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British Columbia.125 miles (0.201 km) Terrace Bay Dragfest: Terrace Bay: Ontario.25 miles (0.40 km) Thunder In The Alberni Valley: Port Alberni: British Columbia.25 miles (0.40 km) Thunder In The Valley: Drayton Valley: Alberta.25 miles (0.40 km) Thunder Mountain Raceway Kelowna: British Columbia.25 miles (0.40 km) Toronto Motorsports Park: Cayuga
Kal Tire Place, formerly known as Wesbild Centre and Vernon Multiplex, is a 3,006 seat multi-purpose arena located in Vernon, British Columbia, Canada. There is an additional standing room capacity of 500. It was built in 2001 as an upgrade over the aging Civic Arena and became the home ice surface of the Vernon Vipers.
Canadian Tire tried twice to expand into the United States. In 1982, it purchased the Wichita Falls, Texas-based White Stores, Inc. automotive retail chain with 81 stores in Texas from its then-owner Household Merchandising Inc., a subsidiary of Household Finance, for US$40.2 million.
1 April: Canadian Tire opened two locations in the former Target locations In Mountain Road in Moncton, NB and Bayers Lake Business Park In Halifax NS. 22 April: Lee Valley Tools opened a location in former Orchard Plaza location in Kelowna, BC. [86] 14 May: Giant Tiger opened a location to replace the Target location in Fergus, Ontario. [87] [88]
Greater Kelowna (officially known as Kelowna Census Metropolitan Area) is the largest metropolitan area in British Columbia. It's the fastest growing metropolitan area within B.C and the fifth fastest growing in all of Canada.
Generally, Kelowna is the transition zone between the drier south and the wetter north. The Okanagan north of Kelowna has a humid continental climate (Köppen: Dfb) with warm, sometimes hot summers and cold winters with highs around freezing, though mild by Canadian standards. Precipitation is well distributed year round.
Kelowna (/ k ə ˈ l oʊ n ə / ⓘ kə-LOH-nə) is a city on Okanagan Lake in the Okanagan Valley in the southern interior of British Columbia, Canada. It serves as the head office of the Regional District of Central Okanagan. The name Kelowna derives from the Okanagan word kiʔláwnaʔ, referring to a grizzly bear. [8] [9]
Highway 33 is a minor two to four-lane highway connecting the Boundary Country and Okanagan regions of British Columbia, Canada.Highway 33, which is 129 km (80 mi) long, connects Rock Creek, on the Crowsnest Highway (), north to Kelowna, on the Okanagan Highway, partially following the West Kettle River.