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Morecambe is a hamlet in central Alberta, Canada within the County of Two Hills No. 21. [2] It is located 0.5 kilometres (0.31 mi) south of Highway 45 , approximately 104 kilometres (65 mi) northwest of Lloydminster .
Blue Mountain is a ski resort located in The Blue Mountains, Ontario, Canada. The resort spans the Niagara Escarpment near the southern shore of Georgian Bay , and encompasses 147 hectares (360 acres) of skiable terrain with a vertical drop of 220 metres (720 ft).
The Blue Mountains is a town in Grey County, southwestern Ontario, Canada, located where the Beaver River flows into Nottawasaga Bay.It is named for the Blue Mountain, and hence the economy of the town is centred on tourism, particularly on the Blue Mountain ski resort and the private Georgian Peaks, Osler, Craigleith and Alpine Ski Clubs.
Blue Mountain, Ontario may refer to: Blue Mountain (ski resort), a ski resort; The Blue Mountains, Ontario, a town; Blue Mountain Formation or Whitby Formation, a geological outcrop in Ontario, Canada
The vineyards at Blue Mountain. Blue Mountain Vineyard, located on the shore of Vaseux Lake in Okanagan Falls, British Columbia is a Canadian Winery. Situated near the bottom of British Columbia's Okanagan Valley, Blue Mountain produces over 12,000 cases of wine per year. Blue Mountain's tasting room is open by appointment only.
Blue Mountain, Alabama, former town in the United States mostly annexed by Anniston, Alabama in 2003; Blue Mountain, Arkansas, town in the United States; Blue Mountain, California, former settlement in the United States; Blue Mountain, Mississippi, town in the United States; Blue Mountain Lake (hamlet), New York, hamlet in the United States
Blue Mountain Pottery was a Canadian pottery company in Collingwood, Ontario, that operated from 1953 to 2004.. Named for the nearby Blue Mountains, it produced pottery with distinctive mixtures of glazes, the most common of which included a blue-green and a dark grey or black glaze.
Calabogie Peaks is a ski resort in the municipality of Greater Madawaska, Renfrew County in Eastern Ontario, Canada. It is located 80 kilometres (50 mi) west of Ottawa, and was founded in 1969 (). [2] Although the resort is named after the nearby community of Calabogie and Calabogie Lake, the mountain is called Dicksons Mountain. [1]