Banff National Park

Popular Rocky Mountaineer Stop
Popular Rocky Mountaineer Stop

Canada’s Banff National Park is known the world over for its mountain scenery. If you visit the park you will see people from many different countries who are busy enjoying the wonders of the park.

RVers come from all across North America to enjoy the camping and to enjoy the pleasure of driving through the park. This is a place where high grey mountains puncture the deep blue sky with majestic ease. On their sides, glaciers cling to sidewalls, or fill beautiful cirques. Hidden alpine meadows call to hikers to come and explore their quiet domains cloaked with rafts of colourful flowers, the silence broken by the sudden whistle of the marmot,

RV in Tunnel Mountain CG
RV in Tunnel Mountain CG

or the sharp crack of shifting ice in a nearby glacier. Walk around a shoulder of rock and suddenly revealed below might be the immeasurable beauty of a tiny emerald lake, one of the jewels of the mountains of Banff.

The park is huge, at 6,600 square kilometres (2564 sq. miles). Setting aside the land for protection began in 1883 when workers building the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) discovered a cave with hot running water. The Banff Upper Hot Springs are now are great place to soak in the natural hot water spring, with the facilities for your comfort just at hand.

Motorhome in Tunnel Mtn. Campground
Motorhome in Tunnel Mtn. Campground

There are campgrounds for everyone. A favourite place to stop is at one of the Tunnel Mountain campsites, just a short distance from the Banff Townsite. If you stop at the Lake Louise campsites you are close to the entrance to Lake Moraine and the Valley of the Ten Peaks which is perhaps the greatest view in the Rockies, and is easily reached.

Lake Moraine, and Lake Louise have become a magnet for every tourist that come to the park and this horde of people is spoiling the beauty of what they had come to see. When I first visited lake Moraine, it was at the end of a long dirt road with a little camping area. Now the road is paved, and there is a huge parking lot, and no camping. Now your experience is fighting for a parking spot, and working through jostling crowds. Try to avoid the summer months, if you want to experience what stirred those who realized what a gem there was here.

Handsome elk on guard duty
Handsome elk on guard duty

For years visitors had the opportunity to see a herd of buffalo just outside of town, but they were removed. The good news is the buffalo herd may return to the park although they will be placed in a remote back-country, and not up close for viewing as they were formerly. However, they may expand their range if left alone.

Come to the park and enjoy the great scenery. If you can arrange it, avoid the summer months.

Happy RVing!

For more than four decades James Stoness has travelled the roads of North America, photographing and writing about what he has seen. His travel articles and beautiful pictures have been published in several magazines and newspapers. He is also the author of five western novels.  Visit his website at:  www.stonesstravelguides.com

The Gatineau Balloon Festival’s Beckoning Skies

Multiple Coloured Balloons

Early man used to sit back and wonder at the eagles soaring so effortlessly high above them. Over the years many tried to emulate them. They made frames and covered them and attempted to float off high hills and achieved spectacular results. However other than cleansing the gene pool results were poor.

Simulated Original Hot Air Balloon

On June 4, 1783 the Montgolfier brothers stepped into the fray with a sackcloth balloon lined with paper. On this date they filled their balloon with hot air from a pile of burning straw and it rose to the sky and remained there several minutes. As with the development of space craft, they experimented by sending up a sheep, and other farm animals and birds. This was followed by humans in tethered flights and then later two humans took off near Paris in a truly untethered hot air balloon flight.

In the fall of 2012 the Gatineau Hot Air Balloon Festival celebrated 25 successful years of the show. As part of the celebration there was a recreation of the original balloon flight and many people took on costumes of that period and launched the balloon using the heat of a simple fire.

The Flower

Of course the big attraction at the festival is the launching of a myriad of hot air balloons in many shapes and colours. Some of these were far from the traditional teardrop shaped balloon. There was a hydrant, a clown,  an elephant riding nose down, a large butterfly, a crab, and a huge Happy Birthday cake balloon.

Balloon launches are weather dependent and not all days were good for getting them aloft. But when they went up, it was a spectacle of colour as one by one, and sometimes in bunches, the huge balloons floated up, up, and away. To aid them in their happy get-away the saxophone quartet, Sax Appeal, played a group of stirring melodies designed to stimulate the excitement of the launch.

The Hydrant and the Clown

On two evenings the balloons were tethered while the flames from the propane burners lit their interiors  so that the balloons glowed in a miracle of light and beautiful designs. This famous time of ‘night glow’ is looked forward to by everyone.

Night Glow

The midway carnival had the young people tied in knots as the various rides flung them every which way possible. If you measure the scream level, it sounded as if they were enjoying every scary moment.

The adults amused themselves visiting the Arts and Crafts tents, and a variety of magic shows, acrobatic displays, and sampling the offerings at the Tim Horton’s pit stops and other hospitality tents.

On Sunday night the Grand Stand show featured Isabelle Boulay whose excellent singing voice, and quality band was the hit of the festival. It was music designed to sound like music and not just a lot of noise, and it was a hit with the audience. This singer should take her skills across North America.

The Midway

While we were in the area we visited two great eating places, the Buffet of the Continents and the Restaurant Fondue and Raclette. These are two distinctly different experiences.

The buffet had food representing many different countries. It was impossible to sample everything. It was all tasty, and the meats were kept hot to bring out the flavour. With all kinds of ice cream and dessert to finish off the meal it was impossible to go away unhappy.

The Fondue and Raclette is a different eating experience. It’s designed as a slow meal where there is time for conversation. It developed from a time when everyone sat around the fire and pulled their food from a common cooking vat. Here the food is prepared at the table on little cooking tops and you take the food as it comes to you and cook it as you would like.

Open Field Camping

The Festival has an open field campground for RVs and it was really packed with a steady stream arriving on Friday and Saturday. The staff there were very helpful. The Balloon Festival is held on the Labour Day weekend and I certainly would recommend it as a nice place to camp for a few days and enjoy the balloons, the midway, and the display tents.

 

Happy RVing

For more than four decades James Stoness has travelled the roads of North America, photographing and writing about what he has seen. His travel articles and beautiful pictures have been published in several magazines and newspapers. He is also the author of five western novels.  Visit his website at:  www.stonesstravelguides.com