Vancouver Sun

Virtual Canadian parks will go online with Google

- BOB WEBER

Some of Canada’s most beloved national parks and historic sites are going online in hopes that allowing people to hike the woods on their computer screens will encourage them to do it in real life.

A deal between Parks Canada and Google Maps is allowing the global Internet giant to take its special cameras to natural and historic wonders from L’Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundla­nd to British Columbia’s Pacific Rim National Park Reserve.

“It’s a way that we see we can step into the psyche of a lot of Canadians and really be able to show these great, iconic places that belong to all of us in a new way,” Andrew Campbell, vice- president of visitor experience for Parks Canada, said Wednesday.

“If people are dreaming about going there, this gives them a way to explore before they go.”

Google staff plan to drive the roads, hike the paths and peer into the rooms of 120 national parks and historic sites by the end of 2014 using backpack mounted cameras being used this year for the first time in Canada.

“The ( camera) is capable of going anywhere a person can hike,” said Google spokesman Aaron Brindle.

“It really will be a big part of this collaborat­ion as we go through backcountr­y hiking trails, drive- in camping sites, campground­s and all these nooks and crannies of historical properties.”

Virtual visitors will be able to stop and look around just as if they were actually in a place of outstandin­g natural beauty.

“You are virtually immersed in these environmen­ts,” Brindle said. “You can pan around 360 degrees and see exactly what you would see if you were standing right there.”

The Google maps — which are being created at no cost to Parks Canada — will also give people an idea of what’s involved in different hikes or drives and allow them to plan better.

They’re also intended to lure foreign tourists by giving them a taste of what Canada has to offer.

Faces of hikers will be blurred, as will licence plates from passing cars.

Google has run into privacy concerns in Europe and Australia.

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