Glendale Golfs Winnipeg Manitoba

Clear Lake Golf Wasagaming Manitoba Golfing Course

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What there is, on this dirt road in Manitoba’s Riding Mountain

National Park, is an impressive pile of bear poop. Not exactly

steaming, but fresh enough to excite our guide, and fresh enough to

make some of us glance nervously at the forest hemming us in on either

side.

We’ve been up since before dawn, lured by the prospect of

seeing wildlife. Elk and bison were mentioned. Bears, I guess, would be

a bonus.

Riding Mountain gets 350,000 visitors a year, but few are

from outside Manitoba. That’s a shame, as it’s only an hour’s drive

north of Trans-Canada Highway 1 at Brandon, half that if you’re using

Trans-Canada No. 16.

“Mountain” is a bit of a misnomer. It’s actually a

pistol-shaped plateau covering 3,000 square kilometres and rising more

than 425 metres above the surrounding grain-rich plains.

Boasting one of the highest wildlife densities of any North

American park, Riding Mountain is the core of a UNESCO biosphere

reserve.

Our quest for critters is led by Celes Davar. After 17

years working for the park, he launched Earth Rhythms, which puts

together learning adventures for small groups. (Visit

www.earthrhythms.ca or phone 1-888-301-0030).

Davar finds lots of elk tracks, but no elk, and uses a

birchbark moose call to no avail. But he hits pay dirt in the Lake Audy

bison range, one of the few rescue grasslands left in Canada.

The resident herd, numbering about 35, appears as if on cue.

First up are three big bulls, one of which delights us by rolling in a

nearby mud wallow. Around a bend, the rest of the gang lines the

roadway. Some come within three metres of our van, a fabulous photo-op.

Davar uses other strategies designed to put us more in touch

with our surroundings. We form a circle, close our eyes and listen to

the wind in the aspens, pick and eat highbush cranberries, and,

pretending we’re elk, go blundering through a tangle of beech and

hazel.

The park also offers nature activities, either free or for a nominal fee.

When the elk rut — mating season — starts, usually in late August,

there are twice-weekly tours in which a staff member tries to lure

randy males by bugling, using a device to imitate a female.

In September, when we visited, they were doing Lake Audy in

autumn, taking convoys of visitors in their vehicles to see the bison

herd. (Phone 204-848-7275 or visit www.pc.gc.ca/ridingmountain).

To seek out moose or elk on your own, try Lake Audy at

either dusk or dawn, particularly after the leaves have fallen and

visibility is better. The big animals also graze alongside Highway 10,

the Riding Mountain Parkway, in summer.

The park is on the central migratory flyway, and more than

270 bird species have been recorded. Naturalists say your best bet is

Ominnik Marsh.

Take Highway 19 to the historic East Gate for a panoramic view. It’s a 45-minute drive from the visitor centre.

Clear Lake Golf Course is a pretty 18-hole layout, and there’s a nine-hole course and spa at Elkhorn Resort.

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