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Hi Jan,

 

From Stanley Park the drive will take you the better part of a day. You'll head NE on a main road until you intersect a major highway, where you will proceed E as though you were going to a rodeo in a certain major western city located in another province. You'll want to slow down well before hitting the site of the "last spike," perhaps stopping for coffee at an historical Canadian city that even has a hint of the Victorian age in its downtown. There you will need to determine the whereabouts of a ferry crossing a bay named after a locally mined ore, lead sulfide.

 

But the quest is not over yet!

 

After locating and then crossing the ferry (at no charge, thanks to the Canadian government), you're heading for a mountain that shares its name with a great railway, founded at the turn of the century before last, by James J. Hill, "The Empire Builder." Mr. Hill, born in Ontario, lived in St. Paul most of his life and was the Bill Gates of his day. I live on the remnant of his farm, north of St. Paul, which was developed in the 1960s. But I digress. The mountain is part of a range named after a Scottish earl who sponsored immigrant settlements in the Canadian portion of the Red River Valley. (The Red River runs along the Minnesota/Dakota border, to the west and north of St. Paul, and is one of the few American rivers that flows north, in this case into Hudson's Bay.)

 

The photos are taken just below the top of this mountain, looking south-west towards the large area of lakes (over 200 km long) created in the 1960s by damming a mighty river that flows into another country and thence to the sea.

 

This is a tough one, but a lot of fun!

 

Bob

 

PS. In some years this location receives over 800 inches of snow.

Edited by woorob
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.....and on the way there I will enjoy the scenery from a free Galena Bay ferry over Upper Arrow Lake. Maybe I'll just get into a canoe here and float down the Columbia River, hoping to somehow make it through Great Coulee ..... Too bad that Canadian Pacific does not run passenger trains through Craigellachie anymore and Great Northern Railway is too far away.....

 

Eventually, I hope to end up in Whitefish to be picked up by the Great Northern Powderguides for a back breaking week of powder at the Great Northern Mountain.

 

There - how was my trip?

 

Cheers,

 

Jan

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Your trip was spot on!

 

The wilderness powder skiing in this area is some of the finest on Earth, so if you went during the winter you'd be jubilant. They say the fishing's great in the summer . . .

 

Great job!

 

Over to you now.

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Here we go - an entirely different corner of the world. From height of probably only 20 meters but, 'from above'......

 

City and body of water please.

 

Good luck,

 

Jan

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