Backdropped by the Rocky Mountains to the west and great swaths of prairie to
the east, Alberta is first and foremost an outdoor lover's paradise. Five of
Canada's national parks are found in Alberta, beckoning travellers year-round
with a myriad of recreational offerings such as skiing, boating and
hiking—along with more esoteric pursuits such as ice walking, caving and
skijoring (dog-assisted Nordic skiing).
Urban escape artists flock
to Alberta's two largest cities, Edmonton and Calgary, for retail therapy,
gourmet dining, rustic spas and shopping at North America's largest shopping
and entertainment complex, West Edmonton Mall.
Alberta is blessed
with a diverse heritage that encompasses First Nations history, pioneer spirit
and a rich immigrant culture that draws New Canadians from all parts of the
globe. The annual Calgary Stampede celebrates all things cowboy and rodeo
early each July. Edmonton K-Days follows up with a tribute to northern
Alberta's Klondike heritage, while dozens of other festivals across the
province celebrate Alberta's unique pockets of regional pride—think perogies
in Vegreville, or beef jerky in Longview. An acclaimed new Central Library in
Calgary's revitalized East Village opened last fall and is an architectural
marvel. Edmonton's renewed Royal Alberta Museum opened downtown in October to
similar recognition.
The biggest urban centres, Edmonton and
Calgary, are cosmopolitan cities, while smaller cities including Red Deer,
Grande Prairie, Fort McMurray, Medicine Hat, Lethbridge and Airdrie serve as
important regional hubs for shopping, government, tourism and
agriculture/industry. Alberta's dining scene is innovative and fiercely local,
emphasizing Rocky Mountain Cuisine such as game. fish and world-famous
grain-fed beef. From upscale hotel dining rooms in the big city to eclectic
alpine bistros in Banff, Jasper and Lake Louise, the restau-rants consistently
win international awards.
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Calgary Peace Bridge / Day
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NATURE'S WONDERLAND
Provincial recreational areas help keep Albertans and their visitors outdoors.
Spread across 661,848 sq. km (255,541 sq. mi.) of pristine terrain, the five
major snow resorts and sprawling backcountry lure powder-hounds from November
to May. Try dogsledding through the untouched Spray Lakes valley, or take a
guided ice walk in frozen Maligne Canyon near Jasper. The lakes of Kananaskis
Country are a delight for ice fishing in winter and boating, hiking and
cycling in the summer. The 4,645-sq. m (50,000-sq. ft.) Kananaskis Nordic Spa
opened late last year with outdoor hot, warm and cold pools and treatment
rooms. Elk Island National Park east of Edmonton offers a great opportunity to
p otograp wildlife, including its resident buffalo and, of course,
elk.
Alberta's glacier-fed waterways—particu-larly the Bow and Red
Deer rivers—lure anglers with the promise of top-notch trout fishing. In the
same day, visitors can play the back nine of a world-class golf course,
hop-scotch past cactus patches in search of ancient rock carvings in the
desert, and then retire to the hotel hot tub to watch the sunset.
VENTURING OUT
Float your boat down a river or head for calmer waters along Lake Minnewanka
or Moraine Lake in Banff National Park. Bonus: hear the crack of avalanches
overhead, well out of your path but still powerful. Chase champagne powder
from the top of first-rate resorts such as Sunshine Village, Lake Louise or
Marmot Basin, or explore them in summer to unveil abundant wildlife and
colourful carpets of wildflowers. Canada Olympic Park in northwest Calgary has
a national athlete training centre, a snow park and Olympic museum, while
Peter Lougheed Provincial Park boasts unparalleled opportunities for adventure
all year-round. Bar U Ranch National Historic Site, south of Calgary,
chronicles pioneer life from 1882 to 195o; this pristine setting in the shadow
of the southern Rockies is featured on many postcards. Travellers with time on
their hands head north to Wood Buffalo National Park. a UNESCO World Heritage
site with 44,807 sq. km (17,300 sq. mi.) of protected wilderness where the
endangered whooping crane and the world's largest herd of free-roaming wood
bison can be found.
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Lake Luise |
WHATS NEW?
The stunning Royal Alberta Museum reopened in Edmonton's downtown Arts
District after three years of renovation. The largest museum in Western Canada
now includes double the display space, over 5,30o exhibits and an expansive
gift shop with a major emphasis on Alberta artisans. Two massive bronze
mammoth sculptures dominate its bright lobby, while a sizeable Bug Gallery
features live invertebrates and the Children's Gallery engages the youngest
visitors in hands-on interactive activities. With numerous research
activities, the new RAM is home to curatorial programs on topics such as
military and political history, botany and mammalogy. It also supports a
variety of international touring exhibits
(www.royallalbertamuseum.ca).
The architecturally striking new
Calgary Central Library is a $2.45-million spectacle adjacent to the popular
National Music Centre, east of downtown's office towers. With its swooping
front archway clad with red cedar wood (which also dominates the interior
stairs and walkways), the 22,300 sq. m (240,000 sq. ft.) library's many
features include a public art exhibit, a performance hall, community meeting
spaces, Indigenous Place Making and early learning centres. It has been called
a "place for the people" because it welcomes everyone (www.
caIgarylibrary.ca/new-central-library).
For the first time in more
than a century, wild plains bison can be seen roaming in Banff National Park.
Hailed as an historic and cultural conservation triumph, the herd of it bison
was released last July from an enclosed pasture to travel freely through a
i.1oo sq. km (461 sq. mi.) 'reintroduction zone along the remote eastern
slopes of the Rocky Mountains in Canada's first national park. Parks Canada is
monitoring the herd over the next several years to determine if it is feasible
for the giant creatures to roam freely long-term.
CITY LIGHTS
Alberta's two major cities offer quite different insights into the province,
though they share a love of green space, sprawling river pathways and tidy,
bustling downtowns_ The provincial capital of Edmonton is a government city
with a grand legislature building. a thriving arts community and numerous
galleries, craft stores and art shops. Most can be found along trendy Whyte
Avenue or in the downtown arts diSt nu. the location of the modern An Gallery
of Alberta, the new Royal Alberta Museum, the Winspear Centre and the Citadel
Theatre. The meandering North Saskatchewan River cuts a steep swath through
the city north of downtown. and can be explored by canoe or raft (www.
edmonton.ca).
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Peace Bridge / Night City Lights
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The -Festival City- boasts more than 60 events a year. Its long winters are
cause for several events including the Ice on Whyte winter festival in
January/February. Summer offerings include the Fringe Theatre Festival. the
Folk Music Festival, K-Days and Heritage Festival. North America's largest
indoor shopping complex is like a self-contained mini-city. West Edmonton Mall
spans the equivaknt of 48 city blocks, has Soo. retail/food outlets and the
year-round World Waterpatk. Fort Edmonton Park along the North Saskatchewan
River showcases the fur trade and Gold Rush eras.
Calgary's office
towers, which contain the majority of Canada's oil and gas company
headquarters. were built to showcase the Rockies on the western horizon. An
inner-city energy hub called the Bow Tower is a modern architectural
skyscraper that covers two city blocks. Nearby Chinatown segues to the Bow
River pathway and the ongoing redevelopment of the Cast Village has myna fixed
this historic section of cast downtown.
The city has preserved much
of the sandstone buildings along Stephen Avenue Walk, where many great
restaurants and shops are found. along with the Glenbow Museum. Olympic Plaza
and the Calgary Tower. Numerous retail stores and eateries are also part of
The CORE complex (www. visitcalgarymm). Residents aredevout nature lovers,
flock-ing to the city's network of river pathways as well as the inner city
Prince's Island Park, Inglewood Bird Sanctuary, and Bowness Park and its
pretty lagoon. where families can skate In winter and canoe and paddleboat in
summer. just west of City Hall, Olympic Plaza is a busy festival and
performance venue that hosted the 1988 Winter Olympic ceremonies. The Calgary
Zoo is renowned for its conservation initiatives while. south of the city.
Spruce Meadows attracts equestri-ans to several international show-jumping
competitions each summer.
THE GREAT OUTDOORS
Head for the hills from summer to fall for a guided multi-day backcountry pack
trip on horseback. Sleep under the stars and listen to coyotes howl in a
riverside tent camp in Dinosaur Provincial Park, home to some of the planet's
largest fossil beds and fantastic interpretive programs. Or scramble up the
Via Ferrara (Italian Cot iron path), a tope and cable-assisted mountain
journey at Mt. Norquay neat Banff. Should winter be your season, abundant
ice-climbing. skiing, fishing, snowshoeing and ATV journeys can be found
across the province.
Explore the snow-caked Spray Lakes valley on dogsled. Drive the winter Ice
toad to Fort Chipewyan, Alberta's oldest First Nations community north of Fort
Maturtay, or photograph wildflowers among the alpine lakes at Sunshine Village
resort west of Banff or the Plain of Six Glaciers trail near Lake Louise.
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Churchill Square |
HERITAGE AND CULTURE
The province's history is just over a century old, but the First Nations
heritage dates to prehistoric times. Metis Crossing, northeast of Edmonton.
offers a taste of the musical culture created by the melding of First Nations
Peoples with European settlers in the re century Eon Edmonton tells of the
city's Gold Rush ma. when these Same voyageurs paved the way for the fur
trade.
Calgary's Heritage Park Ilisrorical Village overlooks the calm waters of the
Glenmore Reservoir—where dragon boat racing and other water sports are held.
History is also chronicled at Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump. one of five
UNESCO sites in Alberta, or Blackfoot Crossing—a modern interpre-tive centre
built into the Bow River bluffs east of Calgary.
Explore transportation history at the Remington Carnage Museum at Cardston,
or hop aboard an open-air biplane at Reynolds.Albetta Museum for a
bird's-eye view of the prairies around Cam rose and Wetaskiwin. Paleontology
enthusiasts will want to head north to the City of Wembley—act km (19 mi.)
west of Grande Prairie—to tour the Philip). Currie Dinosaur Museum, which
chronicles the work done to present the world's largest hornbill dinosaur
bonebed.
Quick Fact
THE WILD ROSE BLOOMS ABUNDANTLY ACROSS ALBERTA; IT BECAME THE OFFICIAL
FLOWER IN 1930
MUST SEE, MUST DO
Rogers Place is Edmonton's shiny new con-ference centre and indoor sports
& enter-tainment hub. but many visitors come here to see the colourful
door murals and other works of art by legendary First Nations artist Alex
janvier (www.rogersplace.corn).
Nestled into the lush coulees 01 the Rosebud River Valley. the abandoned
railway town of Rosebud was overtaken by a group of faith-based artists
three decades ago. They cleated a thriving professional theatre school and
arts centre that offers high-calibre. family.fnendly theatre and music. Many
tourists stroll along the hamlet's two streets, which are spattered with
funky art shops and galleries (www. nosetnidtheatre.com)
Hitoric Fort Macleod, in southern Alberta, is the birthplace of the
Nonh.West Mounted Police—now the RCMP The first musical tide in Canada was
held in the town in 1876. Modelled alter British Army cavalry dulls, the
musical ride is held four tilTle, dads' In July and August
(www,nwmpmuseum.com)
SCENIC DRIVES
Icetields Parkway. Ranked one of the most scenic drives in Canada, Highway
91 Dom Jasper to Lake Louise is a a 47.km (147-Ini.) stretch that zips
past dozens of waterfalls. glaciers. emerald lakes and rocky gorges. A
gateway to the Alaska Ilighway, the town of jasper is a ponal to nearby
destinations such as Athabasca and Sunwa pia falls, Miette lint Springs and
Malign Lake (www.lcefieldsparkway.com).
Deh Cho Trail The best of northern Alberta is found along this 758-km
(47i-mi.) journey northwest of Edmonton to High Level. It offers vast tracts
of stunning wilderness with countless lakes and rivers: the boreal forests.
parkland and wetlands are teeming with wildlife including rare birds.
Explore old fur trade posts at historic sites such as Fort Vermilion. or
cross Alberta's longest vehicle suspension bridge over the Peace River at
Dunvegan.
Cowboy Trail: Western heritage takes the spotlight along this scenic Highway
la drive through the foothills of the Rockies between Pincher Creek and
Mayetthorpe.
Highlights of the 700.km (4 ts-mi.) route include Bar U Ranch National
Historic Sire and historic Cochrane Ranchel House (www. ilsecowboyttalleom).
FAMILY FUN
Don't miss the World Watetpatk at West Edmonton Mall, the Calgary Zoo's
Penguin Plunge or The Brainasium outdoor centre/ slide at the TELUS Spark
Centre. Kids enjoy the Tropical Pyramid at the MOTU n Conservatory. The
Great Canadian Barn Dance at Hillspring features campfires. music and food
(www.gcbd.ca). while the Innisfail Discovery Wildlife Park is a 36 ha (90
acre) zoo housing more than 40 species of orphaned animals including bears,
wolves and lions (vvw.discoverywildlifeparLeom). The Royal Tyrrell Museum
offers a Jurassic joyride: also the chance to climb into the belly of the
World's Largest Dinosaur in Drumheller in the Canadian Badlands. ■