Travel Guide to Canada

WARM, WET, WILD AND WONDERFUL

- BY JUDY WAYTIUK

Most of Manitoba is still pure, wild nature, ripe for adventure, punctuated by occasional reserves and mining towns. The bulk of the population lives on the flat Prairies, and most live in the cities of Brandon, Portage la

Prairie and Winnipeg.

Today, Indigenous, French, British and Scottish heritages blend with Vietnamese, Japanese, Ethiopian, Filipino and dozens more immigrants, creating a vibrant cultural mix.

There is no better showcase to sample that mix than through Folklorama, the early August celebratio­n of Manitoba’s people, where immigrants and their children create pavilions that showcase their food, history, and culture. Visit some four dozen countries all in the span of two solid weeks (www.folklorama.ca). But visitors who don’t make it to Folklorama can drop into city neighbourh­oods and traditiona­l ethnic communitie­s anytime; they all offer their own mini-cultural immersions: Corydon Avenue’s Little Italy; the city centre’s tiny, vibrant Chinatown; the Filipino stretch along Ellice Avenue; and a sprinkling of tiny, family-run Southeast Asian eateries, from Japanese to Vietnamese.

Winnipeg is the province’s dominant city, sitting just west of the precise longitudin­al centre of Canada—30 km 19 mi.) east of the city, on the Trans-Canada Highway at 96 degrees, 38 minutes and 45 seconds west. But the entire province, smack in the middle of Canada, is a playground for more adventurou­s souls seeking the beauty and solitude of unspoiled nature. Rugged Precambria­n Shield granite, lush with forests and thousands of lakes to the northeast, gives way to rolling hills and vast, rich, agricultur­al prairie to the southwest. Dead centre

are three massive lakes: Manitoba, Winnipegos­is and Winnipeg (Canada’s 13th, 11th and 6th largest, respective­ly).

GOING, GOING, GONE WILD

With all that wilderness, it’s no wonder many of the province’s more than ten million annual visitors are recreation­al hunters and fishermen headed for remote lodges and small towns tucked away in thick lake or riverside forests. As well, paddlers, hikers, photograph­ers and wildlife viewers love these natural areas, and families can pitch tents or park campers in one of dozens of provincial parks, or settle into hotel rooms from two to five-star rated. In Riding Mountain National Park, campsites and hotels abound around crystal clear, icy cold Clear Lake and the historic townsite of Wasagaming (www. parkscanad­a.gc.ca/riding).

The three big lakes are fringed by summer-oriented towns and villages, and an October or November visit to far northern Churchill virtually guarantees sightings of increasing­ly-endangered polar bears in their natural setting (www.churchill wild.com; www.lazybearlo­dge.com; www. frontiersn­orth.com), and probable displays of aurora borealis. Flooding washed out the rail line to Churchill two years ago, but repairs last fall has the trains running again. And there’s a whole lot more to be discovered in this varied province.

WHAT’S NEW?

The Winnipeg Art Gallery hosts Vision Exchange: Perspectiv­es from India to Canada. Assembled originally by the Art Gallery of Alberta and the National Gallery of Canada, it brings together the work of 20 contempora­ry artists from India along with artists of Indian heritage living in Canada, and is the largest exhibition of its kind to be presented in Manitoba. It’s on from

May 11 to September 8 (www.wag.ca).

At the Manitoba Museum, Body Worlds: Animal Inside Out takes visitors on an anatomical safari of more than 100 “plastinate­d” specimens, including giraffes, goats, octopi, a giant squid, and a reindeer. No animals were harmed for this exhibition. It runs from April 17 to September 2 (www.manitobamu­seum.ca)

Portage la Prairie’s Whoop and Hollar Folk Festival, the Rural Municipali­ty of Portage la Prairie’s signature event of 2019, started six years ago as a backyard barbecue and has taken off as a showcase of song and dance from the area’s historic Whoop and Holler district nearly a century ago (www. whoopandho­llar.com).

CITY LIGHTS

Foodies alert: Manitoba’s culinary scene is a rising gem, from haute to heavy-duty chowing down. The Culinary Adventure Company (www.culinaryad­ventureco.com) offers The Made in Canada Food Tour, the Savour the Forks Food Tour, and the Exchange District Food Tour. Manitoba’s famous fall supper circuit offers homecooked, hearty, community hall familystyl­e fare all autumn long, with listings at Travel Manitoba (www.travelmani­toba.com). Shoppers will be overjoyed with the Outlet Collection Winnipeg’s two dozen high-end brands, and special tourist deals (www.outletcoll­ectionwinn­ipeg.com).

Summer brings the Winnipeg Goldeyes AAA baseball to Shaw Park (www.goldeyes. com). Bell MTS Place, the winter home of NHL hockey’s Winnipeg Jets, mounts concerts and special events year-round (www.bellmts place.ca), while the city’s south end CFL Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ Investors Group Field tackles big blockbuste­r concerts (www.bluebomber­s.com/stadium). In July, the four-day Winnipeg Folk Festival at Birds Hill Provincial Park, north of the city, is family-friendly (www.winnipegfo­lkfestival. ca), as is the Royal Winnipeg Ballet’s “Ballet in the Park” at Assiniboin­e Park’s outdoor Lyric Theatre (www.rwb.org).

Winnipeg warms up winter with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra (www.wso.ca), Manitoba Opera (www.mbopera.ca), the Royal

Manitoba Theatre Centre, Tom Hendry Warehouse Theatre (www.royalmtc.ca) and Prairie Theatre Exchange (www.pte.mb.ca). Year-round, Thermëa by Nordik Spa in the city’s south end (www.thermea.ca) and Ten Spa at the Hotel Fort Garry (www.tenspa.ca), provide sybaritic pleasures.

THE GREAT OUTDOORS

Provincial parks provide groomed hiking trails and offer summer campsite bookings by computer, and most are near small towns where local motels appeal to family-oriented explorers (www.gov.mb.ca/sd/parks/index. html). Whiteshell Provincial Park (www. whiteshell.mb.ca) is a handy hour’s drive east of Winnipeg and, further afield, wilderness wanderers can take to lakes and rivers in canoes, kayaks, or fishing boats. Cosy resort communitie­s like Grand Beach, Gimli, Winnipeg Beach, Victoria Beach, Sandy Hook, Matlock, and many more lay claim to wide, sandy beaches. Gimli is a favourite weekend hangout with its charming marina and beach-town atmosphere (www.gimli.ca). In Spruce Woods Provincial Park, a day tripper’s hiking trail covers forests, hills, a genuine desert, and the eerie, deepwater blue Devil’s Punch Bowl (www.travelmani­toba.com/listings/ spruce-woods-provincial-park/6732).

HERITAGE AND CULTURE

Winnipeg’s historic Exchange District is home to the Design Quarter, a casual grouping of eclectic, original design shops ranging from fashion to fine dining and fine art. The brochure for it can be found at the Winnipeg Art Gallery. Outside the city, historic gems include Brandon’s Commonweal­th Air Training Plan Museum and its stories of World War II air fighter training (www.airmuseum.ca); Thompson’s Heritage North Museum’s tales of the Indigenous Peoples of the area (www.heritageno­rthmuseum.ca); 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 50th anniversar­y of Manitoba’s entry into Confederat­ion (www.gov.mb.ca/chc/hrb/prov/p040.html). Architectu­ral historian, Dr. Frank Albo, leads small groups on “Hermetic Code” tours of the building (www.frankalbo.com/ tours). In May, the Manito Ahbee Festival in Winnipeg showcases Indigenous culture and spectacula­r powwow performanc­es (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

has a new temporary exhibit examining the impact of Canada’s Indian Act. Elijah Harper’s eagle feather, a wampum belt and a Cree artist’s cradleboar­d “float” above handwritte­n excerpts from the Act. Open until summer (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 wildlife 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. marinemuse­um.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 ten polar bears, including Nanuk 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.oakhammock­marsh.ca); and, at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, see monster fossils from prehistori­c Lake Agassiz and the new 15-m-long (50-ft.) life-sized replica of Bruce, the world’s biggest publicly displayed mosasaur (www.discoverfo­ssils.com).

 ??  ?? BELUGA WHALES, CHURCHILL • DESTINATIO­N CANADA/LAZY BEAR EXPEDITION­S
BELUGA WHALES, CHURCHILL • DESTINATIO­N CANADA/LAZY BEAR EXPEDITION­S
 ??  ?? WINNIPEG • SHUTTERSTO­CK/SBSHOT87
WINNIPEG • SHUTTERSTO­CK/SBSHOT87
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? SPIRIT PANEL AND THEMATIC WALL, INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIV­ES • CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
SPIRIT PANEL AND THEMATIC WALL, INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIV­ES • CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
 ??  ?? ATIKAKI PROVINCIAL WILDERNESS PARK • DESTINATIO­N CANADA
ATIKAKI PROVINCIAL WILDERNESS PARK • DESTINATIO­N CANADA
 ??  ??

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