+ All Categories
Home > Documents > How to bed down in style in national parks {P6} JULY 21-22 ... · rich larder for the First Nations...

How to bed down in style in national parks {P6} JULY 21-22 ... · rich larder for the First Nations...

Date post: 02-Oct-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
1
CANADA CANADA DESTINATION JULY 21-22, 2012 ALL ABOARD QUEBEC’S NEW LE MASSIF TRAIN {P7} BEST HOLIDAY DEALS {P7} THE HISTORIC HEART OF WINNIPEG {P8} ALL THE CREATURE COMFORTS How to bed down in style in national parks {P6} Some like it fresh Adventures aplenty, from forest walks to icy encounters CATHERINE MARSHALL A sturdy and reliable four-wheel-drive vehicle is essential for tackling Alberta’s Icefields Parkway in winter Quebec (city) Quebec (city) Quebec (city) Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa City City City Montreal Montreal Montreal BEAUFORT SEA BAFFIN BAY HUDSON BAY ATLANTIC OCEAN PACIFIC OCEAN LABRADOR SEA Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island US US S S S US US S S S S BRITISH COLUMBIA NEWFOUNDLAND WFOUN WFOUN Y RY NUNA VUT TERRITORY N N CANADA CANADA CANADA ALBERTA GULF OF ALASKA Vancouver Vancouver Vancouver Jasper Jasper Jasper Vancouver Island Winnipeg Winnipeg Winnipeg NIGEL FINNEY Bison roam the range again at Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan ANNE KOSTALAS Icebergs and marine wildlife abound in Conception Bay CHRISTINE McCABE British Columbia’s Tolkienesque Great Bear Rainforest JOHN LEE Volcanic craters in the Yukon brim with icy mist There’s a (white) bear out there: The Great Bear Rainforest covers 8.5 million hectares of mist- shrouded wilderness fringing the remote northwest coast and islands of British Columbia; it’s home to wolves, wolverines and the enigmatic and endangered spirit (or kermode) bear. And we are going in. Barb is our guide from King Pacific Lodge (KPL), a five-star floating resort towed into position off Princess Royal Island every summer and tethered in the shadow of the forest, with bull kelp swirling about its moorings and bald eagles soaring overhead. Every excursion begins in the wet room, suiting up like firemen, for even if it’s not raining when you set out, the world’s largest temper- ate rainforest will be busy making its own weather. We motor by boat around the point and into Cameron Cove, a primeval place of mists, ferns and lichens, dimly lit and as strangely menacing as a noir film. After disembarking we follow the river into the darkening forest as mists roll down to blanket ancient cedars and hemlocks, and the only sound to be heard is water — raining, trickling, dripping, squelching. This is no walk but an obstacle course of fallen logs and shattered stumps; the mossy ground is as spongy as a trampol- ine. We are heading towards a thundering waterfall only dis- covered by KPL guides a year ago. They have dubbed it Tomb- stone for the eerie, moss-corroded tree stumps, like rotten teeth, that surround it. And along the way we pick our own snacks. The forest is a rich larder for the First Nations Gitga’at people (and peckish bears), affording salmonberries and huckleberries, cow parsnip and rice root. All the while there is a sense we are being watched, by wolf or bear or wood sprite. This is a forest so drenched in mystery, so Tolkien- esque, it’s like a fairytale, beautiful and dreadful in equal measure. (September is the best month to spy the rare white spirit bear.) More: kingpacificlodge.com. CHRISTINE McCABE Northern exposures: When 100,000 men stampeded north for the 1890s Klondike Gold Rush, the Yukon’s uncompromising wilder- ness was their biggest challenge. Anyone surviving the killer rapids and jagged-toothed mountains to get there could call themselves a local — that’s if they also made it through the minus 30C winters. Fast-forward and I am about to explore this raw-toothed nature head-on, albeit from a cosy heli- copter. A bird’s-eye view is the way to go and one operator usually shuttling workers for the Yukon’s busy resources sector runs an eye- popping scenic service. Clambering aboard at tiny Dawson City airport in the Klondike River Valley with three other camera-wielding visitors, we quickly shimmy into the air. The airport soon looks like a toy-town model as we zip over forest-striped foothills. Looming ahead is the region’s most dramatic mountain land- scape. At almost 2200sq km, Tombstone Territorial Park is renowned for its claw-like granite terrain. Swathed with multi-hued tundra flora in summer, on my visit it’s still in winter’s glassy grip. Moose and caribou call the area home, razor-sharp pinnacles poke upwards like fangs, streaked with laser-white snow. Prying open one of the chopper’s small windows, I take photos of vast volcanic craters brimming like cauldrons with icy mist. Back below the snowline, we follow the glittering Klondike River over historic Dawson City, where the nugget-eyed prospec- tors stayed. When the easy gold was gone, they quickly left and machines moved in. Ship-sized dredges chewed up local riverbeds here for decades; and just before the airport, we spot the evidence. Deposited in vast, undulating trails that, from above, resemble the shed skins of huge snakes, the dredge piles, or tailings, are dis- carded rocks that were sifted for gold. Their man-made patterns have an oddly attractive, organic look. It’s time to land and recharge. More: trinityhelicopters.com. JOHN LEE I’m going to Grasslands: Along the horizon we spot a small herd of bison grazing on lush spring grass. On the immense prairie of Grasslands National Park in southern Saskatchewan, with no trees to block our view, they look like big brown dots. But as we drive closer, their distinctive shape comes into focus. The closest bull stands majestically alone, his shaggy, horned head pointing into the breeze. Grasslands is Canada’s only national park that preserves the mixed-grass prairie ecosystem. Bison once reigned on the prairies, from Canada to Mexico. Before Europeans arrived in the 1800s and hunted them almost to extinction, they numbered about 30 million. The 71 bison re- introduced in 2006 have multi- plied to more than 300, a far cry from the thundering herds of the past, but a thrilling start. Exploring here is a hiker’s dream. A few trails have been built, but you are encouraged to wander. ‘‘If you want to hike 10km in that direction, you can,’’ says Parks Canada heritage guide Caitlin Mroz, pointing towards nowhere in particular. Look for tipi rings — circles of stones that once secured the tipis (tents) of First Nations people. More than 12,000 have been dis- covered, along with stone cairns and bison drive lanes, where native people once herded bison to be killed for food and clothing. The entire park is an archeological treasure trove and there’s even traditional tipi accommodation available at the Crossing Resort. The past is powerful, but so is the present. Listen for the high-pitched bark of prairie dogs — there’s a huge colony with underground burrows — and watch for owls, black- footed ferrets, antelopes, foxes, coyotes and, of course, those bison. If you want to taste bison, you can. Just outside Grasslands, in the tiny village of Val Marie, Harvest Moon Cafe, which is run by Mroz in her spare time, serves up bison burgers, made from domestic ani- mals raised for their meat. More: pc.gc.ca; crossingresort.com. SUZANNE MORPHET Ice and easy does it: Alberta’s Ice- fields Parkway expresses itself best in the depths of winter, when wind-chill pushes the temperature to minus 40C and the road is paved with an unyielding sheet of ice. The behemoth of a four-wheel- drive my daughter and I have hired makes perfect sense now that we are out on this 232km-long veritable ice floe. Although the car is impossibly unwieldy in parking lots, it glides along the open road with confi- dence and precision, maintaining the very firmest of grips. Our cold- shocked bodies thaw out, thanks to its heated seats and tight insu- lation and on-demand outpouring of warm, soothing air. These are not small comforts, for we have entered an ice age where no leaf or pebble or atom of oxygen has been left unfrozen. Our lungs burn when we stop to view the ice-blue Athabasca Gla- cier and use the log-cabin toilets set out in the woods, their pitched roofs heavy with white frosting. Even the ravens land gingerly on the roadside, hopping from foot to foot and begging for food under duress as their stalky legs threaten to snap with the exertion of it all. The roadside restaurants and coffee shops have closed for the winter, so we motor on through valleys lined with snow-flecked spruces and aspens and the Can- adian Rockies, their foothills curv- ing up towards peaks that are sharply outlined against a bright blue sky. But for the occasional snow plough and intrepid traveller, we are alone in this white expanse, journeying upwards from Banff to Lake Louise and on to the elevated Peyto Lake, then sinking back down along the Saskatchewan Crossing and the Columbia Ice- field into the town of Jasper, where people skate on the frozen lakes. Our eyes have recorded this journey as though it were some glorious, cinematic montage; if only we could show you the results. More: icefieldsparkway.ca. CATHERINE MARSHALL Bay watch: From July to mid- August, Rick Stanley from Ocean- quest Adventures will hurtle you across Newfoundland’s Concep- tion Bay. This is the Avalon Peninsula, the farthest place east you can go on the North American continent, and your mission will be to swim with humpback whales (which apparently like to show off) plus the occasional opportunity to view narwhals, beluga whales, white-beaked dolphins and minke whales. Stanley knows this rugged part of Canada like the back of his hand, including the seabed where he often dives for wartime ship- wrecks; he takes up to 12 passen- gers on his boat for half-day excur- sions at $C199 ($192) to snorkel and $C149 to watch. Your best chance to have a close encounter with a 10,000-year-old lump of ice is between early May and mid-July. From the boat you can hear it crackling and if the skipper says it is safe enough, you can take back a souvenir piece of iceberg, perhaps to pop in a drink. There are also trips for experi- enced divers that may give you the chance to climb on to an iceberg, if the skipper gives the nod. For those who like their adven- tures less daring, there is sea kayaking with a guide who will offer you sea urchins picked from the shoreline. The bay has a wild beauty, has often been used for film shoots and the people are about as friendly as Canadians can get. More: oceanquestadventures.com. ANNE KOSTALAS Terms and conditions: Prices are per person, twin share and correct as of 13/06/2011. 10% discount requires full payment within 14 days and is based on the land-only portion of core tour and twin share price, not including extra night accommodations, extensions, taxes/fees, tips and supplements/reductions. $4284 includes 10% discount and departs 07/09/13; $2475 includes 10% discount and departs 07/09/13; $2529 includes 10% discount and departs 16/09/13. Offers are valid for new bookings only, and may be withdrawn or amended at any time without notice. Further conditions apply, see website or brochure for details. License No. 2TA000637 2013 CANADA, ALASKA & USA Book Early – Save 10% At Globus, planning ahead pays off. Book your 2013 Globus North America tour and pay in full 12 months prior to departure and you will SAVE 10%* For more information or to book, see your local Travel Agent or visit www.globus.com.au Spirit of the Rockies Eastern US & Canada Discovery Spectacular Alaska 12 days Now from $4284 departing 07/09/13 10 days Now from $2475 departing 07/09/13 13 days Now from $2529 departing 16/09/13 SAVE $475 SAVE $274 SAVE $280 Every journey tells a story SM Niagara Falls, Canada
Transcript
Page 1: How to bed down in style in national parks {P6} JULY 21-22 ... · rich larder for the First Nations Gitga’at people (and peckish bears), affording salmonberries and huckleberries,

CANADACANADADESTINATION

JULY 21-22 , 2012

ALL ABOARD QUEBEC’S NEW LE MASSIF TRAIN {P7} BEST HOLIDAY DEALS {P7} THE HISTORIC HEART OF WINNIPEG {P8}

ALL THE CREATURE COMFORTSHow to bed downin style in national parks {P6}

Some likeit freshAdventures aplenty, from forestwalks to icy encounters

CATHERINE MARSHALL

A sturdy and reliable four-wheel-drive vehicle is essential for tackling Alberta’s Icefields Parkway in winter

Quebec (city)Quebec (city)Quebec (city)

OttawaOttawaOttawa

CityCityCity

MontrealMontrealMontreal

BEAUFORTSEA

BAFF INBAY

HUDSONBAY

ATLANTICOCEAN

PAC I F ICOCEAN

LABRADORSEA

Prince Edward IslandPrince Edward IslandPrince Edward IslandUSUSSSSUSUSSSSS

BRITISHCOLUMBIA

NEW

FOU

ND

LAN

DW

FOU

NW

FOU

N

YRYNUNA VUT TERRITORYNN

CANADACANADACANADA

ALBERTAGULFOF

ALASKA

VancouverVancouverVancouver

JasperJasperJasper

VancouverIsland WinnipegWinnipegWinnipeg

NIGEL FINNEY

Bison roam the range again at Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan

ANNE KOSTALAS

Icebergs and marine wildlife abound in Conception Bay

CHRISTINE McCABE

British Columbia’s Tolkienesque Great Bear Rainforest

JOHN LEE

Volcanic craters in the Yukon brim with icy mist

There’s a (white) bear out there:The Great Bear Rainforest covers8.5 million hectares of mist-shrouded wilderness fringing theremote northwest coast andislands of British Columbia; it’shome to wolves, wolverines andthe enigmatic and endangeredspirit (or kermode) bear.

And we are going in.Barb is our guide from King

Pacific Lodge (KPL), a five-starfloating resort towed into positionoff Princess Royal Island everysummer and tethered in theshadow of the forest, with bull kelpswirling about its moorings andbald eagles soaring overhead.

Every excursion begins in thewet room, suiting up like firemen,foreven if it’snot rainingwhenyouset out, the world’s largest temper-ate rainforest will be busy makingits own weather.

We motor by boat around thepoint and into Cameron Cove, aprimeval place of mists, ferns andlichens, dimly lit and as strangelymenacing as a noir film.

After disembarking we followthe river into the darkening forestas mists roll down to blanketancient cedars and hemlocks, andthe only sound to be heard is water— raining, trickling, dripping,squelching. This is no walk but anobstacle course of fallen logs andshattered stumps; the mossyground is as spongy as a trampol-ine. We are heading towards athundering waterfall only dis-covered by KPL guides a year ago.

They have dubbed it Tomb-stone for the eerie, moss-corrodedtree stumps, like rotten teeth, thatsurround it. And along the way wepickour ownsnacks.The forest is arich larder for the First NationsGitga’at people (and peckishbears), affording salmonberriesand huckleberries, cow parsnipand rice root.

All the while there is a sense weare being watched, by wolf or bearor wood sprite. This is a forest sodrenched in mystery, so Tolkien-esque, it’s like a fairytale, beautifuland dreadful in equal measure.(September is the best month tospy the rare white spirit bear.)More: kingpacificlodge.com.

CHRISTINEMcCABE

Northern exposures: When100,000 men stampeded north forthe 1890s Klondike Gold Rush, theYukon’s uncompromising wilder-ness was their biggest challenge.Anyone surviving the killer rapidsand jagged-toothed mountains toget there could call themselves alocal — that’s if they also made itthrough the minus 30C winters.

Fast-forward and I am about toexplore this raw-toothed naturehead-on, albeit from a cosy heli-

copter. A bird’s-eye view is the wayto go and one operator usuallyshuttling workers for the Yukon’sbusy resources sector runs an eye-popping scenic service.

Clambering aboard at tinyDawson City airport in theKlondike River Valley with threeother camera-wielding visitors, wequickly shimmy into the air. Theairport soon looks like a toy-townmodel as we zip over forest-stripedfoothills.

Looming ahead is the region’smost dramatic mountain land-scape. At almost 2200sq km,Tombstone Territorial Park isrenowned for its claw-like graniteterrain. Swathed with multi-huedtundra flora in summer, on myvisit it’s still in winter’s glassy grip.

Moose and caribou call the areahome, razor-sharp pinnacles pokeupwards like fangs, streaked withlaser-white snow. Prying open oneof the chopper’s small windows, Itake photos of vast volcaniccraters brimming like cauldronswith icy mist.

Back below the snowline, wefollow the glittering KlondikeRiver over historic Dawson City,where the nugget-eyed prospec-tors stayed. When the easy goldwas gone, they quickly left andmachines moved in. Ship-sizeddredges chewed up local riverbedshere for decades; and just beforethe airport, we spot the evidence.

Deposited in vast, undulatingtrails that, from above, resemblethe shed skins of huge snakes, thedredge piles, or tailings, are dis-carded rocks that were sifted forgold. Their man-made patternshave an oddly attractive, organiclook. It’s timeto land andrecharge.More: trinityhelicopters.com.

JOHN LEE

I’m going to Grasslands: Alongthe horizon we spot a small herd ofbison grazing on lush spring grass.

On the immense prairie ofGrasslands National Park insouthern Saskatchewan, with notrees to block our view, they looklike big brown dots. But as we drivecloser, their distinctive shapecomes into focus. The closest bullstands majestically alone, hisshaggy, horned head pointing intothe breeze.

Grasslands is Canada’s onlynational park that preserves themixed-grass prairie ecosystem.Bison once reigned on the prairies,from Canada to Mexico.

BeforeEuropeansarrived in the1800s and hunted them almost toextinction, they numbered about30 million. The 71 bison re-introduced in 2006 have multi-plied to more than 300, a far cryfrom the thundering herds of thepast, but a thrilling start.

Exploring here is a hiker’sdream. Afew trailshave beenbuilt,but you are encouraged to wander.

‘‘If you want to hike 10km inthat direction, you can,’’ says ParksCanada heritage guide CaitlinMroz, pointing towards nowherein particular.

Look for tipi rings — circles ofstones that once secured the tipis(tents) of First Nations people.More than 12,000 have been dis-covered, along with stone cairnsand bison drive lanes, wherenative people onceherded bison tobe killed for food and clothing.

The entire park is anarcheological treasure trove andthere’s even traditional tipiaccommodation available at theCrossing Resort.

The past is powerful, but so isthe present.

Listen for the high-pitched barkof prairie dogs — there’s a hugecolony with underground burrows— and watch for owls, black-footed ferrets, antelopes, foxes,coyotesand,of course, thosebison.

If you want to taste bison, you

can. Just outside Grasslands, in thetiny village of Val Marie, HarvestMoon Cafe, which is run by Mrozin her spare time, serves up bisonburgers, made from domestic ani-mals raised for their meat. More:pc.gc.ca; crossingresort.com.

SUZANNEMORPHET

Ice and easy does it: Alberta’s Ice-fields Parkwayexpresses itself bestin the depths of winter, whenwind-chill pushes the temperaturetominus40Candtheroad ispavedwith an unyielding sheet of ice.

The behemoth of a four-wheel-drive my daughter and I havehired makes perfect sense nowthat we are out on this 232km-longveritable ice floe.

Although the car is impossiblyunwieldy in parking lots, it glidesalong the open road with confi-dence and precision, maintainingthe very firmest of grips. Our cold-shocked bodies thaw out, thanksto its heated seats and tight insu-lation and on-demand outpouringof warm, soothing air.

These are not small comforts,

for we have entered an ice agewhere no leaf or pebble or atom ofoxygen has been left unfrozen.Our lungs burn when we stop toview the ice-blue Athabasca Gla-cier and use the log-cabin toiletsset out in the woods, their pitchedroofs heavy with white frosting.Even the ravens land gingerly onthe roadside, hopping from foot tofoot and begging for food underduress as their stalky legs threatento snap with the exertion of it all.

The roadside restaurants andcoffee shops have closed for thewinter, so we motor on throughvalleys lined with snow-fleckedspruces and aspens and the Can-adian Rockies, their foothills curv-ing up towards peaks that aresharply outlined against a brightblue sky.

But for the occasional snowplough and intrepid traveller, weare alone in this white expanse,journeying upwards from Banff toLake Louise and on to the elevatedPeyto Lake, then sinking backdown along the SaskatchewanCrossing and the Columbia Ice-

field into the town of Jasper, wherepeople skate on the frozen lakes.

Our eyes have recorded thisjourney as though it were someglorious, cinematic montage; ifonly we could show you theresults. More: icefieldsparkway.ca.

CATHERINEMARSHALL

Bay watch: From July to mid-August, Rick Stanley from Ocean-quest Adventures will hurtle youacross Newfoundland’s Concep-tion Bay.

This is the Avalon Peninsula,the farthest place east you can goon the North American continent,and your mission will be to swimwith humpback whales (whichapparently like to show off)plus the occasional opportunityto view narwhals, belugawhales, white-beaked dolphinsand minke whales.

Stanley knows this rugged partof Canada like the back of hishand, including the seabed wherehe often dives for wartime ship-wrecks; he takes up to 12 passen-gers on his boat for half-day excur-sions at $C199 ($192) to snorkeland $C149 to watch.

Yourbestchance tohaveacloseencounter with a 10,000-year-oldlump of ice is between early Mayand mid-July.

From the boat you can hear itcrackling and if the skipper says itis safe enough, you can take back asouvenir piece of iceberg, perhapsto pop in a drink.

There are also trips for experi-enced divers that may give you thechance to climb on to an iceberg, ifthe skipper gives the nod.

For those who like their adven-tures less daring, there is seakayaking with a guide who willoffer you sea urchins picked fromthe shoreline.

The bay has a wild beauty, hasoften beenused for filmshoots andthe people are about as friendly asCanadians can get. More:oceanquestadventures.com.

ANNEKOSTALAS

Terms and conditions: Prices are per person, twin share and correct as of 13/06/2011. 10% discount requires full payment within 14 days and is based on the land-only portion of core tour and twin share price, not including extra night accommodations, extensions, taxes/fees, tips and supplements/reductions. $4284 includes 10% discount and departs 07/09/13; $2475 includes 10% discount and departs 07/09/13; $2529 includes 10% discount and departs 16/09/13. Offers are valid for new bookings only, and may be withdrawn or amended at any time without notice. Further conditions apply, see website or brochure for details. License No. 2TA000637

2013 CANADA, ALASKA & USA

Book Early – Save 10%At Globus, planning ahead pays off. Book your 2013 Globus North America tour and pay in full 12 months prior to departure and you will SAVE 10%*

For more information or to book, see your local Travel Agent or visit www.globus.com.au

Spirit of the Rockies Eastern US & Canada DiscoverySpectacular Alaska

12 days Now from $4284departing 07/09/13

10 days Now from $2475 departing 07/09/13

13 days Now from $2529departing 16/09/13

SAVE$475

SAVE$274

SAVE$280

Every journey tells a storySM

Niagara Falls, Canada

Recommended