Our reporters comb the country for inspiring stories. You're welcome to use them just follow our usage guidelines.

Need a story?

At the CTC, our job is promoting Canada to the world. We are pleased to provide media all copyrights to reproduce the stories and story ideas published here.

We welcome you to use these story ideas as inspiration for your own stories about Canada. The CTC owns all rights worldwide. (Our images are also royalty-free and available for editorial print, broadcast and electronic use.)

If you choose to reproduce these texts for editorial use only, please include the author’s byline and “courtesy of the Canadian Tourism Commission.” If you cut, edit or modify the text in any way, please include this note: “The text has been modified from the original.”

Please contact us if you would like to reproduce one of our media centre stories, and let us know how and where you will use this story. Thank you.

Canada, from an unusual perspective: igloo, tipi, prospector’s tent, tree-house orb, jail…

Our original structures where you can bed down for the night or week might just be as original as Canada itself. It’s a good match.

by Susan Musgrave

My memories of being a happy camper are mostly repressed. When I dredge up a leaky tent, mosquitoes the size of Boeing 767s and the nearest facilities at least a mile down a bear-infested road, it reminds me of why I prefer to stay home, on my Simmons Beautyrest. If I’m going to crawl out from under my down duvet, I want the experience to be memorable. And not the kind of memorable I would really rather forget.

There must be a lot of other people who feel the same as me, which is why glamping has so much appeal. One luxurious getaway is the Clayoquot Wilderness Resort, on the west coast of Vancouver Island, BC. I’m all for roughing it in a safari-style tent with bejewelled walls, Persian carpets and a bed fit for an eco-queen.

But if drinking lovely tea, wrapped in Hudson’s Bay blankets, doesn’t sound like enough of a bare-bones survival challenge, Outward Bound Canada gives adventure travellers a chance to mush a team of sled dogs through Algonquin Provincial Park, about 250 km (155 mi) north of Toronto, ON. You’ll sleep in a canvas prospector’s tent heated by a wood stove—at night take a walk under the starry skies (if you’re lucky, you’ll see the Northern Lights). Don’t worry, the dogs will keep you company, baying to scare away the wolves that often howl all night in conversation with them. For more exotic animal viewing, wake up to a polar bear at your window in Tundra Buggy Lodge, a mobile, train-like hotel on monster-truck wheels. You’ll stay right in a polar bear environment, near Churchill, MB.

The Ottawa Jail Hostel in Ottawa, ON, has small but secure rooms (“It’s a jail, dude,” one guest writes) in fully rehabilitated prison cells. Another option is Quirpon Lighthouse Inn, a restored light-keeper’s home on a deserted island at the northernmost point of Newfoundland and Labrador, on the shores of named-for-a-reason “Iceberg Alley.”

There are so many places to crib in our country, all of them exotic in their unique way. You can bed down in a traditional igloo, in the heart of a Laurentian forest in Quebec; a tipi at Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Alberta; a handcrafted sphere suspended from a web of rope in the Vancouver Island, BC, rainforest; or in a yurt in the remote Yukon wilderness. On British Columbia’s Sunshine Coast, you can spend romantic nights in a tree-house cottage in a cloud sleeper bed—under a skylight where you can count the stars or listen to rain falling on cedar.

Another place I’ve always fantasized about staying in is Quebec’s infamous Hôtel de Glace (Ice Hotel). Everything—the structure, décor, furniture, even the drinking glasses and the beds—are made entirely of snow and ice. The first time I Googled the hotel, I was surprised to learn that “deer pellets” were spread on the ice to insulate you from the cold. I, otherwise known as The Princess and the Pea incarnate, could not imagine getting through a night reclining on deer pellets. Turns out the story had been translated, and something’d been lost in translation. Deer pelts cover the ice, which keep you cozy and warm.

Print
Usage guidelines

We welcome you to use these story ideas as inspiration for your own stories about Canada. The CTC owns all rights worldwide. (Our images are also royalty-free and available for editorial print, broadcast and electronic use.) If you choose to reproduce these texts for editorial use only, please include the author's byline and "courtesy of the Canadian Tourism Commission." If you cut, edit or modify the text in any way, please include this note: "The text has been modified from the original." Thank you.

Tags:

Post a comment

(Read our comments disclaimer)

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This security code is to protect the CTC from automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

Comments

Check out glamping in Ontario's Wilderness Region of Canada's Boreal Forest.
http://www.BorealForest.travel

Photo credit : Victoria Island, Northwest Territories © NWTT/Terry Parker - Background Image