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10 Spectacular Canadian Parks Across Canada

by Chris Hamilton on 07/07/08 at 4:02 am

If your ever decide to visit Canada and love nature then this group of 10 amazing provincial and national Canadian parks are places you should definitely check out.

When most visitors come to Canada, they have many sites to see but the ones that are less known or visited are truly beautiful and must be seen in person to appreciate.

British Columbia: Arrow Lake Provincial Park

 

Arrow Lake Park is located about 150 kilometers south of Revelstoke, British Columbia. The park was established on May 8, 1981 to help maintain tourism and to boost outdoor activities in the area. This park offers camping, hiking, boat trips and much more. Definitely worth a visit if you ever in British Columbia.

Alberta: Jasper National Park

 

Jasper Park is a 10,800 kilometer protected park which was established around 1907 and is the largest National Park in in the Canadian Rockies. This is one of Canada’s more popular tourist destinations with many activities to do within the park. There is also 1,200 kilometers of trails through the park, which offers horse back riding, biking and skiing with the right weather conditions.

Saskatchewan: Prince Albert National Park

 

Prince Albert National Park is 120 miles north of Saskatoon and was established in on March 24, 1927. The park is 3,874 km and is home to number of Canadian species and is mostly dominated by forest. There’s even a heard of about 400 wild bison’s that roam the park.

While visiting this park one can take a boat ride, picnic, biking, hiking, swimming, canoeing and much more. Truly this park is one of Saskatchewan’s most beautiful places to see in my opinion.

Manitoba: Wapusk National Park

 

Wapusk National Park is Canada’s 37 th park established in 1996 and is one of Manitoba’s pride and joys. Its name “Wapusk” means “White Bear” and is home to the world’s largest known polar bear mating grounds. This park is unique in a way because it has lush forests like other parks but then the northern part is like Artic tundra which is home to polar bears, woodland caribou, Artic and red fox, lesser snow goose, swans and many other species. Also if you visit the park between March and October you might get lucky enough to see the Northern Lights like the picture above.

Ontario: Algonquin Park

 

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4 Comments

salvatore

Jul 12th, 2008

great article, awesome photo’s, well done.

Ljubomir Mamula

Jul 23rd, 2008

My best wishes to you. Regards, LM

tonisan60

Aug 6th, 2008

The Northern Lights are so awsome, and Alberta is my favorite picture, all are very beautiful landscapes, thank you for sharing them.
Claps and hugs

i need a answer

May 23rd, 2009

why is wapusk national park still opened today

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