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7 November 2025

  • 15:5015:50, 7 November 2025 Bank of Canada Museum (hist | edit) [4,958 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''The Bank of Canada Museum''' (formerly the Currency Museum) is a public museum operated by the Bank of Canada in downtown Ottawa. It interprets money, inflation, central banking, and Canada’s monetary history through interactive exhibits, hands-on activities, and one of the country’s largest numismatic collections. Content is presented in English and French. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px,42vw,340px); ma...")
  • 15:4215:42, 7 November 2025 Statistics Canada (hist | edit) [8,775 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Statistics Canada''' (''StatCan'') is the national statistical office of Canada. It collects, compiles, analyzes, and publishes official data on the economy, society, and environment to inform the public, governments, businesses, researchers, and media. StatCan produces flagship programs such as the Census of Population, Consumer Price Index (CPI), Labour Force Survey (LFS), Gross dom...")
  • 15:3615:36, 7 November 2025 Inflation in Canada (hist | edit) [8,790 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Inflation in Canada''' refers to the rate at which the average price level of goods and services purchased by households rises over time. Canada’s official consumer inflation is measured by Statistics Canada’s '''Consumer Price Index (CPI)'''. The Bank of Canada targets low, stable inflation to support sustainable economic growth and a well-functioning financial system. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px...")
  • 15:1515:15, 7 November 2025 Coins of the Canadian dollar (hist | edit) [7,362 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Coins of the Canadian dollar''' are produced by the Royal Canadian Mint for everyday payments, savings, and collecting. Standard circulation denominations are 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, $1 (the '''loonie''') and $2 (the '''toonie'''); a 50-cent piece is struck mainly for collectors and appears rarely in circulation. The 1-cent coin was withdrawn from circulation in 2012. Coins complement Bank of Canada notes in Canada’s cash system. __TOC__ <div styl...")
  • 15:0815:08, 7 November 2025 Royal Canadian Mint (hist | edit) [9,453 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''The Royal Canadian Mint''' (RCM) is the Crown corporation that designs, manufactures, and markets Canada’s coins and a wide range of related products and services. It produces Canadian circulation coins, bullion (e.g., Maple Leaf coins and bars), and numismatic/collector coins; operates a precious-metals refinery and assay services; develops anti-counterfeiting technology; and fulfills foreign coinage contracts for other countries. The Mint is wholly owned by the Go...")
  • 15:0115:01, 7 November 2025 Canadian dollar (hist | edit) [6,233 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''The Canadian dollar''' (symbol '''$''', sometimes '''C$''' or '''CA$'''; ISO 4217 code '''CAD''') is the official currency of Canada. One dollar is divided into '''100 cents''' (¢). Canadian bank notes are issued by the Bank of Canada and coins are produced by the Royal Canadian Mint. Canada uses a floating exchange rate and targets low, stable inflation. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px,42vw,340px);...")
  • 14:5114:51, 7 November 2025 Bank of Canada (hist | edit) [8,251 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''The Bank of Canada''' is Canada’s central bank. It conducts monetary policy to keep inflation low and stable, promotes a safe and efficient financial system, issues Canadian bank notes, and provides funds-management services to the Government of Canada and other clients. The Bank is a Crown corporation, publicly owned and operationally independent within its mandate. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px,42vw,340px);...")
  • 14:4914:49, 7 November 2025 Current events/2025-11-07 (hist | edit) [702 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "; Federal Bank of Canada — Day 2 of the Bank’s annual economic conference (Ottawa) focuses on cross-border and retail payments; closing remarks today. ; Provinces & territories Quebec — Institut de la statistique du Québec reports October job gains (+11,500; +0.2% m/m). ; Economy Economy of Canada — StatCan (08:30 ET): Labour Force Survey (Oct 2025) — employment +67,000; unemployment rate down to 6.9%. Also out today: Retail Commodity Survey (...")

6 November 2025

  • 11:0611:06, 6 November 2025 Current events/2025-11-06 (hist | edit) [759 bytes] TMyApp (talk | contribs) (Created page with "; Federal Bank of Canada — Governor speaks at the Bank’s annual conference; remarks flag global trade disruptions as a risk to price stability. ; Provinces & territories Ontario — Province tables the 2025 Ontario Economic Outlook and Fiscal Review today; minister to brief media afterward. ; Economy Economy of Canada — StatCan (08:30 ET): Provincial & territorial economic accounts (2024); Canadian Economic News (Oct); Supply-and-use tables (2022); Co...")

5 November 2025

  • 16:2816:28, 5 November 2025 National urban parks of Canada (hist | edit) [6,531 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''National urban parks of Canada''' connect large city populations to protected nature, culture, and agriculture within metropolitan regions. Led by Parks Canada, the network complements national parks by safeguarding ecological corridors, farmlands, trails, and cultural landscapes close to where Canadians live, work, and study. The first and flagship site is Rouge National Urban Park in the Greater Toronto Area. __TOC__ <div style...")
  • 16:2216:22, 5 November 2025 Parks Canada (hist | edit) [8,747 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Parks Canada''' (formally the '''Parks Canada Agency''') is the federal organization responsible for protecting and presenting many of Canada’s nationally significant natural and cultural places. It establishes and manages national parks and national park reserves, national marine conservation areas (and reserves), national historic sites, and the emer...")
  • 16:1716:17, 5 November 2025 Emergency management in Canada (hist | edit) [8,071 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Emergency management in Canada''' is the coordinated set of policies, programs, and practices used to reduce disaster risks and to prepare for, respond to, and recover from emergencies. Canada follows an all-hazards approach that integrates governments, Indigenous partners, NGOs, the private sector, and the public. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px,42vw,340px); max-width:100%; border:1px solid #e5e7eb; border-radiu...")
  • 16:1116:11, 5 November 2025 National marine conservation areas of Canada (hist | edit) [5,678 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''National marine conservation areas of Canada''' (NMCAs) protect representative examples of Canada’s marine heritage—Great Lakes and ocean waters, the water column, lake/sea floor, and associated ecosystems—while allowing ecologically sustainable use. NMCAs are administered by Parks Canada in collaboration with Indigenous governments and coastal communities. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px,42vw,340px); m...")
  • 16:0516:05, 5 November 2025 Public safety in Canada (hist | edit) [11,153 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Public safety in Canada''' covers how governments, first responders, communities, and individuals prevent, prepare for, respond to, and recover from emergencies. It spans policing, fire and paramedic services, emergency management, disaster risk reduction, cyber security, critical-infrastructure protection, border and transportation safety, and public-health emergencies. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px,42vw,340px...")
  • 15:5815:58, 5 November 2025 Current events/2025-11-05 (hist | edit) [776 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "; Federal Budget of Canada — Day-after reactions to Budget 2025 focus on a larger-than-expected deficit and big defence/infrastructure outlays; House debate begins. Government of Canada — Nova Scotia MP Chris d’Entremont crosses the floor to the Liberals, shifting budget-vote math in Ottawa. ; Provinces & territories Quebec — Province opens applications today for festival and tourism-event funding for the 2026. ; Economy Economy of Canada — S...")

4 November 2025

3 November 2025

2 November 2025

  • 18:5118:51, 2 November 2025 Thaidene Nëné National Park Reserve (hist | edit) [6,875 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Thaidene Nëné National Park Reserve''' (“Land of the Ancestors” in Dënesųłiné Yatié) protects the dramatic East Arm of Great Slave Lake and surrounding boreal–tundra transition in the eastern Northwest Territories. Established in '''2019''' and co-managed with Indigenous partners led by the '''Łutsël K’é Dene First Nation''', the park reserve is the federal core of the larger '''Thaidene Nëné Indigenous Protected Area'''. __TOC__ <div style="...")
  • 18:4418:44, 2 November 2025 Ukkusiksalik National Park (hist | edit) [6,115 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Ukkusiksalik National Park''' (“the place where there is soapstone” in Inuktitut) protects the long, tide-swept inlet of '''Wager Bay''' and a vast sweep of polar tundra, coastal lowlands, and Precambrian bedrock on the west side of Hudson Bay in central Nunavut. It is a remote, roadless park known for powerful reversing tides, rich marine–terrestrial wildlife, and extensive Inuit cultural sites. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0...")
  • 18:1018:10, 2 November 2025 Nááts’įhch’oh National Park Reserve (hist | edit) [6,230 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Nááts’įhch’oh National Park Reserve''' protects the headwaters and upper canyons of the South Nahanni River and neighbouring basins in the Mackenzie Mountains of the Sahtu Region, Northwest Territories. Rugged limestone and granite peaks, alpine plateaus, clear rivers, and wide wildlife corridors characterize this upstream companion to Nahanni National Park Reserve. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(30...")
  • 16:5316:53, 2 November 2025 Nahanni National Park Reserve (hist | edit) [7,227 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Nahanni National Park Reserve''' protects the wild canyon system of the '''South Nahanni River''', thunderous '''Virginia Falls (Náilicho)''', hot springs and karst, alpine plateaus, and the Mackenzie Mountains in the Dehcho Region of the Northwest Territories. Inscribed on the UNESCO '''World Heritage List''' in '''1978''' (among the world’s first sites) and expanded in 2009, the park reserve safeguards outstanding river canyons, tufa mounds, and serrated gran...")
  • 16:4816:48, 2 November 2025 Quttinirpaaq National Park (hist | edit) [6,652 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Quttinirpaaq National Park''' (“top of the world” in Inuktitut) protects polar-desert plateaus, sprawling ice caps, fiords, and some of the most remote mountains and valleys on northern Ellesmere Island, Nunavut. Centered around Tanquary Fiord and Lake Hazen, the park includes Canada’s highest Arctic mountains and the northern fringe of the massive Ellesmere icefields. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:cl...")
  • 14:3014:30, 2 November 2025 Qausuittuq National Park (hist | edit) [6,166 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Qausuittuq National Park''' (“place where the sun doesn’t rise” in Inuktitut) protects polar desert landscapes, low limestone plateaus, wetlands, and ice-scoured shorelines on northern Bathurst Island and nearby islands in the high Arctic of Nunavut. Established in '''2015''', the park conserves critical habitat for the threatened '''Peary caribou''' and other Arctic wildlife in one of the most remote regions of Canada. __TOC__ <div style="float:right;...")
  • 14:1314:13, 2 November 2025 Sirmilik National Park (hist | edit) [6,140 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Sirmilik National Park''' (“place of glaciers” in Inuktitut) protects glaciers, rugged granite and limestone mountains, deep fiords, coastal tundra, and immense seabird cliffs across northern Baffin Island and Bylot Island in Nunavut. The park is arranged in several units—most prominently '''Bylot Island''', the '''Borden Peninsula''' on north Baffin, and '''Oliver Sound'''—with access primarily from the communities of Pond Inlet, Nunavut|Pond In...")
  • 14:0514:05, 2 November 2025 Tuktut Nogait National Park (hist | edit) [6,298 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Tuktut Nogait National Park''' protects canyon-cut tundra, rolling limestone hills, and Arctic coastal plain in the northeast of the Northwest Territories, above the Arctic Circle. Created to safeguard the calving and summer range of the '''Porcupine/Blue­nose caribou herds'''—especially the '''Bluenose-West'''—the park also preserves the wild canyons of the '''Hornaday''' and '''Brock''' rivers and important wetlands for migratory birds. “Tuktut Nogait”...")
  • 13:5313:53, 2 November 2025 Aulavik National Park (hist | edit) [6,312 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Aulavik National Park''' protects broad Arctic lowlands, rolling limestone hills, river canyons, and wild coastlines on northern Banks Island in the Northwest Territories. Centered on the clear, meandering '''Thomsen River'''—one of the northernmost navigable rivers in North America—the park is renowned for exceptional densities of '''muskox''', wide tundra vistas, migratory birds, and deep cultural ties within the Inuvialuit Settlement Region. __TOC__ <...")
  • 13:0213:02, 2 November 2025 Auyuittuq National Park (hist | edit) [6,110 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Auyuittuq National Park''' (“the land that never melts” in Inuktitut) protects granite peaks, long fiords, ice caps, and glacier-carved valleys on the Cumberland Peninsula of Baffin Island, Nunavut. Famous for the Akshayuk Pass trekking corridor and big-wall peaks like Mount Thor and Mount Asgard, Auyuittuq is a remote, roadless park co-managed with Inuit partners through Parks Canada. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0...")
  • 12:5012:50, 2 November 2025 Vuntut National Park (hist | edit) [5,849 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Vuntut National Park''' protects Arctic tundra, rolling limestone hills, wetlands, and river headwaters in northern Yukon, directly north of the community of Old Crow. Established in '''1995''' through the '''Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation Final Agreement''', the park safeguards key habitat and migration routes of the '''Porcupine caribou herd''' and forms part of a larger protected mosaic with Ivvavik National Park and the Old Crow Flats...")
  • 12:4212:42, 2 November 2025 Ivvavik National Park (hist | edit) [5,942 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Ivvavik National Park''' protects the British Mountains, the wild canyon of the Firth River, and Arctic coastal plain along the Beaufort Sea in northwestern Yukon. Created in '''1984''' as the first Canadian national park established through a modern land claim (the '''Inuvialuit Final Agreement'''), Ivvavik safeguards key calving and migration habitat of the '''Porcupine caribou herd''' and a rich mosaic of tundra valleys, limestone ridges, and braided ri...")
  • 12:3212:32, 2 November 2025 Kluane National Park and Reserve (hist | edit) [7,536 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Kluane National Park and Reserve''' protects vast icefields, towering St. Elias peaks, broad river valleys, and boreal uplands in southwestern Yukon. Home to '''Mount Logan''' (≈5,959 m), Canada’s highest mountain, Kluane anchors the transboundary UNESCO World Heritage Site shared with Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve (U.S.), Glacier Bay National Park (U.S.), and Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park (BC). __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:r...")
  • 12:2312:23, 2 November 2025 Mount Revelstoke National Park (hist | edit) [5,721 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Mount Revelstoke National Park''' protects old-growth inland rainforest, subalpine meadows, lakes, and rugged Selkirk Mountain peaks just north of the city of Revelstoke, BC. A signature paved road—the '''Meadows-in-the-Sky Parkway'''—climbs from valley rainforest to flower-filled meadows near the summit, with classic day hikes to Eva and Miller lakes and short boardwalks through giant cedars and skunk cabbage wetlands. __TOC__ <...")
  • 12:1112:11, 2 November 2025 Gulf Islands National Park Reserve (hist | edit) [7,162 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Gulf Islands National Park Reserve (GINPR)''' protects scattered parcels of Garry oak meadows, arbutus–Douglas-fir forest, intertidal shores, and nearshore waters across the southern Gulf Islands of the Salish Sea between Vancouver Island and mainland British Columbia. Created as a '''national park reserve''' (2003) to recognize ongoing Indigenous rights and agreements, the park includes popular sites such as '''Sidney Spit''' (Sidney Island), '''East Point'...")
  • 12:0212:02, 2 November 2025 Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site (hist | edit) [7,379 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve, National Marine Conservation Area Reserve, and Haida Heritage Site''' protect remote islands, temperate rainforest, rich nearshore waters, and extraordinary cultural places in southern Haida Gwaii (formerly the Queen Charlotte Islands), British Columbia. There are no roads, towns, or frontcountry campgrounds—travel is by boat or floatplane, often with guides, under a co-management system between the '''Council of the Haida Nat...")
  • 11:5111:51, 2 November 2025 Current events/2025-11-02 (hist | edit) [963 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with ";Federal * Government of Canada — Canada and the Philippines sign a Status of Visiting Forces Agreement allowing troops to train on each other’s soil in the Indo-Pacific. ;Provinces & territories * Quebec — Montréal’s STM resumes service on a reduced schedule Nov 2–28 after the Nov 1 shutdown; further job action is possible. * Ontario — Province doubles the Hydrogen Innovation Fund to $30M; IESO set to open applications Nov 4. ;Economy * Bank...")

1 November 2025

  • 23:1923:19, 1 November 2025 Pacific Rim National Park Reserve (hist | edit) [7,448 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Pacific Rim National Park Reserve''' protects wild Pacific beaches, surf-battered headlands, temperate rainforest, and island-dotted Barkley Sound on the outer coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The park reserve has three units: the drive-accessible '''Long Beach''' between Tofino and Ucluelet, the kayak-only '''Broken Group Islands''' in Barkley Sound, and the 75-km '''West Coast Trail''' between Pachena Bay and Gordon River. __TOC__ <div styl...")
  • 23:0923:09, 1 November 2025 Kootenay National Park (hist | edit) [6,440 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Kootenay National Park''' protects steep limestone and quartzite ranges, glacier-fed rivers, deep canyons, hot springs, and dry interior forests along the continental divide’s west slope in southeastern British Columbia. Linked historically to the construction of the Banff–Windermere Highway, the park forms part of the UNESCO-listed '''Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks''' with Banff, Jasper, and Yoho. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16p...")
  • 23:0223:02, 1 November 2025 Yoho National Park (hist | edit) [6,000 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Yoho National Park''' sits on the western slopes of the Canadian Rockies in southeastern British Columbia. Part of the UNESCO-listed '''Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks''', Yoho is renowned for towering waterfalls, emerald lakes, rugged peaks and passes, and globally significant '''Burgess Shale''' fossil sites overlooking the Kicking Horse River valley. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px, 42vw, 340px); max-width:1...")
  • 22:5722:57, 1 November 2025 Wood Buffalo National Park (hist | edit) [7,269 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Wood Buffalo National Park''' is Canada’s largest national park and one of the largest protected areas in the world. Spanning northeastern Alberta and the southern Northwest Territories, it safeguards the '''Peace–Athabasca Delta''', vast boreal forests and wetlands, active karst terrain, and the planet’s largest free-roaming herd of '''wood bison'''. The park is a UNESCO '''World Heritage Site''' (inscribed 1983) for its outstanding boreal ecosystems and the on...")
  • 22:5222:52, 1 November 2025 Glacier National Park (Canada) (hist | edit) [7,124 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Glacier National Park''' (Canada) protects steep Selkirk Mountain peaks, active glaciers, deep avalanche valleys, old-growth inland rainforest, and the historic transportation corridor over Rogers Pass between Revelstoke and Golden, British Columbia. The park, established in '''1886''', is paired historically with the Rogers Pass National Historic Site, reflecting the role of the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Trans-Canada Hi...")
  • 20:3820:38, 1 November 2025 What Is A Ground Lease And What Do They Mean For Investors And Landlords (hist | edit) [12,183 bytes] GregorioDavidson (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<br>Ground leases are various things to different people and bring a varying set of advantages and disadvantages. Below, we check out the kinds of ground leases, what they are, and how they work. Depending on your view searching in- whether you are a landlord, residential or [https://bonhommeproperties.com commercial property] owner, or prospective financier, a ground lease takes on a whole new meaning.<br><br><br>In a nutshell, a ground lease (also in some cases called...")
  • 12:5912:59, 1 November 2025 Waterton Lakes National Park (hist | edit) [6,376 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Waterton Lakes National Park''' protects soaring peaks, deep glacial lakes, wind-swept prairie, and aspen parkland where the Rocky Mountains meet the Great Plains in southwestern Alberta. Adjacent to Montana’s Glacier National Park, it forms the UNESCO-listed '''Waterton–Glacier International Peace Park''' (est. 1932), noted for exceptional scenery and biodiversity. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16...")
  • 12:4912:49, 1 November 2025 Elk Island National Park (hist | edit) [5,804 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Elk Island National Park''' protects aspen parkland, boreal forest, lakes, and wetlands on the Beaver Hills east of Edmonton, Alberta. A year-round wildlife sanctuary, it is renowned for free-roaming herds of '''plains bison''' and '''wood bison''' (managed in separate areas), along with elk, moose, beaver, and abundant birdlife. The park contributes bison to conservation projects across North America and beyond. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right;...")
  • 12:4412:44, 1 November 2025 Jasper National Park (hist | edit) [6,223 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Jasper National Park''' is the largest national park in the Canadian Rockies and part of the UNESCO-listed '''Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks'''. Centered on the town of '''Jasper''', it protects rugged peaks, the Columbia Icefield, turquoise lakes, deep canyons, hot springs, and extensive wildlife corridors across the headwaters of the Athabasca and Sunwapta rivers. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:clamp(300px, 42vw, 340px); m...")
  • 12:3112:31, 1 November 2025 Banff National Park (hist | edit) [7,194 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Banff National Park''' is Canada’s first national park ('''est. 1885''') and a core part of the UNESCO-listed '''Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks'''. Centered on the town of Banff and the hamlet of Lake Louise, the park protects rugged peaks, glaciers, turquoise lakes, subalpine meadows, and extensive wildlife corridors across the headwaters of the Bow and North Saskatchewan rivers. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:ri...")
  • 12:2812:28, 1 November 2025 Prince Albert National Park (hist | edit) [6,569 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Prince Albert National Park''' protects lakes, rivers, wetlands, and mixed boreal forest on the Waskesiu–Kingsmere uplands of central Saskatchewan. Centred on the lakeside townsite of '''Waskesiu Lake''', the park is known for classic canoe routes, sandy beaches, wildlife viewing, and the historic trek to '''Grey Owl’s Cabin''' on Ajawaan Lake. __TOC__ <div style="float:right; clear:right; margin:0 0 12px 16px; width:320px; border:1px solid #e5e7eb; border-r...")
  • 12:1812:18, 1 November 2025 Grasslands National Park (hist | edit) [6,939 bytes] SirNash87 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Grasslands National Park''' protects one of the largest, best-preserved tracts of native mixed-grass prairie in Canada, along the Frenchman River Valley and the badlands of the East Block in southwestern Saskatchewan. The park is famous for open horizons, night skies, and a suite of prairie wildlife including plains bison, pronghorn, black-tailed prairie dogs, swift fox, and—through reintroduction—the black-footed ferret. __TOC__ <div style="float:right;...")
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