1. Canada is home to the longest street in the world.
Yonge Street in Ontario starts at Lake Ontario and runs for almost 2,000 km all the way to the Minnesota border.
2. The longest coastline in the world is in Canada.
It is over 202,000 kilometres long. It would take four and a half years to walk the length of Canada‘s coastline. This coastline borders three different oceans: The Pacific, Atlantic, and Arctic. The second-longest coastline in the world is in Indonesia and it is just over 1/4 of the length of Canada’s at 54,700 kilometres.
3. A bear from Canada inspired Winnie the Pooh.
London Zoo imported a bear cub from Winnipeg in 1915. This bear from Winnipeg was the favourite part of the zoo for a young Christopher Robin Milne. This love inspired his father, AA Milne, who went on to write world famous stories about Winnie the Pooh.
4. The United States has invaded Canada twice.
The two attacks took place in 1775 and 1812. They lost both times.
5. There are over 55,000 different species of insects in Canada
6. Beatlemania was coined in Canada
The term “Beatlemania” was used around the world to describe the impact of the band The Beatles. The author of that term was Sandy Gardiner, a journalist with the Ottawa Journal in the 1960s.
7. Appropriately, the name Canada came about through a polite misunderstanding.
Jacques Cartier, an explorer from France, met with local natives who invited him to visit their kanata, the local word for village. He and his group thought that kanata or Canada was the name of the entire country.
8. The world’s smallest jail is in Canada.
The world’s smallest jail is in Ontario. It is just over 24 square metres.
9. Canada has national parks that are bigger than many countries.
Wood Buffalo National Park in Albert is bigger than Denmark and Switzerland (just over 44,000 square kilometres) and Nahanni National Park Reserve in the Northwest Territories is bigger than Israel with over 30,000 square kilometres.
10. The world’s northernmost settlement is in Canada.
Alert, Nunavut is at the top of Ellesmere Island and is only 817 kilometres from the North Pole. This settlement is home to scientific and military workers. However, it is a temporary home as in January the temperature has dropped to a low of -32 degrees Celcius.
11. Canada has 2 deserts
Canada has one desert which is located in British Columbia. It is 15 miles long and the only desert in the world with a boardwalk for visitors. The second desert is in northern Saskatchewan on the south bank of Lake Athabasca.
12. Watch your toes in Canada
If you visit Dawson City in the Yukon you could become a member of the Sour Toe Cocktail Club. A Sour Toe cocktail is any drink with a real human toe in the bottom. The rules are that you can have any drink you want and consume it at any pace but your mouth must touch the toe. The toes have generally been donated by people who have suffered from frostbite. If you swallow the toe there is a fine of $2500.
13. The lowest recorded temperature ever in Canada was as cold as Mars.
On February 3, 1947, a temperature of – 63 degrees Celcius or -81.4 Fahrenheit was recorded in a small village in the Yukon called Snag. This is pretty much the same temperature as Mars.
14. Canada is the second-largest country in the world by total area.
Russia is the biggest.
15. Canada has some interesting ways to fight a war.
Canada and Denmark have fought over an uninhabited island in the Arctic since the 1930s. Their manner of warfare is quite unusual. They leave each other bottles of alcohol and change their flags. The Canadian’s leave Canadian Rye Whiskey and the Danish a bottle of Dutch schnapps.
16. Canadian police give out positive tickets when they see people doing positive things.
17. 10% of the world’s forests are in Canada.
Canada has just under 400 million hectares of forest.
18. Canada could so easily be the 51st state in America.
One of the 13 articles in the US Articles of Confederation states that if Canada wants to be admitted into the United States it will automatically be accepted.
19. Canada has more surface area covered by lakes than any other country in the world.
Canada’s Great Lakes alone contain 18% of the world’s fresh lake water. And there are over 30,000 Canadian lakes including two of the biggest in the world, Great Slave Lake and Great Bear Lake. All this means that more than half of all the lakes in the world are located in Canada.
20. Canada eats more doughnuts than any other country in the world.
They also have more doughnut shops per capita than any other country in the world. Each year 30 million people eat over 1 billion donuts. It’s all down to Tim Hortons!
21. In Churchill, Canada it is customary for residents to leave their cars unlocked.
This is to offer an escape to any pedestrians who see a polar bear. Residents also leave their homes unlocked for the same reason. About 15,500 of the 25,000 polar bears in the world live in Churchill. At times the town has more polar bears than it does people.
22. License plates in the Canadian Northwest Territories are shaped liked polar bears.
23. The province of Alberta has been rat-free for over 50 years.
24. Canada is bigger than the European Union.
It is also five times larger than Mexico and three times as big as India. It is even 30% larger than Australia.
25. The Hawaiian Pizza was invented in Canada.
That’s pineapple on a pizza. This is the most popular type of pizza in Australia. Personally, it has never worked for me.
26. The province of Newfoundland has a town called Dildo.
Each year they have a festival called Dildo Days which is lead by their mascot, Captain Dildo. Canada also has a town called Sexsmith in Alberta and Stoner in British Columbia.
27. There is a strip club in Ontario that doubles as a church on Sundays.
28. The US/Canada border is the longest international border in the world.
It has no military defense. It stretches for nearly 9,000 kilometres and the border between Alaska and Canada alone is nearly 2,500 kilometres.
29. The official phone number for Canada is 1-800-o-canada.
Really. Try dialling it. Canada will answer.
30. There is a polar bear jail in Churchill, Canada.
It is for badly behaved polar bears who spend too much time in the town of Churchill or close by. The bears are hit with a tranquiliser dart and then carefully transported to the polar bear jail. They are tranquillised again and released into the wild at the end of the season.
31. The only walled city in North America is in Canada.
It is the beautiful Quebec City. The French and then the English built up these walls and other fortifications during the 17th and 19th centuries. Quebec City is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the oldest cities in North America. it dates back to 1608 when it was founded by Samuel de Champlain.
The second of the only two urban centres in North America that have UNESCO designations is lovely Lunenburg in Nova Scotia.
32. You will probably weigh less in Canada.
Large parts of Canada have less gravity than the rest of the Earth. Gravity isn’t uniform across the earth and these differences are driven by landmass. Canada is still recovering from the melting of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. This means if you head to Hudson Bay you will weigh about a tenth of an ounce less than you would weigh elsewhere in the world.
33. Canadians Put Milk in Bags
Canadians buy milk in bags. Apparently 75% of Canadian’s drink their milk from a bag. This is because milk in bags is more cost effective than milk in bottles or cartons. Although I have been told by a resident of Alberta that they are all about cartons.
34. It is illegal to smell bad in Canada.
If you are in a public place and have an offending smell you may well end up with two years in a Canadian jail. Which are probably really nice and I imagine have a Tim Horton’s.
canada_ottawa_parliament-hill-changing-of-the-guard
Changing of the Guard in Ottawa
35. Bigfoot is safe in Canada
It is illegal to kill a Sasquatch in British Columbia.
36. Canada has the 4th lowest population density on earth
Canada is home to just over 37 million people across an area of ten million square kilometres. This means it comes in at 3.7 people per square kilometre. That same square kilometre in the United States would have 35 people in it. Around 90% of Canada is uninhabited. And 90% of Canadians live within 500 kilometres of the border with the United States.
37. Canada has the highest tides in the world
The Bay of Fundy in Canada is home to the highest tides in the world. The Bay of Fundy is between the fantastic Nova Scotia and wonderful New Brunswick provinces. More than 100 billion tons of water move through the bay twice a day. There are some fantastic places to visit in both provinces to see this extraordinary phenomenon.
38. Canada has the longest freshwater beach in the world.
Canada and beaches don’t seem to go naturally together but Wasaga Beach in Ontario is the longest freshwater beach in the world and is located on the the Georgian Bay. Canada also has the second-longest freshwater beach in the world which is Sauble Beach.
39. Canada has the longest highway in the world.
The Trans Canada Highway #1 is 7821 kilometres long.
40. The world’s longest and largest skating rinks are in Canada
This one makes a lot more sense than the beaches. Winnipeg is home to the longest skating rink in the world. The largest skating rink in the world is the stunning Rideau Canal in Ottawa.
41. Basketball was invented by a Canadian
Dr James Naismith defined the 13 rules that make up basketball in 1891 at a YMCA in Springfield, Massachusetts.
42. Superman was created by a Canadian
Superman was co-created by Jerry Siegal and Canadian Joe Shuster. The Daily Planet is based on the Torono Star and Metropolis is based on Toronto not New York City (which I always thought until I wrote this post).
43. Canada is the most educated country in the world
More than 50% of the Canadian population has a post-secondary education qualification. And Canada’s literacy rate is 99%.
44. Canada has 3 of the 10 biggest islands in the world
These three islands are Baffin Island (which is twice the size of the United Kingdom), Vancouver Island and Ellesmere Island (the last two are about the sie of England).
45. Canada is home to the fourth-largest city in the world that has a French-speaking population (Paris is only 2nd!)
Montreal has more than four million inhabitants and is the fourth-largest city in the world after Kinshasa, Paris and Abidjan that has a French-speaking population. Toronto is Canada’s biggest city with over 6 million people but it doesn’t have as many French speakers as Montreal.
46. Santa Claus is Canadian
In 2012, Canada’s Immigration Minister declared that Santa Clause was a Canadian citizen. Apparently the red and white of his suit is based on Canada’s flag. And you can even contact Santa in Canada using the address: Santa Clause, North Pole, HOH OHO Canada. As this is Canada there are people who actually reply to every single one of these letters.
47. Canada has the snake capital of the world
I am Australian so I was shocked to discover this Canadian fun fact. Manitoba in Canada has the largest concentration of snakes in the world. Around 70,000 snakes come out of hibernation each year in the Praire province. The most popular type of snake is the red-sided garter snake.
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SOURCE : Theboutiqueadventurer