Westworld Saskatchewan

Fall 2013

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/162438

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(l-r) Guide Dr. Paul Watts on the Hudson Bay shoreline; a polar bear crosses the tundra; another one greets tourists in a tundra buggy, which moves at an average of four km/h with a top speed of 40 km/h; red currants pop out against the boreal forest backdrop. Red Riding Hood. "My, what big paws you have . . . ." grain delivered here by rail from Western Canada and beyond. The shipping season runs from mid-July to the beginning of November. However, longer ice-free periods (more about that later) are expected to increase trading opportunities because vessels from Russia, Europe and northeast Asia will be able to use the port, cutting time from the traditional Atlantic crossings. The governments of Manitoba and Canada, along with private sector investors, have committed millions to upgrade the rail lines to Churchill as well as the port itself. Now, cue the bears. Churchill was formerly home to a United States military base, established in 1942 near the present-day airport. The base was used for cold weather exercises, training soldiers and testing equipment in harsh conditions. For years, polar Westworld p26-33_Life-FurLane.indd 29 >> fa l l 2 0 1 3 29 13-08-19 8:59 AM

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