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The Top 10 National Parks in Canada
A WorldWeb.com feature travel article.
Home > Canada > Features & Reviews > Local Attractions > Editorial
 
The Top 10 National Parks in Canada
from WorldWeb.com Travel Guide

Auyuittuq National Park
The Frozen Landscape at Auyuittuq 1
O Canada!
Our home and native land!
True patriot love in all thy sons command.

With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The True North strong and free!

—yes, the national anthem sure says a lot about Canada's character, yet this poetic tribute could still use one more adjective, like big or maybe huge.

Really, the place is massive. It measures up as the second largest country in the world with borders extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean. Nearly 10,000,000 sq km (3,861,022 sq mi) in all, the country encompasses ten provinces and three territories that cross sweeping prairies, ancient glaciers and more freshwater lakes than any other country on the planet.

However, the nation's population is a whole other story. In terms of density, there are only 3.5 inhabitants per square kilometer (9.1/sq mi) in Canada, a strikingly small number as far as the modern world is concerned. And it's not that nobody wants to live here either (quite the opposite). The country's scanty person-to-property ratio is due in most part to its geography, a great chunk of it being located beyond the Northern Shield, a land inhospitable and nearly inhabitable. For obvious reasons then, the majority of the populace tend to make their homes as far south as possible, crowding in along the U.S. border for warmth. Yet even with this southern nesting trend, the distance between cities in Canada can still span hundreds, if not thousands of kilometers.

So what do those crazy Canucks do with all that extra space? They make parks and lots of them. They make them big, like the 44,000 sq km (16,988 sq mi) Wood Buffalo National Park, and they make them in the most unlikely of places, like Auyuittuq National Park out on the barren hills of Baffin Island.

Some of these parks hardly see the light of day for months on end, others feature sun-soaked beaches and warm, peaceful lakes. Yet as much as they may differ, each and every one provides a most valuable service. Canada's great national parks exist primarily to protect and preserve a vast array of ecological zones that support thousands of species. They also allow the public to explore, learn about and enjoy the country's expansive wilderness.

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Reflections at Kootenay National Park 2
Combined, this vast system of protected areas represents all the distinct natural regions of the country. In other words: to visit each one could take an entire lifetime. Therefore it's important to collect, categorize and cull some of the very best from each of the distinct regions and create a list of the top 10 national parks in Canada.

PACIFIC RIM NATIONAL PARK RESERVE

Far out west, beyond the fine city of Vancouver and across the Georgia Strait, the Pacific Rim National Park stretches over 150 km (93 mi) of Vancouver Island's western shoreline, encompassing 511 sq km (197 sq mi) of land and water. Backed by mountains and facing the open Pacific Ocean, this park reserve is characterized by a rugged coast, thriving temperate rainforests and three geographically separate areas; the Long Beach unit is named for the longest of Vancouver Island's beaches and one of Canada's premier surf spots; the Broken Group Islands region features over 100 islets that dot the Barkley Sound; and the West Coast Trail area gets its name from the 75-km (47-mi) hiking trail that winds through the park's old-growth rain forest. The region's cool, wet climate produces an abundance of life but it also douses the place with over 3,000 mm (118 in) of precipitation per year. This makes the park especially popular from June to early September, when the rain lets up.

KOOTENAY NATIONAL PARK

Set along the western side of the Continental Divide in B.C.'s southern interior, Kootenay National Park represents the south-western region of the Canadian Rocky Mountains—a diverse landscape that includes everything from glacier-clad mountains and crashing waterfalls to semi-arid grasslands, limestone caves and canyons. The park rises 2,506 m (8,221 ft) from the south-west park entrance to the rocky peaks of Deltaform Mountain. It was established in 1920, and declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984 when it joined with six other national and provincial parks to form the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site—one of the largest protected areas in the world.

Wood Buffalo National Park
Grazing in Wood Buffalo National Park 3
BANFF NATIONAL PARK

It all began here, at the heart of Alberta's Rocky Mountains, when Banff was designated the country's first National Park in 1885. It was the third of its kind in the world, planting the seed for continued conservation of natural places everywhere. Spanning 6,641 sq km (2,564 sq mi), the park reaches from jagged snow-capped mountains down to turquoise lakes, over fields made of ice and through dense coniferous forests. It's a remarkable alpine landscape, home to Banff Hot Springs and six world class ski resorts, the combination of which attracts more than 4 million visitors every year.

WOOD BUFFALO NATIONAL PARK

Originally established in 1922 to protect the habitat of a declining wood bison population, this massive park is now home to the largest free-roaming and self-regulated bison herd in the world, as well as the world's only natural nesting site of the whooping crane. It is Canada's largest park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a great example of successful wildlife preservation. The borders of the park reach from the extreme north of Alberta into the Northwest Territories, encompassing 44, 807 sq km (17,300 sq mi) of northern boreal interior plains. This great landscape has four distinct sections. At the south and western ends, the Caribou and Birch Uplands rise over the land, covered in spruce and lichen tundra. The largest section is known as the Alberta Plateau and features a vast, wild plain pocked by countless bogs, soft muskegs and huge sinkholes. The Peace-Athabasca Delta is located in the park's southeast corner, where the Peace, Athabasca and Slave Rivers all flow toward Great Slave Lake. It is one of the largest fresh-water deltas in the world, creating a wetland of over 4,800 sq km (1,853 sq mi) and a home for a myriad of waterfowl and fish.

Grasslands National Park
The Sweeping Landscape at Grasslands 4
GRASSLANDS NATIONAL PARK

Saskatchewan is not a land of towering mountain peaks, extreme ocean storms or roaring whitewater rivers. It is a place of peaceful rolling hills, grassy fields and farmland. In the far southwestern corner of the province, the Grasslands National Park has become the first national park of Canada to preserve a portion of these mixed prairie grasslands. This relatively untouched portion of land contains a rich and complex ecosystem and sustains a variety of endangered species, including some of the country's only remaining black-tailed prairie dog colonies.

BRUCE PENINSULA NATIONAL PARK

Located in the heart of a World Biosphere Reserve, the Bruce dramatically juts out into the waters of Lake Huron, nearly cutting off the Georgian Bay completely. On its west side, the 363 sq km (104 sq mi) national park slips gently into bogs and beaches. On its east side, massive, rugged cliffs plunge into the crystal clear waters of the bay below. At its northern tip, the cliffs run underwater, surfacing as the Fathom Five Islands, a separate national marine park. Amongst the park's dramatically sculpted cliffs, shallow caves and views of the bay, stunted white cedar trees have clung to life for over 1,000 years and yet stand less than five feet tall.

Bruce Peninsula National Park
The Cliffs at Bruce Peninsula 5
LA MAURICIE NATIONAL PARK

Quebec City and Montreal aren't too far from one another. Only 270 km (168 mi) separate the two cities. Yet, within that small void, one of the country's 41 national parks occupies nearly 550 sq km (212 sq mi) of land. Established in 1970, La Mauricie National Park preserves a vast rolling plateau in the Laurentians, the mountains that flank the northern shore of the St. Lawrence River. It is a densely forested landscape, intersected by a number of lakes, rolling hills and narrow valleys. It's also a transition zone for many species heading north or south, and the point where large broad-leafed trees give way to needle-leaf evergreens—setting a scene akin to the boreal forest.

PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND NATIONAL PARK

At the end of Canada's eastern reaches, over the Great Lakes and beyond the rolling green hills of Quebec, Prince Edward Island stands guard at the mouth of the St. Lawrence. Here, cradled by the island's curving east coast, an inspiring array of sandy beaches, rust-red cliffs, and giant, shifting sand dunes are all contained within Prince Edward Island National Park. Hardly spanning more than 40 km (25 mi) down the shoreline, this may be one of Canada's smallest parks, but it surely is one of its busiest. People come from far and wide to be witness to the dunes piled 18 m (60 ft) high, slowly crawling across the landscape. They come to learn of native archaeological findings that date as far back as 1400 A.D. And perhaps most of all, they come to visit the landmark Green Gables House, the inspiration for the classic novel, Anne of Green Gables.

IVVAVIK NATIONAL PARK

Canada's northern territories are perhaps the least understood and yet most awe inspiring of all. The further north one travels, the more alien the landscape becomes, as a journey to Ivvavik National Park demonstrates. Within the northernmost corner of the Yukon, where Arctic and sub-Arctic meet, this vast, 16,000 sq km (6,178 sq mi) park lies in a landscape untouched by the Pleistocene glacier. In Inuvialuktun, the language of the Inuvialuit, Ivvavik means 'a place for giving birth' or 'a nursery'. It's a fitting name for this park as it was designed to protect a great portion of the calving grounds for the Porcupine caribou herd.

AUYUITTUQ NATIONAL PARK

Prince Edward Island National Park
Dramatic Red Rocks of PEI National Park 6
Well beyond Canada's boreal forest—the green scarf on the shoulders of North America—over the rim of Hudson's Bay and deep in the Canadian Shield, lies Auyuittuq. This is Canada's only national park north of the Arctic Circle. It's a frozen land of jagged mountain peaks, deep valleys and spectacular fjords where the sun shines through the night and darkness falls for days on end. Established in 1976, the park protects 19,089 sq km (7,370 sq mi) of terrain, mostly untouched by humans but alive with wildflowers, seals, polar bears and narwhals. This remote domain presents one of the most fantastic journeys in the world, for those willing to journey to the end of it.


PHOTOS COURTESY OF:
  1. The Frozen Landscape at Auyuittuq; Baffin Island, NU, Canada
  2. Reflections at Kootenay National Park; Radium, B.C., Canada
  3. Grazing in Wood Buffalo National Park; Wood Buffalo, AB, Canada
  4. The Sweeping Landscape and Grasslands; Swift Current, SK, Canada
  5. The Cliffs at Bruce Peninsula; Bruce Peninsula, ON, Canada
  6. Dramatic Red Rocks at PEI National Park; Prince Edward Island, Canada