DAY HIKE TO CRYPT LAKE: AN ADVENTURE IN WATERTON LAKES PARK

Written by CAROL ANN MACARTHUR
Living Category: Travel & Tourism
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watertonpark"It's always farther than it looks.
It's always taller than it looks.
And it's always harder than it looks." 

 

I can’t remember who said that, but it must have been someone remembering a day trip to Crypt Lake, in Waterton Lakes National Park. The trip was something to remember. Although it felt a bit rushed, as we had no idea that there was so much to see and enjoy, it is definitely a hike to experience. Next trip, we’ll camp overnight and also bring along a beekeeper costume in our backpacks. Here’s why.

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NUCLEAR POWER IN ALBERTA = ALTERNATIVE ENERGY = WHAT ELSE?

Written by CAROL ANN MACARTHUR
ROOT» Category: Energy
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nuclearmanFor a long-long time, there have been discussions about whether expert opinion or public opinion should be given more consideration when deciding on the form our future energy needs will take.


For decades, Three Mile Island and Chernobyl became synonymous with nuclear disasters – a perennial reminder that nuclear power generation could go awry anytime. As I am writing this article, recent findings and more alarming consequences stream out through the global media as the latest news from Japan. Anniversaries have a way of generating reflection and re-assessment, and that is the good thing.

This week’s anniversary of the Fukushima catastrophe reminds us about how much really we can control nuclear power and how much it needs to be rethought. As Japan's deadliest earthquake and tsunami have led to the disaster of Fukushima Daiichi, for one year the whole world has witnessed that it was not just a one time event that would be over in a few months. Fukushima Daiichi is still revealing its nightmarish legacy.

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STUCK IN THE MIDDLE WITH YOU: OUR ALBERTA OIL SANDS

Written by CHRIS COZEA
Economy Category: Economic Diversification
Print

athabascsandsJust heard this one: “If Canada were like China, the Northern Gateway pipeline would be built in six months.” Which also sounds like this one: “If Alberta were part of the United States the Keystone XL Pipeline would be built by now.”


This kind of talk occurs more often than necessary, especially over lunch in Alberta cafeterias. During dinner, in fancier restaurants, such scenarios are not discussed as straightforwardly, although they are inevitable elements of the current ethos in Canada’s fossil energy sector, where all kinds of plausible and impossible scenarios are discussed ad nauseam.


In one of these recurring discussions, Alberta’s oil sands are at the center of an imaginary T intersection. Besides the Northern Gateway and Keystone pipelines, which are envisioned for exporting its bitumen, the third leg of the T is rather illusory in terms of economic practicality and refers to sending the bitumen through existing pipelines all the way to Canada’s East Coast to be refined in Irving facilities or similarly retrofitted facilities in Central and Eastern Canada.

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DAY HIKE TO CRYPT LAKE: AN...
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“To well dispose your audience to you and ill dispose them to your enemy.”(Aristotle:  On Rhetoric) Aristotle’s First Principle of...
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ALBERTA’S MOCK LEGISLATURE: THE...
On May 30, 1930, Alberta finally and utterly became the province of Albertans. From then on, Albertans were no longer glamorized squatters in their...
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