This summer, wildfires tore through Canada's Jasper National Park, forcing thousands to evacuate and burning hundreds of ...
The best way to get around Jasper National Park is by car. A car is practically essential for exploring the more than 2.7 million acres that make up Jasper. Otherwise, travelers can take advantage ...
Jasper National Park is a beautiful area filled with those amazing aqua colored lakes, wildlife, mountains and amazing views!
In the east end of Jasper, Alta., the mountain town appears ... Canada’s most famous tourism destinations. Behind the Forest Park Hotel, a thick stand of trees — entirely escaping the fate ...
The best times to visit Jasper National Park are March through May and September through November. While traveling in these seasons may mean chillier temperatures (think: highs around 60 degrees ...
As I approached Jasper from the south, through the fire-scarred Jasper National Park, I was first struck by what visually appears as a wasteland of burnt sticks in a black, brown and grey landscape.
Marmot Basin in Jasper National Park is eyeing a mid-November opening as it looks forward to welcoming visitors back to its slopes. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. “We’re ...
The fast-moving wildfire destroyed or damaged 356 buildings in Jasper National Park's townsite – one-third of the community. And while not all of them were residential, Jasper lost 820 housing ...
Year-round tourism is Jasper’s main economic driver as close to 2.5 million people visited the surrounding national park last year alone. Soraya Martinez Ferrada, the federal tourism minister ...
Tracy Friedel is with the Lac Ste. Anne Métis Community Association and is descended from people who stewarded what is known as Jasper National Park now. "The history of establishing national ...
Year-round tourism is Jasper's main economic driver as close to 2.5 million people visited the surrounding national park last year alone. Kimberley Stark, who owns the Bear's Paw Bakery and ...
“It's not the parks themselves that are deadly or dangerous, inherently,” National Park Service spokesperson Cynthia Hernandez told USA TODAY. “It's how you approach your visit to a park and ...