Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Has A Lot To Offer Travellers During Sesquicentennial Year

The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2016 01:20 PM
    FREDERICTON — Canada already has a lot to offer travellers, but as the country celebrates its 150th birthday in 2017 with a year full of sesquicentennial celebrations, there's even more to see and do.
     
    "Because of the celebrations happening around the country, a normal festival event will be that more special because of the 150th anniversary. We see a lot of interest by Canadians to travel within Canada," said Gary Howard of the Canadian Automobile Association.
     
    Howard said he's hearing from people interested in exploring areas of the country they haven't been to, or visiting favourite places again.
     
    "I think you will see a lot of movement with people from Eastern Canada going to the West, and vice versa," he said.
     
    Howard said he expects most of the travel will be during the summer months, with the peak around Canada Day, July 1.
     
    He said there many great places to enjoy and take part in the birthday celebrations.
     
    "Charlottetown and Ottawa are the obvious ones, but I think that we will see each and every city and community is going to have its own celebration. You think about the Calgary Stampede — it's going to be much better in 2017 because they'll use that event to get more excited about the 150th. There's going to be lots of options right across the country."
     
     
    Travel media company Lonely Planet has named Canada as the No.1 country to visit in 2017.
     
    "Bolstered by the wave of positivity unleashed by its energenic new leader Justin Trudeau, and with dynamic cities that dominate global livability indices and a reputation for inclusiveness and impeccable politeness, the world's second-largest country will usher in its sesquicentennial in 2017 in rollicking good health," their "Best in Travel 2017" guide says.
     
    "You add that to the perennial favourites such as Vancouver's great food scene, the great outdoors in the Canadian Rockies and beautiful fall colours in Nova Scotia. It's a great destination whatever year it is, but 2017 has a lot to offer," Lonely Planet spokesman Alex Howard said from his home in Nashville, Tenn.
     
    And he said with the weak Canadian dollar, Canada offers a great value.
     
    "International travellers, especially those from the United States, are going to have a lot to spend their money on," he said.
     
    Gary Howard said train travel is an interesting way to get across the country and see cities, towns and everything in between.
     
    "What we see for Western Canada is rail companies that go from Vancouver to Banff, or Vancouver to Calgary. They do that whole tour through the valley and the Rockies. That's five to seven days, so it's a lot shorter, but you have dining onboard, and those companies stop at night so that you're not missing any of the scenery. They'll stop at the evening, you stay at a hotel, and get back on in the morning," he said.
     
     
    He said the cruise ship companies are also adding more ships to routes that make stops on Canada's east and west coasts. He said it's a great way to tour Atlantic Canada or British Columbia without having to drive.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    British Columbia Is Opening New Locations Where People Can Inject Illicit Drugs

    British Columbia Is Opening New Locations Where People Can Inject Illicit Drugs
    The province announced Thursday that its opioid overdose crisis has spurred it to establish three overdose-prevention sites in Vancouver, with more planned in Surrey and Victoria.

    British Columbia Is Opening New Locations Where People Can Inject Illicit Drugs

    Dead Mouse Found In Cup Of Tim Hortons Coffee, Says Nova Scotia Man

    Dead Mouse Found In Cup Of Tim Hortons Coffee, Says Nova Scotia Man
    A man who says he pulled a dead mouse from a cup of Tim Hortons coffee is asking for an apology from the restaurant chain.

    Dead Mouse Found In Cup Of Tim Hortons Coffee, Says Nova Scotia Man

    Quebec First Nation Lays Claim To Downtown Ottawa, Including Parliament Hill

    Vancouver's Tsawwassen First Nation signed British Columbia's first urban treaty in 2007, which gave the band 724 hectares of land, harvest rights to fish and other resources and a one-time cash payment of $33.6 million, along with another $2.9 million annually for five years. 

    Quebec First Nation Lays Claim To Downtown Ottawa, Including Parliament Hill

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death
    EDMONTON — Alberta's human services minister says he didn't botch an investigation into the death of a girl in government care and rejects opposition calls for his resignation.

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support
    TORONTO — The family of a doctor found strangled and beaten to death is expressing gratitude for an outpouring of support.

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start
    OTTAWA — A day-long meeting of first ministers on finalizing a pan-Canadian climate plan is off to a fractious start.

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start