Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Popular tourist attractions Yellowknife and Great Slave Lake (Canada)

How to Get Around: Downtown Yellowknife is compact and walkable but you' ll want a rental car to explore more outlying areas. Heading further afield You'll probably need a floatplane. Where to Stay: The Explorer Hotel in downtown Yellowknife is the go to place to stay. But if you' re keen to visit Old Town Brent Reaney publisher of local magazine EDGE YK offers another option: Bayside Bed and Breakfast is comfortably furnished and does a great eggs Benedict Reaney says. Its rare waterfront location is as great in summer as it is in winter. Want to get out on Great Slave The Plummer family helped pionner fly in fishing lodges in the north they first landed back in 1938 where their Great Slave Lake lodge now sits.   


Where to Eat or Drink: Yellowknife has a cluster of dining and drinking option with most located downtown. Says Reaney: Have a pint at the Black Knight (BK to the locals) and a plate of pan fried pickerel at Bullock's Bistro. In summer hit Bullock' s early (even before five) to make sure you get a seat inside the cramped log cabin. What to Read or Watch Before You Go: The city draws television producers like flies: Ice Road Trucers and Ice Pilots NWT and the fictional drama Arctic Air have all filmed here. Of the Y.K. based reality shows Ice Pilots NWT is probably the most accurate in terms of northern weather and people's experiences in the community Reaney says. Fun Fact: Margot Kidder of Superman' s Lois Lane fame was born in Yellowknife.                                       

Yellowknife the capital of the Northwest Territories is an isolated mining town built on gold and now sustained by diamonds an outpost of civilization surrounded by  vast austere landscape of rock and tundra and water most notably the enormous Great Slave Lake on whose shore the city is built. Come for the wilderness and stay for the people who know how to make their own fun is this raw country. When to Go: Summer in the rthwest Territories is short and sweet. Folk on the Rocks an outdoor music festival on Long Lake and the biggest event of the season lands in mid July. Due to its location Yellowknife is blessed with spectacular views of the northern lights best seen near the fall and spring equinoxes. March is when the city celebrates winter with a pair of festivals: the Long John Jamboree is a long weekend event featuing ice fishing helicopter rides crafts and kids activities the monthlong Snowking Festival is held in a genuine snow castle on frozen Great Slave Lake and includes theater and musical performances story slams and film screenings.