What is the most interesting part of the far Canadian north to explore?
>>1065206
>What is the most interesting part of the far Canadian north to explore?
Alaska?
None.
The only places in Canada ever worth visiting are the areas within an hour or two of the USA border.
Depends what is "interesting" for you.
>>1065210
Durrrr, good one.
>>1065217
>Depends what is "interesting" for you.
Interesting wilderness, few people
If you like canoeing or long hiking trips there are lots of national parks up there that are full of beautiful land. Also the 20 hour summer days are awesome.
>>1065218
>Interesting wilderness, few people
What is generally interesting to most people relates to a topographical change (mountain ranges) and anything maritime or around water features. So...maritime provinces and coastlines, major lakes and streams, and interesting hiking/waterfalls and what nature created when tectonic plates smash together. When you "get it" about these things, you'll find what >>1065216
said is true. People live very west or very east in Canada, as close to the American border as possible, or around the shipping and navigation that was possible around the Great Lakes regions. I'm not sure exactly what you wish to see, but national parks and state parks tend to have set aside beautiful features early on. Any newer sites probably have more to do with protecting a watershed or preserving some bit of nature that is important to scientists seeing a bigger picture, but isn't visit-worthy. So, head to either coast, or a sea town, or visit your better cities. Any remote idea is based on BORING plains, or was a trade stop between coasts during fur and fish trade days (ohh, like Whitehorse).
>>1065223
>as close to the American border as possible
Why? are they trying to suckle on the american teat?
>>1065225
>Less people = more death
Develop this hypothesis
>>1065226
Trying to suckle on the Equatorial teat.
2500', goes at 5.10c or 5.9 c1
>>1065206
Mackenzie River. If you can handle mosquitoes, it's not even too hard to paddle down
>>1065226
Canada is America's #1 trade partner, and most of Canada's economy is geared towards that. So people live close to the border. Also the weather.
>>1065610
The most interesting parts of Canada are near the U.S. border because Canadians have an unhealthy obsession with the United States.
A majority of Canadians are recent immigrants from other countries that couldn't get into the U.S. and settled for Canada.
Tombstone, Dempster Highway, Keno, Dawson City, Whitehorse-Skagway. Definitely the coolest part of the far north. Forget Yellowknife and NWT in general.
>>1065644
>Forget Yellowknife and NWT in general.
Why?
>>1065216
relevant picture
also, bumping with interest.
is that where there is that serial killer/s, or is that somewhere else?
>>1065745
What serial killer?
There's a rumor that there's a uncivilized Native Tribe that beheads trespassers in this park.
>>1065627
to be fair, Ontario would be the best state if it was part of america lol
>>1065645
Yellowknife has no redeeming qualities at all. It is nothing but drunk indians and drunker, nasty miners. NWT has one highway that ends at Yellowknife so if you want to travel anywhere else, you fly and it is very expensive. It is flat, rocky, mosquito ridden and the weather is horrid.
The Yukon otoh has a number of quite interesting highways, lots of mountains and even a highway that travels to the Arctic Circle.
>>1065791
Uh, no.
New York and California would still be the most important states, and Hawaii would still be the prettiest state.
Canada has nothing to offer.
>>1066024
Canada has dank memes