a day, and in major towns several pharmacies are also open for 24 hours. In most towns, stores have late closing until 9pm on Friday evening. However, in smaller towns and villages you should not expect any store, including the gas station, to be open after 6pm. Sunday openings are increasing: usually hours run from noon to 5pm but vary from province to province. Check first, as many may be closed in rural areas. HOW TO PAY Most Canadian stores accept all major credit cards, with VISA and MasterCard being the most popular. Some stores require a minimum purchase in order to use the card. They may limit the use of cards during summer and winter sales. Direct payment, or “Switch” transactions, are also widely used, with pointof-sale terminals for bank cards available in most supermarkets and department stores. Travelers’ checks are readily accepted with proper identification; a valid passport or driver’s license are the usually accepted forms. US dollars are the only nonCanadian currency accepted in department stores. Bear in mind that the exchange rate is usually lower, sometimes as

much as 15 percent, than a bank will give. Large stores may offer money-changing facilities within the store. SALES TAXES In Canada there are three types of sales taxes: Provincial Sales Taxes (PST), the federal Goods and Services Tax (GST), and the Harmonized Sales Tax (HST). Every province except Alberta implements a PST which varies between 5 and 12 percent, on store-bought items. The Yukon Territory, Northwest Territories and Nunavut are the exceptions and these do not have any type of regional sales tax. In Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland and Labrador, an HST of 14 percent replaces both the GST and the PST and is applied on the same basis as the GST. Canadians love to curse the GST, which currently runs at 6 percent. It is added to most retail transactions; the major exception is basic food items. Since the beginning of April 2007 the GST rebate program for non-residents of Canada has been eliminated. CONSUMER RIGHTS AND SERVICES Smart shoppers always check a store’s refund policy before buying an item. Policies vary, some stores will refund money on unwanted items, others offer store vouchers, and many will not exchange or refund sale merchandise. Reputable stores will take back

defective merchandise within 28 days as long as it is accompanied by the original bill. As credit card fraud increases, it is wise to be cautious about buying by telephone using cards.

Native Canadian Wayne Carlick, carving soapstone, British Columbia

COMPLETELY CANADIAN Products made in Canada offer shoppers a wide variety of choice. Although most specialty items are on sale across the country, many goods are less expensive in their province of origin. Handknitted sweaters and pottery are particularly good value in Atlantic Canada, as is the much-praised Seagull pewter made in Nova Scotia. The Prairie provinces and Alberta specialize in cowboy attire; tooled belts, vests, cowboy hats, and boots. Farther west, British Columbian artisans produce elaborate carvings,

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MALLS AND SHOPPING CENTERS

Shopkeeper at the Lonsdale Quay craft market in Vancouver (see p278)

Suburbia may not offer the most culture in Canada, but some of the malls are fine destinations in themselves. The renowned modernist Eaton Centre in Toronto is enclosed by a glass and steel arched roof, with a wonderful sculpted flock of geese soaring over shoppers. Over 42 million visitors annually enjoy this showcase of modern architecture, though it has been derided as “brutalism” by conservative Torontonians. Canada has the world’s largest mall, the West Edmonton Mall in Edmonton, Alberta. Over 800 stores, more than 100 restaurants, 34 movie theaters, a huge water park, an amusement park, a theme hotel, a mini-golf course, an ice rink, and a zoo with dolphins are just some of the sights that draw Canadians and visitors alike to this retail paradise. Exclusive stores are largely found in the country’s retail capital, Toronto. Bloor Street and Yorkville Avenue are lined with status brands known the world over, such as Tiffany, Holt Renfrew, Ralph Lauren, and Gucci. Both Vancouver and Montreal have their own selection of world-class luxury stores. Montreal is notable as the fur capital of the country; good department stores will stock a selection of winter and summer furs at very reasonable prices. For those unable to travel to the north, Inuit art features highly in craft shops here.

including totem poles. Jade are fine buys, as is fishing jewelry, from locally mined tackle. With such a strong tradition of outdoor life, a wide stone, is also reasonable here. Local specialties from Quebec range of products is usually and Ontario include maple available at well below syrup and sugar-related prodEuropean prices. ucts. Quebec artisans make beautiful wood carvings too. DEPARTMENT STORES In Ontario, native basketwork is good as a lasting souvenir. The Bay is the major middleFor those who need an extra range department store suitcase to carry their finds chain across the country. home, the renowned Tilley Canadian department stores travel cases and products are have suffered financially during the last years of made and sold locally throughout Ontario. the 20th century. They Native carvings can be are changing to meet found across Canada, the competition of US especially in the far chains, such as Walnorth. Genuine Inuit Mart and discount carvings are inspected stores, and membership and stamped by the stores including Costco federal government. and Price Club. Chains such as Sears and Zeller’s A sticker featuring an occupy the middle to igloo marks a true Pottery jar, Nova Scotia piece; it will also be lower end of the market place. signed by the artist. Canadian Tire sells everything Since the 1950s, the Inuit have been producing prints of from auto parts to sporting traditional scenes, which are goods and has become a popular, as is native jewelry. national institution. Beautifully handmade parka jackets, embroidered panels, and soft deer hide moccasins make excellent gifts. Contemporary Canadian art features highly in gift shops and galleries countrywide. Photographs and prints are recommended for the budgetconscious shopper. Recordings of Canadian music are freely available: Europeans will be pleased to find that tapes and CDs are at least 50 percent cheaper in Canada. Modern sportswear and outerwear is both durable and beautifully designed. Camping, hiking, and boating equipment The Underground City, with hundreds of boutiques, in Montreal

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Shopping in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver Canada’s three largest cities offer shopping experiences with one thing in common: international fare! Montreal’s cosmopolitan edge complements its wide-ranging stores, from chic boutiques to antique shops to an underground network of stores and services. Toronto’s shopMarket ’til-you-drop attitude includes the Bay/Bloor vegetables neighborhood and Yorkville as well as dozens of ethnic communities selling wares from their home countries. Vancouver shows off with about ten great shopping areas, as befits a spreading coastal city, with haute couture alongside art, furniture, and much more. major retailers. A good rendezvous point is the mall’s soaring 30-ft fountain. In Vancouver, the Pacific Centre is arguably the city’s premiere shopping mall downtown, but in nearby Richmond, the Aberdeen Centre plays host to a bevy of Asian stores, restaurants, and services. MARKETS Eaton Centre in Toronto, containing hundreds of stores

DEPARTMENT STORES AND MALLS Canada’s most well-known department store is The Bay/ La Baie, a modern moniker for the Hudson’s Bay Company, which started here in the 17th century as a trading post between the early settlers and the aboriginal peoples. The Bay is found in all three cities, and its distinctive brand of rainbow-striped blankets, sweaters, and coats have always been a hit with visitors. In downtown Toronto, the mammoth Eaton Centre shopping complex, which stretches a full city block, contains two well known stores – Sears and the Swedish retailer H&M – as well as hundreds of smaller stores. Theater impresario Ed Mirvish started his empire with a small discount department store, Honest Ed’s, which today covers a city block and remains exceptionally popular, especially with new immigrants to Toronto. Montreal’s Place Montréal Trust is home to 70 boutiques, including several

Vancouver’s milder climate allows for longer seasons of the outdoor markets, but Canada’s two other large cities do not shy away from this popular shopping experience. Montreal’s Jean-Talon Market, with over 100 vendors, is mainly outdoors from May until October, although it is open year round and contains 20 indoor stores over the underground parking lot. In Toronto, the St. Lawrence Market, with 60 vendors, is much loved by locals as much for its fresh produce and meats as for the quirky indoor shopping it offers. Vancouver’s Granville Island

boasts an authentic farmer’s market along with several galleries, boutiques, and artisans’ stores. ANTIQUES AND CRAFTS Toronto’s antique and craft stores are located throughout the city, but Yorkville has the higher end items. This is also the location for The Guild Shop, featuring beautiful items from the Ontario Crafts Council. The Harbourfront Antique Market, south by the lakeshore, is also a must-visit. In Montreal, L’Art des Artisans du Québec is a perfect store for original gifts made of wood, pewter, and glass, designed by talented Quebec artists. Local crafts are also on sale in the 15 boutiques of Marché Bonsecours. In Vancouver, Antique Row has both valuable and kitschy antiques. The city’s Antique Warehouse is an attractive stop for aficionados. DESIGNER FASHION AND JEWELRY In Montreal, women’s fashion by exclusively Quebec designers can be found at Boutique Diffusion Griff’3000, while there is a wide variety of designer menswear at L’Uomo Montréal. La Maison Ogilvy has been a respected fashion retailer in Montreal since 1866, and is also worth a visit for high-end items. In Toronto, most designer stores, including Tiffany & Co. and Gucci (both also have stores in Vancouver), are centered in the Bloor-Yorkville area, including the flagship store

The market on Granville Island in Vancouver

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for Holt Renfrew, a Canadian retailer known for its fine products, especially in cosmetics, fashion and jewelry. Vancouver’s Robson Street contains the high fashion stores, with Armani, Chanel, Louis Vuitton, and Canada’s own Roots all catching the shopper’s eye. ART, BOOKS, MUSIC, AND GIFTWARE

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cafés). The Canadian Guild of Crafts in Montreal not only displays fine giftware in wood, ceramic, blown glass, metal, and handmade jewelry, but also has a permanent collection of Inuit art worth perusing. In Vancouver, rare books or early titles on western Canadiana can be found at Macleod’s Books. SPECIALTY STORES

The largest bookstore chain in the country is Chapters/Indigo/ Coles, and the large outlets in major centers have excellent music offerings as well (and

Canadian Maple Delights in

Montreal is the quintessential homage to maple syrup: here there’s everything from gelati, pastries, mustards, vinaigrettes,

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and jams to 100 other maple treats. Elsewhere in the city, La Casa del Habano is the best place to enjoy a fine Havana cigar with a Cuban cocktail or coffee. And for those so inclined, Héritage is a furrier as well as an art gallery in the heart of Vieux-Montréal. In Toronto, the city’s Yorkville neighborhood plays host to Canada’s oldest sex toy store, Lovecraft, which is now considered to be decidedly upscale. Vancouver’s Mountain Equipment Coop

will ensure the buyer is outfitted with the very best in outdoor gear and supplies.

DIRECTORY DEPARTMENT STORES AND MALLS Aberdeen Centre 4151 Hazelbridge Way, Richmond, Vancouver. Tel (604) 270 1234. www.aberdeencentre.com

The Bay/La Baie 585 Rue Ste-Catherine Ouest, Montréal; 176 Yonge St., Toronto; 674 Granville St., Vancouver. www.hbc.com

Eaton Centre Yonge and Dundas St., Toronto. Tel (416) 598 8560. www.toronto eatoncentre.com

Honest Ed’s 581 Bloor St. W., Toronto. Tel (416) 537 1574. www.honesteds.sites. toronto.com

Pacific Centre 550–700 W. Georgia St., Vancouver. Tel (604) 688 7236. www.pacificcentre.com

Place Montréal Trust 1500 McGill College Ave., Montréal. Tel (514) 843 8000. www.place montrealtrust.com

Jean-Talon Market

Yorkville

L’Uomo Montréal

7075 Ave. Casgrain, Montréal. Tel (514) 277 1588. www.montreal food.com/jtalon

Betw. Avenue Rd. and Bay St., north of Bloor St. W., Toronto. www.bloor-yorkville.com

1452 Rue Peel, Montréal. Tel (514) 844 1008. www.luomo-montreal.com

St. Lawrence Market 92 Front St. E., Toronto. Tel (416) 392 7120. www.stlawrencemarket. com

ANTIQUES AND CRAFTS

DESIGNER FASHION AND JEWELRY Boutique Diffusion Griff’3000

Main St., Vancouver (betw. 16th and 25th Ave).

Marché Bonsecours, 350 Rue St-Paul Est, Montréal. Tel (514) 398 0761. www.braderiedemode quebecoise.com

Antique Warehouse

Gucci

226 S.W. Marine Dr., Vancouver. Tel (604) 324 3661. www.antique warehouse.net

130 Bloor St. W., Toronto.

Antique Row

L’Art des Artisans du Québec Complexe Desjardins, 150 Rue Ste-Catherine Ouest, Montréal. Tel (514) 288 5379.

The Guild Shop 118 Cumberland St., Toronto. Tel (416) 921 1721.www.craft.on.ca

Harbourfront Antique Market

MARKETS

390 Queens Quay W., Toronto. Tel (416) 260 2626.

Granville Island

Marché Bonsecours

South shore under the Granville Street Bridge, Vancouver. www.granvilleisland.com

350 Rue St-Paul Est, Montréal. Tel (514) 872 7730. www.marche bonsecours.qc.ca

ART, BOOKS, MUSIC, AND GIFTWARE Canadian Guild of Crafts 1460 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Suite B, Montréal. Tel (514) 849 6091. www.canadianguild.com

Macleod’s Books 455 West Pender St, Vancouver. Tel (604) 681 7654.

SPECIALTY STORES

Holt Renfrew 1300 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montréal; 50 Bloor St. W., Toronto; Pacific Centre, 633 Granville St., Vancouver.

Canadian Maple Delights

La Maison Ogilvy

La Casa del Habano

1307 Rue Ste-Catherine Ouest, Montréal. Tel (514) 842 7711. www.ogilvycanada.com

1434 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montréal. Tel (514) 849 0037. www.lacasadelhabano.cu

Roots

Héritage

1001 Robson St., Vancouver. Tel (604) 683 4305; 1025 Rue SteCatherine Ouest, Montréal. Tel (514) 845 7995;100 Bloor St. W., Toronto. Tel (416) 323 3289. www.roots.com

Tiffany & Co. 85 Bloor St. W., Toronto. www.tiffany.ca

84 Rue St-Paul Est, Montréal. Tel (514) 765 3456. www.mapledelights.com

30 Rue St-Paul Est, Montréal. Tel (514) 392 9272.

Lovecraft 27 Yorkville Ave., Toronto. Tel (416) 923 7331.

Mountain Equipment Coop 130 W. Broadway, Vancouver. Tel (604) 872 7858. www.mec.ca

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ENTER TAINMENT IN CANADA ntertainment in Canada offers the latest in alternative acts and traditional artforms, particularly in boasts all the sophistication tourists have come to expect its exceptional folk music heritage. from a major North American counMusic of the highest quality, both classical and modern, is offered try, coupled with delightful rural entertainments in relaxing local throughout the country, and major cities provide first-rate theater, dance, venues. Covering mainstream world-class productions in Ottawa Royal Winnipeg and film, not to mention many Ballerina musical shows and film festivals. and the larger cities, Canada also

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INFORMATION Provincial daily newspapers are the most reliable sources of information about forthcoming events; the Vancouver Sun, Montreal Gazette, Ottawa Citizen, and Toronto Star are the most popular. Listings are usually published at least once a week. The Globe & Mail and National Post are produced in Toronto but are sold countrywide and have excellent arts sections containing reviews of the latest attractions. Tourist offices (see p409) are helpful; some operators may assist in booking tickets. Visitor centers and hotel lobbies have weekly entertainment guides, such as Where, a magazine covering Vancouver. In Quebec, French-language entertainment is chronicled by two papers, La Presse and Le Devoir. Macleans is a national weekly magazine with arts coverage. BOOKING Ticketmaster outlets are found in many shopping malls and represent major halls across the country. Tickets to venues in Quebec are available from Admission Network. Different offices cater to different sports and artistic events in each city. Most venues, however, can be contacted directly for tickets.

and at most other major venues. Call ahead to check their availability. Outside ramps and elevators are provided to reach concerts halls and theaters at most large centers. THEATER Toronto, Ottawa, Vancouver, and Montreal are the four top theater centers in Canada (most of their productions are in English). Homegrown talent mixes here with shows imported from Europe and the US. Musicals and classical theater are always popular, as is Shakespeare, but there is a wide spectrum of shows – for example, Toronto’s Princess of Wales and Royal Alexandra Theatres mount Broadway and West End productions, as well as world premieres, such as Lord of the Rings. The main theaters have a principal season from November to May, but summer attractions are on the increase. Musicals and historical reconstructions provide family entertainment; the bestknown is the musical Anne of Green Gables, performed year-round in Charlottetown.

FILM Hollywood block-busters have no better chance of success than in Canada, where premieres are often parallel with the US, so visitors may well see films in advance of a showing in their own country. Huge IMAX X™ and OMNIMAX X™ movie theaters can be found in the center of major cities, particularly in Ottawa and Hull. Canada has a fine history of filmmaking: the documentary genre was invented here, and more recently its art films have attracted a wider audience. The main centers to see the new trends are Montreal, Vancouver, and Toronto. Robert LePage, Canada’s own theater and movie impresario, has an international following among the cognoscenti. The surrealist David Cronenberg, director of Spider (2002) and A History of Violence (2005), is also Canadian. Quebec’s Denys Arcand is admired for his intensely human dramas, such as Jesus of Montreal (1989), Love and Human Remains (1993) and The Barbarian Invasions (2003). The National Film

DISABLED VISITORS Major Canadian venues are well equipped to deal with wheelchair users. All interior halls contain ramps and restroom access. Parking lots will have designated disabled spaces nearby. A hearing loop system is available at Ottawa’s National Arts Centre (see p197),

Façade of The Royal George Theatre, Niagara-on-the-Lake

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DIRECTORY TICKET AGENCIES Admission Network Tel 1 800 361 4595. Tel (613) 755 1111 Ottawa. Tel (514) 790 1245 Montreal. Tel (416) 861 1017 Toronto.

Ticketmaster Tel (416) 870 8000 Toronto.

MAJOR VENUES Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts Tel (416) 363 6671.

The National Ballet of Canada Tel (416) 345 9686 Toronto.

Royal Winnipeg Ballet The Ontario Place IMAX™ giant movie theater in Toronto

Board selects and releases a work by native talent each year, comprising feature films, animations, and documentaries. Ideal for spotting new talent, every year the Toronto International Film Festival provides a lively magnet to moviegoers, as do parallel festivals held in Montreal and Vancouver. CLASSICAL MUSIC, BALLET, AND OPERA Classical music and opera draw large audiences in Canada, and this is reflected by the high quality of performers and venues. The Canadian Opera Company is based at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts (see p174) in Toronto, with a repertoire ranging from Mozart to cuttingedge pieces sung in English. The National Ballet of Canada is also based here, rival to the Royal Winnipeg Ballet; both companies feature period pieces and experimental work in their seasonal run. Fringe theater takes off in Toronto each summer with 400 shows selected by lottery. Well over 100,000 people annually visit the state-of-the-art Jack Singer Concert Hall in the EPCOR Centre for the Performing Arts to hear the celebrated Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra. The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra plays at the Orpheum Theatre in Vancouver.

ROCK, FOLK, AND POP MUSIC During the 1990s, Canadian pop music acquired a credibility even its kindest supporters would admit had previously been lacking. Quebec’s Celine Dion is a superstar and Shania Twain, Bryan Adams, and k d lang are international stars. Alanis Morissette and Sarah McLachlan are worthy successors to their country’s heritage of folk rock. Young pop icons Avril Lavigne and Nelly Furtado have been wooing teenagers worldwide with their youthful anthems. Canada is perhaps most famous for its folk music, with such stars as Leonard Cohen, Neil Young, and Joni Mitchell being the bestknown faces from a centuries-

Celine Dion, one of Canada’s best-selling international artists

Tel (204) 956 0183.

The Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra Tel (709) 753 6492.

EPCOR Centre for the Performing Arts Tel (403) 294 7455.

Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra Tel (403) 571 0270.

Vancouver Symphony Orchestra Tel (604) 876 3434.

Orpheum Theatre Tel (604) 665 3050.

Bell Centre Tel (514) 932 2582.

old tradition. The product of an intensely musical rural people, the nature of Canadian song changes across the country, moving from the lonesome Celtic melodies on the east coast to the yodeling cowboys in the west. Atlantic Canada has numerous tiny, informal venues, where an excellent standard of music can be found. Quebec’s French folksters include singer Gilles Vigneault (see p28) who is also admired in Europe. The Yukon’s memories of the gold rush surface in 19th-century vaudeville, reenacted by dancing girls and a honkytonk piano in Whitehorse.

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Entertainment in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver A visit to the three largest cities in the country will not disappoint when it comes to great entertainment. Each is rich in theatre, film, and music venues. Montreal has spawned both French and English musical artists, and annual festivals abound, such as the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal. The Avril renowned Toronto International Film Festival Lavigne attracts the cream of Hollywood celebrities every September, and Vancouver is no slouch with its vibrant live music scene, dance clubs, and Irish pubs in just about every neighborhood.

Giant banner in the parade at the annual Toronto Pride Festival

FESTIVALS

THEATER

Festival fever hits Canada’s three largest cities in the summer months, but the late spring and early fall can offer unique events too. Montreal’s own Cirque du Soleil often premieres its new productions in its home city, and the

Montreal has an important theater for the Anglophone enthusiast. The Centaur is housed in the former Montreal Stock Exchange building and stages English adaptations of works by local playwrights. In 2004 it was recognized by the government as one of the top seven theater companies in the province. Toronto’s live theater community, the Mirvish Theatres, is considered to be the third largest in North America, and the city often showcases the continental premiere of large-scale

Festival International de Jazz de Montréal is known for its 350 free concerts. The Contact: Toronto Photography Festival

enables new artists to exhibit alongside internationally famous photographers. The Toronto Pride Festival has grown tremendously to include thousands of people of all orientations and gender identities. The Vancouver International Film Festival is fast becoming as popular as the Toronto International Film Festival when the cities’ populations turn into blearyeyed cinephiles. In July, Vancouver’s Dancing on the Edge Festival showcases contemporary dance.

productions, such as Lord of the Rings. Vancouver’s nonprofit Arts Club Theatre Company has had over 40 seasons of producing professional live theater. The city also hosts the Bard on the Beach – western Canada’s largest professional Shakespeare Festival, performed in Vancouver’s Vanier Park. ROCK, FOLK, AND POP MUSIC The premier location for rock and pop concerts in Montreal is the Bell Centre, while folk music and up-and-coming artists can be found in the Quartier Latin (Latin Quarter) at any of the trendy bistros and bars along Saint-Denis and Ontario Streets. Toronto’s largest pop/rock concerts can be enjoyed at the Rogers Centre or the Air Canada Centre; smaller groups and retro/folk musicians are normally featured at the Molson Amphitheatre at Ontario Place (on the lakefront) during the summer months. In Vancouver, General Motors Place usually hosts the biggest rock and pop concerts, while the more intimate Orpheum Theatre plays host to single or smaller groups of musicians. CLASSICAL MUSIC, BALLET, AND OPERA The Opéra de Montréal, founded in 1980, is the largest francophone opera company in North America. For dance lovers, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montréal has a wide repertoire and invites prestigious international ballet companies each year to Place des Arts. Toronto is home to the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, and to the

The setting for Bard on the Beach – Vancouver’s Shakespeare Festival

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the Queen Elizabeth Theatre plays host to both the Vancouver Opera and Ballet British Columbia. BARS AND CLUBS Montreal has two main clubbing areas: Rue Crescent, a two-block area packed with patios and Performance by the Opéra de Montréal pubs between Rue de at the city’s Place des Arts Maisonneuve and Rue Ste-Catherine, and Rue Canadian Opera Company and St-Laurent, a predominantly the National Ballet of Canada, French-speaking neighborwhich are showcased at the hood with more upscale Four Seasons Centre for the locations and most of the Performing Arts. In Vancouver, dance clubs. Toronto’s Queen

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Street and King Street West neighborhoods (from University to Spadina Avenues) are where the bulk of dance clubs, comedy clubs, and other pubs are located. The city’s gay village and its nightclubs are in the ChurchWellesley Streets area. Vancouver’s bars and clubs are spread all over: from Robson Street downtown, to the East Side/Main Street where the artsy community owns galleries that double as bars. Kitsilano is the city’s homage to California life, with pretty people and beachside bars and clubs.

DIRECTORY FESTIVALS

THEATER

Cirque du Soleil

Arts Club Theatre Company

Frequent premieres in Montreal. Tel (514) 790 1245. www.cirquedusoleil.com

Contact: Toronto Photography Festival June. Tel (416) 539 9595. www.contactphoto.com

Dancing on the Edge Festival Vancouver. July. www.dancingontheedge. org

Festival International de Jazz de Montréal Late June–early July. Tel (514) 971 1881. www.montrealjazzfest. com

Toronto International Film Festival Early September www.bell.ca/filmfest

Toronto Pride Festival June. www.pridetoronto.com

Vancouver International Film Festival Late September–early October. www.viff.org

1585 Johnston St., Vancouver. Tel (604) 687 1644. www.artsclub.com

Bard on the Beach Vanier Park, Kits Point at the Foot of Whyte Ave., Vancouver. Tel (604) 739 0559. www.bardonthe beach.org

The Centaur 453 Rue Saint-FrançoisXavier, Montréal. Tel (514) 288 3161. www.centaurtheatre.com

Mirvish Theatres Princess of Wales Theatre, 300 King St. W; Royal Alexandra Theatre, 260 King St. W; Canon Theatre, 244 Victoria St., Toronto. Tel (416) 872 1212. www.mirvish.com

ROCK, FOLK, AND POP MUSIC Air Canada Centre 40 Bay St., Toronto. Tel (416) 815 5500. www.theaircanada centre.com

Bell Centre 1260 Rue de La Gauchetière Ouest, Montréal. Tel (514) 932 2582. www.centrebell.ca

General Motors Place 800 Griffiths Way, Vancouver. Tel (604) 899 7400. www.canucks.com

Molson Amphitheatre 909 Lakeshaw Boulevard W., Toronto. Tel (416) 260 5600. www.ontarioplace.com

Orpheum Theatre 884 Granville St., Vancouver. Tel (604) 665 3028. www.city.vancouver.bc.ca /theatres/orpheum/

Rogers Centre (formerly SkyDome) Next to the CN Tower, Toronto. Tel (416) 341 1234. www.rogerscentre.com

CLASSICAL MUSIC, BALLET, AND OPERA Ballet British Columbia Vancouver. Tel (604) 732 5003. www.balletbc.com

Canadian Opera Company Toronto. Tel (416) 363 6671. www.coc.ca

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts 145 Queen Street W., Toronto. Tel (416) 363 6671. www.fourseasonscentre.ca

Les Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montréal Tel (514) 849 0269. www.grandsballets.com

National Ballet of Canada Toronto. Tel (613) 755 1111. www.national.ballet.ca

Opéra de Montréal Tel (514) 985 2258. www.operademontreal. com

Queen Elizabeth Theatre 649 Cambie St., Vancouver. Tel (604) 665 3050. www.city.vancouver.bc.ca /theatres/

Toronto Symphony Orchestra Tel (416) 593 4828. www.tso.ca

Vancouver Opera www.vancouveropera.ca

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SPECIALTY VACATIONS AND ACTIVITIES he sheer variety of the available in this single country massive, unspoiled landis wide: sledding and snowmobiling with Inuit guides or cruisscape is, in many ways, ing in the spring through the what attracts visitors to Canada. Taking advantage of the 39 flower-filled Thousand Islands national parks, several of which Hiking sign in of Ontario are both possibilities. are UN World Heritage sites, National Parks Other choices include scenic most specialty vacations tend to rev- train rides through the Rockies, troutolve around Canada’s spacious natural fishing in pristine secluded lakes, and playgrounds. The range of activities adventurous world-class hiking.

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HIKING Canada is one of the world’s top hiking destinations, with excellent facilities and a wide variety of terrain for beginners and experts alike. Hiking trails range from a leisurely two-hour nature walk to several days’ physically demanding trek through starkly beautiful wilderness. The preferred starting places for hiking trails in each national park are well marked. Accommodations for longer trips are often available in lodges or hostels within a park; alternatively you can bring your own tent or rent one in a nearby town. Largescale maps of any area, including national and provincial parks, can be obtained from Canadian Topographical Series in Ottawa.

Most of the more popular hikes require little preparation and only basic training. The best-known hiking areas are found in Alberta and British

Columbia, in particular in and around the “big four parks” of Kootenay, Yoho, Jasper, and Banff, which encircle the Rocky Mountains. The variety of lands here, from the lush, gently rolling country near Calgary to craggy mountain peaks, reinforces the popularity of the area. More centrally, the prairie provinces offer a surprising variety of walking, from the arid badlands of Alberta’s dinosaur country to the wilderness hiking in Prince Albert National Park. In the east the mountains resume; the steep scenery of the Quebec park of Gatineau and the untamed wilds of the eastern and central Gaspé Peninsula both have wonderful scenery. In northern Canada the hiking is more demanding but equally rewarding. Most walking and hiking takes place from April to August, when temperatures do rise slightly, although drops to -30°C (-22°F) are not unusual. At best, the weather remains

Hikers near Weasel River, Auyuittuq National Park, Baffin Island

Turquoise Lake O’Hara in Yoho National Park

unpredictable. The Chilkoot Pass is a 53-km (33-mile) trail that follows the path of early gold prospectors in the late 19th century from Bennett in northern British Columbia to Dyea in Alaska. For the area, this is a relatively easy path to follow and gives a good taste of northern scenery. More arduous, not to say dangerous, is the memorable Pangnirtung Trail through the southeast of Baffin Island, which even in the summer has a permanently frozen ice cap. Inuit guides will take hikers through the frozen wastes by arrangement. Occasionally wildlifewatching hikes are available, and teams of husky dogs carry visitors on sleds across ice paths in the wilderness to reach remote destinations. An unforgettable experience, these tours are expensive due to their remoteness and a lack of other modes of transportation.

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SAFETY MEASURES Training and safety procedures must be followed for any hike. Always contact the local park or provincial tourist office for their advice and route maps before setting off. Remember, however unlikely a meeting may seem, wildlife can be aggressive; following instructions on bear safety is a must (see p300). While less alarming, insects are a constant irritant: take all possible measures to repel blackflies and mosquitos. However clear and sparkling it may seem, do not drink stream or river water without thoroughly boiling it first as it may contain an intestinal parasite, which can lead to “beaver fever” or giardiasis. In the far north, freezing weather conditions place a premium on safety measures. Never go on a trip without telling someone your planned route and expected time of arrival. Consult local wardens about wildlife and routes, and take the proper equipment. Even in the summer, freezing weather changes can be sudden, so be prepared. Those venturing into little-known territory must be accompanied by a trained guide or seek local advice on dealing with the unexpected. EQUIPMENT Most hiking areas offer rental outlets for tents and cold-weather clothing. Nonetheless, sturdy walking boots, rain gear, and a change of spare clothing are essentials that hikers have to bring themselves, or buy in a nearby town. Appropriate medication and a first-aid kit should also be taken, in particular bug

Rental lodge by Emerald Lake in Yoho National Park

repellent, and antihistamine. Exposure, resulting in either sunstroke or hypothermia, can be guarded against by using appropriate clothes and medication. On a long trip, carry energy-giving foods such as chocolate or trail mix. NATIONAL PARKS

Canada’s 39 national parks cover the country’s most beautiful mountains, lakes, rivers, forests, and coastline. Areas of unspoiled peace, they are the ideal destination for those seeking an outdoor vacation filled with sports, activities, or even a natural spa. The most celebrated upland areas are the “big four” parks in Alberta and BC, Kluane in the Yukon, Swimmers at Radium Hot Springs in the Rockies and the arctic

flower-filled tundra of Auyuittuq National Park in southern Baffin Island. Most of the parks are administered by the government heritage body, Parks Canada, and each has a visitors’ center or park office to welcome visitors. Here walking, hiking, canoeing, and fishing information is available, often from guides who know every detail of the terrain. These offices also issue permits for fishing, which are necessary in each park. Hunting of any kind and use of firearms are all strictly forbidden in national parks, as is feeding the wildlife and damaging any trees and plants. Most parks have camping facilities, or rustic lodges and cottages. The parks generally charge for these facilities, and most have a daily, weekly, or yearly entrance fee, but some are free. Season tickets are available from either the individual park or the Parks Canada office in Hull.

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Canoeists on Lake Wapizagonke, Parc National de la Mauricie

CANOEING Native Canadians perfected the canoe to maneuver around the country’s vast system of waterways for food and survival; today canoeing is a largely recreational pursuit. In provincial or national parks with many lakes and rivers, canoeists can portage (or trek) to the backwaters, getting away from the most populated areas at a gentle pace. Over 250,000 lakes and 35,000 km (20,000 miles) of waterways in Ontario make this the most accessible canoeing destination. Rivers and lakes making up more than 25,000 km (16,000 miles) of canoe routes run through the Algonquin, Killarney, and

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Quetico parks. The Rideau Canal, which travels 190 km (120 miles) from Ottawa to Kingston is a favorite route through the province, taking in the capital, the sprinkling of tiny islands near the historic town of Kingston, and acres of fruit orchards by the fertile waterway. While traveling through the islands, be careful of the other marine traffic. The Canal connects with the St. Lawrence Seaway, the world’s largest draft inland waterway, and shipping regulations are tight. Smaller craft may have to make way for tankers. Most towns near canoeing routes will rent boats by the day, week, or month, and wetsuits, oars, and life jackets are usually available. Because of the popularity of watersports, Canada is an extremely reasonable place to buy fishing and canoeing equipment; many outfitters offer goodquality products at almost half European and US prices.

the South Nahanni River near Fort Simpson in the Northwest Territories. New roads here and in the Yukon have boosted the number of visitors to yet another grueling set of waterways, the Yukon River system. Inexperienced boaters and rafters can take advantage of two-week basic training courses offered all over the country. Lake canoeing in Wells Gray Provincial Park is popular throughout the province for those seeking a more relaxing alternative.

WHITEWATER RAFTING Whitewater rafting may be attempted in the national parks of British Columbia. The Mackenzie River system, which runs from BC backwaters through the Northwest Territories, provides occasionally hair-raising rafting and canoeing. Most routes in the far north are for the experienced only. The toughest trek of all is the 300-km (180-mile) run of

Windsurfing in Georgian Bay Islands National Park, Lake Ontario

OTHER WATERSPORTS Although the season may be short, sailing has always been a popular summer pastime. Canada contains a large proportion of the world’s fresh

Whitewater rafting on the Athabasca River, Jasper National Park in the Rocky Mountains

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DIRECTORY MAPS Canadian Topographical Series Tel 1(800) 214 8524.

Canada Map Office Tel 1 (800) 465 6277.

Ulysses Travel Bookshop 4176 rue St. Denis, Montreal. Tel (514) 843 9447.

Rand McNally (maps) Tel 1 (800) 333 0136. Snowmobiling in Ontario across virgin powder snow

water, and there are allegedly more boats per head here than anywhere else in the world. The Great Lakes are the prime sailing and windsurfing areas, as are both east and west coastal regions from May to September. Swimming is also a favorite in warm weather; beaches on Prince Edward Island and Cape Breton off the east coast offer warm waters and sandy beaches, while lakes in Ontario, such as Lake Huron, provide inland swims. Torontonians sometimes swim in Lake Ontario in the summer.

SKIING, SNOWBOARDING, AND SNOWMOBILING

Not for nothing is Canada known as the Great White North, and its snowy terrain provides some of the world’s best skiing. In the east, the Laurentian resorts of Mont Tremblant and Mont-Ste-Anne offer excellent downhill skiing. Moving west, the resorts of Whistler, Lake Louise, and Banff provide unforgettably dramatic skiing. High in the Rockies, powder snow awaits the adventurous; heli-skiing (lifting skiers by helicopter to FISHING pristine slopes) takes place on the deserted northern peaks. Over three million square Many of the runs are higher miles of inland waters go than those in the European partway to justifying Canada’s Alps, particularly in Banff and reputation as a paradise Lake Louise. These sites have for anglers. There are held major competitions, countless varieties of including the Winter sports fish (see p25), Olympics in 1976. Anothnot to mention the er advantage to skiing in charterboat ocean fishing Canada is the proximity for salmon off the Pacific of the mountains to major coast. Almost all parks cities; it is perfectly possoffer fishing, often in ible to spend the day secluded, pristine lakes zipping down slopes and then dine out in town. and rivers. Be sure to Cross-country skiing is contact the park’s main available across the office to obtain a fishing license. While most country, but is particularly visitors fish in summer, fine on s