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CulturalTravels.com - Home More Heritage Sites

Volume 2, December 2000

ISSN 1538-893X

Heritage Site of the Month

 Sheri Leigh, Publisher

This Issue

Culinary Adventures

Portugal: Places of the Heart
Culinary Delights in Greece
Olive Oil: An Ancient Italian Passion
Fugu: Do You Dare?
 

4 Host of the Month

4 Museum Pick
4 Festival Pick
 

UNESCO Site

The World Heritage Committee has inscribed 721 properties on the World Heritage List (554 cultural, 144 natural and 23 mixed in 124 States Parties). The List, arranged alphabetically by nominating State Party, is current as of December 2001. The list will be updated following the next meeting of the Committee in June 2002. The complete list is Located at
UNESCO’s World Heritage Site.

A UNESCO World Heritage Site

A Spectacular Winter Unfolds Among Some of the Earth’s Most Beautiful Mountains

Maligne Lake in Jasper National Park is one of the most photographed places in the Canadian Rockies.

The recent movie “Mystery, Alaska” told the story of a fiercely competitive amateur  hockey team from a backwater Alaskan town that manages to land an exhibition game with the National Hockey League’s New York Rangers. Filmed in winter, “Mystery” constantly distracted viewers with a spectacular backdrop of steep, sharply chiseled, Alp-like peaks surrounding the town. Where in Alaska were these gorgeous summits?

They were in Canmore, Alberta, a small town just south of Banff National Park. The peaks that soar above Canmore are prelude to a 200-mile stretch of some of North America’s most beautiful mountain scenery – so beautiful that the 14,000 square miles of uplands that the Canadians have preserved there in seven national parks (Banff, Jasper. Yoho and Kootenay are the most popular) have been named a World Heritage Site.

A stretch of road near the Columbia Icefield at the border of Jasper and Banff National Parks reveals the stunning chiseled beauty of the Canadian Rockies.

The Canadian Rockies, like the Alps and Himalayas, rise abruptly from their bases. There are no foothills to hide or diminish the visual effect of the mountains’ steepness. They were once heavily sedimented seabeds that were broken, elevated and then thrust up into almost vertical directions by tectonic activity. Later, huge glaciers scraped and honed the peaks, giving them their distinctive sharp-edged, pyramidal profiles.

In winter, the mountains look even more epic than in warmer months, with bright mantles of snow spilling down the dark rock thousands of feet, delineating every crevice and fold. Clouds hover near the tops as though attending to some remote assembly of ice gods. With its quiet, lack of crowds and almost overwhelming scenery, winter is a perfect time to visit the Canadian Rockies. The Canadians have built some of the best winter accommodations on earth to house cold-season travelers, including the great old railroad hotels at Lake Louise and Banff. The towns of Banff and Canmore at the southern end of the parks offer abundant cultural, dining and shopping opportunities in winter, as well as access to skiing (including helicopter, downhill and cross-country), snowboarding, dogsledding, snowmobiling, hockey and glacier tours. The town of Jasper, 150 miles north, is smaller and quieter, but also offers a broad range of winter services and amenities.

For more information, use an Internet search engine like Google or Dogpile to look under “Canadian Rockies,” “Canadian Rockies National Parks,” or the names of individual towns or parks (Banff, Jasper. Kootenay, Yoho). Patrick Totty

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