Southeastern Saskatchewan is a region in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.
Communities
edit- 1 Regina — the provincial capital offers museums, art galleries, a professional football team, and more parks and greenspace per capita than any major city in Canada
- 2 Carlyle — site of an attempt by eastern settlers to recreate the aristocratic English lifestyle supported by agriculture
- 3 Estevan — the sunniest city in Canada
- 4 Fort Qu'Appelle — founded in 1865 as a Hudson's Bay Company trading post, it has a museum on the original site
- 5 Kenosee Lake — small resort town in Moose Mountain Provincial Park
- 6 Lumsden – small artisan town located near Regina
- 7 Moosomin — eastern gateway to Saskatchewan along the Trans-Canada Highway
- 8 Regina Beach — small resort town on Last Mountain Lake
- 9 Weyburn — see the world's first curling museum (curling is a sport played on ice that is popular in rural Canada)
- 10 White Butte — bedroom communities just to the east of the provincial capital Regina
- 11 Whitewood — "Crossroads Community", located at the intersection of Highways 1 and 9
- 12 Wilcox−Avonlea — small villages south of the provincial capital Regina
Other destinations
edit- 1 Echo Valley Provincial Park — located in the Qu'Appelle Valley with two beaches and access to two lakes
- 2 Moose Mountain Provincial Park — year-round activities, beautiful stands of popular and birch trees, and hilly topography
- 3 Katepwa Point Provincial Park — small, day-use park featuring one of the nicest beaches in the Qu'Appelle Valley
- 4 Rowan's Ravine Provincial Park — located on Last Mountain Lake on one of southern Saskatchewan's largest natural beaches
Understand
editSoutheastern Saskatchewan is a rural area anchored the city of Regina. To the north and east of Regina is the Qu'Appelle Valley, which features a series of small lakes linked by the Qu'Appelle River that offer different water-based recreation. The southeastern part of the area is a large oil and gas producing region.
Get in
editBy air
editBy car
editThe Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) runs across the region, including Regina, and connects the region with Manitoba, Southwestern Saskatchewan, and Alberta. Highway 11 connects Regina to Saskatoon in West Central Saskatchewan. Highway 39 connects the region to North Portal, the main port of entry into the United States (open 24 hours), connecting to North Dakota; there are other ports of entry into North Dakota and Montana.
By bus
edit- Rider Express, ☏ +1 306-209-3636, toll-free: +1-833-583-3636, [email protected]. Operates intercity bus routes in western Canada. Routes stopping in the region:
By train
editThere is no passenger rail service in directly into the region. The Empire Builder train runs about 100 km (60 mi) south of the US-Canada border, while The Canadian stops in Melville (in East Central Saskatchewan), about 150 km (95 mi) northeast of Regina.
Get around
editA private vehicle is a necessity to explore the region.
See
editYou can explore more of the province's history in Regina at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, the history of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police at the RCMP Heritage Centre in Regina, the history of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Qu'Appelle. For fans of horses and/or uniformed police officers, the RCMP Sunset Retreat Ceremonies is a colourful 45-minute ceremony for the lowering of the Canadian flag. (Jul-Aug only).
Rouleau, a small town about 45 minutes south of Regina, was used as the filming location for the popular TV sitcom Corner Gas from 2004-2009. (The studio where the rest of the series was filmed is in Regina.)
Do
editThe Queen City Ex in Regina is the biggest summer fair in the province, with free stages, food, midway, exhibits, Buffalo Days parade, home decor, pancake breakfast, Equifest, downtown activities. (Late July-early August.) Hike the Roche Percee rock formations near Estevan. Check out one of the lakes in the Qu'Appelle Valley.