Travel Guides to Canada

2022-23 Travel Guide to Canada

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Thompson's Heritage North Museum's tales of the Indigenous Peoples of the area (www.thompson.ca/p/heritage-north- museum); and, in far western Manitoba, the Inglis Grain Elevators National Historic Site (www.ingliselevators.com) is the best remaining example of an "elevator row" in Canada. Winnipeg's Manitoba Legislative Building, the Tyndall limestone-clad beaux arts classical seat of government, opened on July 15, 1920, on the 50 th anniversary of Manitoba's entry into Confederation (www.gov.mb.ca/chc/hrb/prov/p040.html). On hold for 2022, architectural historian, Dr. Frank Albo, takes small groups on "Hermetic Code" tours of the building (www.frank albo.com/tours). In May, the Manito Ahbee Festival in Winnipeg showcases Indigenous culture and spectacular powwow perform- ances (www.manitoahbee.com). February's French Festival du Voyageur, centred in St. Boniface, focuses on Franco-Manitoban history and culture (www.heho.ca/en). MUST SEE, MUST DO Lower Fort Garry, the national historic site just south of the City of Selkirk, shelters an historic fur-trading fort. It is also the site where Treaty 1, the first treaty between colonial explorers and Indigenous Peoples, was signed, and where the North-West Mounted Police—the precursor to Canada's Mounties—were first trained (www.parkscanada.gc.ca/fortgarry). In summer, hardy adventurers can kayak with more than 57,000 white beluga whales that calve and raise their babies near the mouth of the Churchill River (www.everythingchurchill.com). The Canadian Museum for Human Rights, adjacent to The Forks National Historic Site, houses a permanent exhibit called Truth and Reconciliation. It chronicles the findings of the 2008 Truth and Reconciliation Commis- sion that aimed to right the wrongs of the residential school system in Canada (www.humanrights.ca). SCENIC DRIVES Bunk in at Riding Mountain National Park's Wasagaming townsite, and take the next day to drive to the park for early morning wild- life spotting, a visit to the resident bison herd, selfie stops all around beautiful Clear Lake and ups and downs in the park's unique topography. Return to Winnipeg via Highway 5 and McCreary and the self-proclaimed world lily capital of Neepawa, then take the scenic Highway 16 Yellowhead route through vast farmland (www.discoverclearlake.com). From north Winnipeg, drive River Road along the Red River to Selkirk and the Marine Museum of Manitoba (www.marine museum.ca), with Lower Fort Garry National Historic Site about two-thirds along the 60-km (37-mi.) route. Tiny Lockport, an historic catfishing spot (rent a boat and gear) and hot dog stand heaven, lies between the two. From Selkirk, return to Winnipeg via pretty Henderson Highway. For a longer day trip, take Highway 44 east from Lockport, through the Agassiz Provincial Forest and all the way to Seven Sisters Falls and the classic hydro station there, then onto Pinawa for a visit to Pinawa Dam Provincial Park and the picturesque town and lake. Stop to walk the suspension bridge and hiking trails. FAMILY FUN Kids go wild at FortWhyte Alive, where bison roam on prairie grasses near a pioneer sod house, teepee encampment and prairie dog town (www.fortwhyte.org), and at Assiniboine Park's Nature Playground and Polar Playground (www.assiniboinepark.ca). Journey to Churchill is home to polar bears, including Nanuq and Siku, rescued from the Churchill area. For history and fun, families can ride the vintage steam train Prairie Dog Central Railway from north Winnipeg to the villages of Grosse Isle and Warren and back (www.pdcrailway.com). En route to Gimli, Oak Hammock Marsh Interpretive Centre welcomes thousands of migrating geese in the fall (www.oakhammock marsh.ca); and, at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, see monster fossils from prehistoric Lake Agassiz and the 15-m-long (50-ft.) life-sized replica of Bruce, the world's biggest publicly displayed mosasaur (www.discoverfossils.com). MB 55 THE ST. BONIFACE MUSEUM, ORIGINALLY BUILT AS A GREY NUNS' CONVENT, IS WINNIPEG'S OLDEST BUILDING AND NORTH AMERICA'S LARGEST OAK LOG STRUCTURE. Quick Fact National Parks and Historic Sites: www.parkscanada.gc.ca 1-888-773-8888 Park Pick THE FORKS NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE The Forks National Historic Site ranks at the top of visitor to-do lists, thanks to its marketplaces, Children's Museum, Manitoba Theatre for Young People, traditional Indigenous Oodena Celebration Circle, Festival Park and CN Stage with free concerts, Riverwalk and summer boat rides along the Assiniboine. In winter, the river becomes a skating, skiing and snowball-throwing playground, with warming huts designed by an assortment of international architects. Around the borders of The Forks is the Beaux Arts 1911-vintage Union Station rail terminal, the post-contemporary Canadian Museum for Human Rights, and the elegant cable- stayed Provencher Bridge , spanning the Red River and linking Winnipeg's French Quarter with Manitoba's capital (www.parkscanada.gc.ca/forks). MANITO AHBEE FESTIVAL • TRAVEL MB

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