Ramada Limited Dawson Creek
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Travel Blogs from Dawson Creek
Ft. St. John to Dawson Creek
... are planted with canola, a hybrid of rapeseed, developed as a low cholesterol seed. We have finally found SUMMER! It's almost 70 outside and we're sitting at the picnic table outside the trailer thoroughly enjoying it. We spent part of the day wandering around DC. Most of the tourist highlights are centered around the building of the ALCAN highway in 1942. We're here on the 70th anniversary this ...
Pleasant Hill,CA to Bend,OR
... OR. We're not camping as it is very hot and we need to make some time. In Oregon you cannot pump your own gas - they have pump attendants. Because out next stop was Bend, OR we took a side trip to Crater Lake----- no matter how many times we have been there we always marvel over the cobalt blue color of the lake - interesting tidbit - Mt Magnus, which is ...
OH THE PAIN !!!
... to Jasper, about 250 kms. It rained in the morning, but the sun managed to shine in the afternoon. Beautiful!
WE SAW A BLACK BEAR & HER BABY!!!! Yay!!
We have been told, if we see cars & vans parked on the side of the road, more than likely they will be looking at a bear or some sort of wildlife, and that is exactly what it was. We were so excited. At last! The baby bear looked so cute following ...
Water, Wind and Wood
Okay, so what is there to do in Dawson Creek you say? Well we’re gonna tell you...
You could go to “Mile Zero”, which is the exact spot that the Alaska highway starts. You see, way back in 1942 the US government decided that they needed to build a road into Alaska so that they could defend North America from the Japanese. Well as the Americans usually do they did it in a big way. They sent 11,000 troops, hired ...
A cold and snowy day
... we could see the piles of logs ready for transport. We even followed one truckload for awhile, something I was very uncomfortable with. Something else we see a lot of up here in Canada are the gas and oil fields. It's a huge business. They have large complexes for the workers to stay, so they are close to the job sites. Once the snow stopped, we again started seeing wildlife. We saw a wolf along the side of the road and drove back and forth a few ...