Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Mountie statue in Redvers, Saskatchewan, commemorates the founding of the Red Coat Trail along SK Highway 13. There are 36 communities along the 676 km (420 mi) of the Saskatchewan portion of the Red Coat Trail which would be one approximately every 20 km (12 mi) apart, and there are 59 at grade intersections with primary and secondary highways which would be a junction approximately every ...
Travel east through the province of Saskatchewan on the Red Coat Trail is continuous on Highway 13 which is a secondary paved undivided highway until Weyburn. Highway 13 crosses Lodge Creek and Middle Creek, then passes the junction with Highway 21 south followed by Highway 615 north. The highway volume beginning in Saskatchewan along the ...
Multi-use trail that is a section of the Trans-Canada Trail. Mostly flat with a crushed limestone surface. Lynn Valley Trail: 11.8 km (7.3 mi) Simcoe: Port Dover: Simcoe, Port Dover bicycle-friendly trail Maitland Trail: Goderich: Auburn: Goderich, Auburn hiking trail Merritt Trail: 45 km Waterfront Trail at St. Catharines: Friendship Trail at ...
Trail is a city in the western Kootenays region of the Interior of British Columbia, Canada. It was named after the Dewdney Trail , which passed through the area. [ 5 ] The town was first called Trail Creek or Trail Creek Landing, and the name was shortened to Trail in 1897.
The system of auto trails was an informal network of marked routes that existed in the United States and Canada in the early part of the 20th century. Marked with colored bands on utility poles , the trails were intended to help travellers in the early days of the automobile .
A Chevrolet Maple Leaf truck built in Oshawa and sold in Canada with minor trim differences to the American trucks. General Motors of Canada opened its new head office building on the shore of Lake Ontario in 1989. The building is a fixture on Highway 401 and usually displays an enormous picture of a new vehicle on its huge glass atrium. This ...
The Old Dawson Trail is the remnant of the first all-Canadian route that linked the Great Lakes with the Canadian prairies. It was a water and land route that began at Port Arthur, Ontario (now Thunder Bay) and ended at St. Boniface, Manitoba (now Winnipeg). The land portions of the trail are usually referred to as Dawson Road.
The second of the 1A routes, known as the Bow Valley Trail, begins in Canmore, off of the Trans-Canada Highway at exit 91. It formerly began at the Trans-Canada Highway at exit 86 and passed through Canmore; however, ownership of the section was transferred to the Town of Canmore. The roadway still carries the name "Bow Valley Trail". [1]