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Canadians, Help Needed!
For my Advanced Oral Skills class (where we practise giving presentatins) I was assigned with the subject "My ideal holiday". Now, I was thinking that I'd like to plan a trip to Canada since it's a place I'd actually love to go and haven't been yet which makes the presentation fun for me, too.
Since I only have limited time to give that presentation I was thinking that I'd narrow down the fictional travelling to British Columbia and Alberta.
I will look up sights and places worth going on Wikipedia and tourism websites, but I thought that since I have quite a few Canadians on my flist maybe you could help me out?
If I was to visit Alberta and British Columbia, where would you take me? What are must-sees? Which sights praised by tourism websites are highly overrated? Which places are never mentioned on those websites but worth checking out? How likely is it to see moose and bears if you go to Canada? :-p
I'd love it if you could help me :-) (And who knows, maybe I'll take that tour some day!)
Thank you in advance :-)
Since I only have limited time to give that presentation I was thinking that I'd narrow down the fictional travelling to British Columbia and Alberta.
I will look up sights and places worth going on Wikipedia and tourism websites, but I thought that since I have quite a few Canadians on my flist maybe you could help me out?
If I was to visit Alberta and British Columbia, where would you take me? What are must-sees? Which sights praised by tourism websites are highly overrated? Which places are never mentioned on those websites but worth checking out? How likely is it to see moose and bears if you go to Canada? :-p
I'd love it if you could help me :-) (And who knows, maybe I'll take that tour some day!)
Thank you in advance :-)
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And I don't know about moose, but when I was doing my research on hiking in BC there were pages telling you how to prepare for and deal with bear encounters, so I guess they must happen! I know you come across bear warning signs while hiking here in Ontario, too. Luckily, I've never encountered one...
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http://gentlehobbit.livejournal.com/136963.html
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Badlands, Dinosaur National Park, and Royal Tyrell Museum. Awe-inspiring. The vast emptiness and flatness, with the huge gouges of badlands where dinosaur bones are found.
Banff: overrated and overpriced. Climbing the local mountain is cool.
Lake Louise: beautiful beyond any imagining.
Lake Moraine: even better. Back of the old Canadian $20.
The Rockies in general -- incredible.
Columbian Ice Fields -- not to be missed.
BC: Vancouver Island is superb according to my parents and my son. We've never been there.
However we did go to Yoho National Park to see Takakkaw Falls. Spectacular. Natural beauty beyond belief.
So... our trip to Alberta and brief trip into BC was of a beauty I will never, not in this life, expect to surpass.
Bear: go in August, when the berries are ripe, and there will be bear warnings everywhere. Bear are DANGEROUS and hiking trails will be closed.
Moose mate in September. They flourish near lakes and cooler areas on the mountainsides, and across the whole of Canada. Not so dangerous unless threatened.
FWIW I've seen bear many times, but never a moose. Dave has seen moose twice, because he used to camp in a national park as a boy, and bear many times.
In BC and Alberta you can also expect to see elk, bighorn sheep, ground squirrels, magpies, and deer in the moutains. On the plains, mustangs, mormots and prairie dogs.
Good luck!
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You will go east to Lake Louise, but don't bother with Banff - it's pretty but overpriced. Instead you should decide to head north, especially if you want to see moose. White water rafting at Lytton, through Hell's Gate is fun if you're an adrenalin junkie, and further north you'll find Lake McLeese, which is gorgeous in a very low-key way. You'll pass Prince George and start climbing - the Rockies are in the way of your progress Stop at Swallow Falls, cos they're pretty - and once you come down again to Dawson Creek your adventure truly begins. You hit mile zero of the Alaska Highway, and your journey truly begins. You're heading for the Liard Hotsprings, where you can bathe when the temperature is -40C, and you're absolutely guaranteed to see moose. You will likely stop in Fort Nelson, (mile 300) and I advise a stop at Auntie's Kitchen, at Pink Mountain on the way to Fort Nelson - the food there is the best food ever anywhere!
Is that enough?
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I need money :-)
Thanks a lot for the help!
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Gotta visit Liard Hotsprings though. Last time I was there, moose were all around, and the springs are awesome.
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