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Travel Facts About Canada
- Canada has the world’s longest coastline—over 240,000 km—so beach days can mean rugged Pacific shores, red-sand Atlantic coves, or glassy Arctic inlets.
- You can cross six time zones without leaving the country; Newfoundland runs on its own quirky half-hour time zone.
- Summer daylight stretches forever in the far north—think midnight sun in Yukon and Nunavut—while winter brings spectacular aurora shows.
- The Trans-Canada Highway is one of the longest roads on Earth, linking St. John’s, Newfoundland to Victoria, British Columbia in more than 7,800 km.
- VIA Rail’s “The Canadian” between Toronto and Vancouver is a bucket-list train: glass-dome cars, prairie sunsets, and a front-row seat to the Rockies.
- Alberta’s Icefields Parkway is a road-trip icon—turquoise lakes, hanging glaciers, and wildlife sightings packed into a few jaw-dropping hours.
- Churchill, Manitoba calls itself the Polar Bear Capital of the World; tundra buggies roll right into prime bear country each fall.
- The Bay of Fundy (New Brunswick/Nova Scotia) has the highest tides on the planet—boats rest on the seafloor at low tide and float stories high at high tide.
- Niagara Falls is spectacular year-round; in winter, mist can freeze into glittering ice formations along the gorge.
- Vancouver Island isn’t just surf and orcas—temperate rainforests and mossy cathedrals of cedar make it feel prehistorically lush.
- Poutine (fries, curds, gravy) started in Quebec and now appears nationwide—there are gourmet versions with everything from lobster to smoked meat.
- Maple syrup season peaks in early spring; sugar shacks serve hearty “cabane à sucre” feasts and taffy poured on snow.
- Ice wine is a Canadian specialty—grapes are harvested frozen at night to concentrate sweetness; Niagara and the Okanagan are top tasting regions.
- Canada’s café culture is cozy and local; yes, you’ll find Tim Hortons everywhere, but independent coffee houses thrive in most cities.
- Montreal is North America’s festival powerhouse—jazz, comedy, circus arts, and pop festivals crowd a single summer calendar.
- In Quebec, French is the majority language; bilingual menus and signs are common, but a bonjour and merci go a long way.
- Toronto is among the world’s most diverse cities, with neighborhoods for almost every cuisine—from Little Tibet to Greektown and Little Portugal.
- Ottawa’s Rideau Canal becomes the world’s largest skating rink in cold winters—bring a beavertail pastry for fuel.
- Banff and Jasper’s lakes really are that blue—glacial silt scatters sunlight to produce the famous “Canadian turquoise.”
- Wildlife encounters are real: elk stroll resort towns, bears wander trails, and moose own certain highways—keep distance and never feed them.
- Blackfly and mosquito season can be fierce in lake country; a head net and repellent make sunset canoe trips much nicer.
- Indigenous experiences—from coastal canoe journeys to powwows and cultural centers—offer a deeper understanding of the land and its peoples.
- The Inukshuk, a stacked-stone figure from Inuit culture, symbolizes guidance and community; you’ll spot it in art, parks, and wayfinding.
- Whale watching is big on both coasts: orcas and humpbacks in British Columbia; minke and fin whales in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
- Calgary Stampede bills itself as “The Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth,” mixing rodeo, midway food, and nightly fireworks each July.
- The northern lights aren’t just a winter show—spring and autumn can produce vivid aurora with milder travel conditions.
- Power outlets are Type A/B at 120V, 60Hz; your European hairdryer needs a proper converter, not just a plug adapter.
- Canada uses the metric system—speed limits in km/h and temperatures in °C—though you’ll still hear height and weight in “imperial” sometimes.
- Driving is on the right; winter tires are mandatory or strongly recommended in several provinces during cold months.
- Public transit is solid in cities, but distances between towns are vast—budget time and fuel for road trips.
- BC Ferries operate like clockwork between the mainland and islands—reservations help on summer weekends.
- PEI’s beaches boast warm water by Canadian standards and photogenic red sand shaped by iron-rich sandstone.
- Saskatoon and Winnipeg have thriving arts scenes; long winters breed top-tier galleries, festivals, and live music venues.
- Sales tax varies by province (GST/HST/PST)—price tags often exclude tax, so totals ring up higher than expected.
- Tipping is customary in restaurants (15–20%), bars (a dollar or two per drink or ~15%), and ride shares (10–15%).
- Cannabis is legal nationwide, but rules for where you can buy or smoke vary by province—check local regulations before lighting up.
- Alcohol sales are provincial too—some places have government shops, others allow grocery store wine and beer.
- Mobile coverage is excellent along major corridors but sparse in remote parks; download maps and carry a paper backup for backcountry trips.
- Canada’s national park Discovery Pass can save money if you’re visiting multiple parks in a year; provincial parks have their own fees and reservation systems.
- Pack layers any time of year—weather swings are real, and even summer nights can turn cool by the lake or coast.
