CANADIAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY   |    CANADIAN ATLAS ONLINE   |    CANADIAN ENVIRONMENT AWARDS   |    GEOCHALLENGE   |    GEOGRAPHIC EDUCATION
Canadian Geographic magazine Canadian Geographic Travel magazine
WHAT'S NEW17 May 2008
Check out CG's online travel features!
more »
RSS Feed WHAT IS RSS?
 PRINT   EMAIL  AA
SUBSCRIBE RENEW GIVE A GIFT NEWSLETTER

travel / travel magazine / march 2008

GateWay

Adventure   |   Room with a view   |   It’s a great time of year to…  |   Green space
Day trip   |   Museum watch   |   Parks   |   Learning vacations
Documents   |   Accomodation



PARKS
Caching in at national parks

NATURAL AND CULTURAL wonders aren't the only treasures protected by Parks Canada. After a two-year ban on the activity, Parks Canada is now touting geocaching as a way to explore its national parks, historic sites and marine conservation areas.

Geocaching is like a scavenger hunt using GPS units. Participants hide small waterproof "caches” that contain a logbook and often a small trinket, record its location and then upload the coordinates to an online database. Since the activity first caught on in 2000, more than 500,000 caches have been hidden worldwide, with about 41,000 in Canada, and numbers increase daily.

But in 2005, Parks Canada removed some of the geocaches hidden within its jurisdiction, including seven in Banff National Park. Ed Jager, Parks Canada's manager of visitor experience, products and service, says that as geocaching exploded in popularity, an interim policy was put in place to give staff time to learn more about the activity and research its impacts on park environments and operations.

After two years of review, including comments from more than 100 enthusiasts and Parks Canada-sanctioned workshops, geocaches will again be allowed within park boundaries this year. The catch is, park officials must approve them first, making sure that they are accessible from trails or other public areas and that they contain only a message instead of the usual trinket.

Edmonton resident Dave Hughes, who participated in the Parks Canada review, says he's eager to once again search for hidden treasures in the backcountry of Elk Island National Park. But he isn't sure how enthusiastic his geocaching partners - his eight- and nine-year-old children - will be about the news.

"For the kids, it's all about the hidden trinkets,” says Hughes. "I'm afraid now it will be more like, 'We'll humour Dad on this one.'”

Find Parks Canada's geocaching guidelines at www.pc.gc.ca.

— Conor Mihell

top



Advertisement



LEARNING VACATIONS
Cruise counters

PASSENGERS on an 11-day Adventure Canada cruise through the eastern part of the Canadian Arctic last summer did more than sit back and enjoy the view. As part of a pilot project, the crew engaged them in a wildlife survey.

Bird expert Cam Gillies recorded GPS locations and took notes as passengers sighted wildlife along the route, including a feeding polar bear (below) and five rare ivory gulls.

The survey is part of World Wildlife Watch, an initiative of the cruise line and Manitoba's Brandon University that encourages ship passengers travelling through the Arctic to collect wildlife data, which are then made available to researchers around the globe.

"Next season, we hope to have other cruise-ship companies on board,” says Shelley Brule of Adventure Canada. "The results will be useful for wildlife managers and conservationists.”

— Keith Nicol


DOCUMENTS
What is WHTI?

IF YOU'RE considering heading stateside by air, land or water anytime soon, you should get to know WHTI - the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative. It's the U.S. law that came into effect post-9/11 and imposes new document requirements for travellers entering the United States. And it has had Canadians running to passport offices in droves.

Here's the scoop: Since Jan. 23, 2007, every Canadian has needed a passport to fly into the United States. To cross the border by land or water, however, a government- issued photo ID, such as a driver's licence, plus a birth certificate (just a birth certificate for anyone 18 or under) will get you through until June 1, 2009, when entry into the United States is expected to require a passport - or another secure, as-yet-to-be-determined identification card. British Columbia is now testing enhanced driver's licences, one potential alternative to the passport for land and water travel.

Bottom line: get a passport, and get used to tighter controls along the world's longest undefended border. (For more: Canada Border Services Agency, www.cbsa.gc.ca).



ADVERTISEMENT
Subscribe to Canadian Geographic Magazine and Save
Province 
Privacy Policy  


Meet our client partners
CG Contests
Featured Destinations
Smooth Operators
ADventures
Classifieds
Advertiser Directory
© 2008 Canadian Geographic Enterprises ADVERTISE WITH US   |    PRODUCTS & SERVICES   |    PRESS DESK   |    PRIVACY POLICY   |    CONTACT US   |    SITEMAP