Canada: Skylines

September 19th 2018

This is Canada: a canvas for small things.

Yellow butterfly

American red squirrel Spruce Lakes MB 19 Sept 2018

Autumn food

This is Canada, where the sky can swallow your thoughts. There are no trees here, or very few, just the raw horizon furred with autumnal grass, and the sky above it reinvents itself almost every minute of the day.

Prairie sundown 19 Sept 18

Six years was too many. I don’t even know how many times I’ve been to Canada – 15? 20? – but for a variety of reasons this wild and perplexing country dropped off my radar after 2012. Coming back, remembering the sky, grateful for the air that is still flavoured with the crisp northern bite.

We landed last night at the heart of Canada, in the historic if climatically-challenged city of Winnipeg. There are no easy roads to the village of Val Marie; this time we’ve chosen to drive from the east, some 850 kilometres.

Prairie, prairie, prairie: mostly arable farmland these days, although just occasionally you catch glimpses of its glorious wildlife-filled past. Say ‘Canadian wilderness’, and most people visualise the western mountains or boreal forests – but the prairie held far higher numbers of wild things, once. Grasslands National Park in Saskatchewan protects the best habitat left, but on the way there, there are many surprises.

The Souris River, for one. At 700 km, it is small by Canadian standards, but is still longer than England. Like most of the prairie landscape, it is a nod to past glaciation – its basin was once filled by the now-extinct Lake Souris.

Souris River1

Canadian royalty, for another.

Bald eagle 19 Sept 2018

After a full day of driving, we still have many hours to go. Pulling into Assiniboia, we are greeted by a great horned owl perched on the grain elevator.

Great horned owl grain train 19 Sept 2018

Looking for rodents attracted to wheat being transferred to the grain train, no doubt. Some wildlife takes full advantage of its human neighbours.

But many other species need wilderness proper. Tomorrow, we’re back on the road and turning south east.

4 thoughts on “Canada: Skylines

  1. Adele, my goodness, I missed this post! Sorry! But, welcome back to this fair land! I found this post when I found your last! I have driven your route a few times! Wouldn’t want to even try guess how many. Raised in Manitoba and then B.C. for many years, we’ve worn in trail, back and forth! I look forward to your posts while you’re here!

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    1. Hi Robin! 🙂 Hope you’re well. I was in Canada in September but I’ve only just got round to blogging it because my laptop stopped talking to my photo editing software…all problems fixed now. Had a lovely trip to Grasslands and Riding Mountain. Manitoba’s great!

      I can imagine that you’ve got very familiar with Highway 1! I had a bit of a laugh when the satnav kindly told us that we had 700km before the next turn off. And then we missed it, but never mind.

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  2. Still haven’t been in prairies but it is just a matter of time. But growing up in flatlands of northern Serbia, I still prefer mountains 🙂

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    1. I think they both have their charm 🙂 In any case, while the farmed prairie around Highway 1 is pretty flat, Grasslands NP itself is much more varied in scenery. It has plenty of buttes, coulees and badlands. I hope you do get there someday! It’s a great place to see eagles.

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