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On 31 December 1972, Carlyle Lake Resort was dissolved as a village; it was restructured as a hamlet under the jurisdiction of the Reservation of White Bear Band on that date. [5] The hamlet is located about 14 km north of the town of Carlyle on highway 9. Carlyle Lake Resort is also home to the 18-hole White Bear Golf Course. [6]
Bear Claw Casino & Hotel. It was the first casino in Saskatchewan operated by a First Nations group to open in the province in 1993; at that time, it was caught up in a legal battle between the local First Nations group and the province over jurisdiction. [4] The casino opened in 1993 in the club house of the White Bear Golf Course.
White Bear 70 is an Indian reserve of the White Bear First Nations in Saskatchewan. [1] [4] It is about 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) north of Carlyle, is adjacent to Moose Mountain Provincial Park, and surrounds White Bear (Carlyle) Lake. It encompasses a total of 12,038.4 ha (29,748 acres).
The Bear Claw Casino & Hotel is also located north of Carlyle on highway 9. It is on the White Bear First Nation. In town, there's a 9-hole golf course, [29] Carlyle Sports Arena (CSA), an outdoor swimming pool, [30] curling with four sheets of ice, [31] a motocross track, and a playground. Lions Park in Carlyle has a soccer pitch, six ball ...
The following is an incomplete list of golf courses in Newfoundland and Labrador. [1] Amaruk Golf Club; Bally Haly Golf & Curling Club; Blomidon Golf & Country Club; Brookside Golf Resort; Grand Falls Golf Club; Grande Meadows Golf Club; Gros Morne Golf Resort; Harmon Links; Humber River Golf Club; Humber Valley Golf Resort; Pippy Park Golf Club
In 1923, two breeding pairs from Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan were brought to nearby Kenosee Lake. The beavers flourished and soon dams were blocking not just inflow creeks to Kenosee, but to White Bear (Carlyle) Lake as well. [3] According to aerial photographs, the surface of White Bear (Carlyle) Lake in 1928 was 737 m (2,418 ft) asl. By 1945, it ...
White Butte Recreation Site was established in 1982 as a result of the lobbying of the provincial government by members of the Regina Ski Club, the Saskatchewan Natural History Society, and numerous other interested persons. The first trails — Cherry and Snowberry — were completed in 1983.
Until the 1980s, it was home to several campsites, barbecue areas, two boat launches, a beach, several rentable cabins, a miniature golf course, and other services. In the 1960s, Ed McCullough had wanted to build a ski hill north of the lake and had purchased the CPR railway station from the nearby town of Carlyle for the project.