Heritage Garden & Inukshuk
Inukshuk,
first found in Northern Canada, served as guides or markers, and means
"likeness of a person". Today, they are found along many highways atop a
high spot or knoll. Each one is unique because they are built from
stones of the land where they are found. The Inukshuk in our Heritage
Garden symbolizes unity between all people; a symbol of friendship,
leadership and co-operation. Just as each stone is important to the
balance of the Inukshuk, so too is every person important to our
community. As a marker, may this Inukshuk guide you through our Village
and may you come again.
Victoria Trail & Victoria
Settlement
Initially
an Indian trail running along the banks of the North Saskatchewan River,
Victoria Trail winds through picturesque farmland from Hwy 38, southeast
of Redwater, to the
Victoria Settlement Provincial Historic Site in Smoky Lake County.
In 1999 directional and
interpretive signs were installed along the 58 kilometer length of the
historic Victoria Trail, the oldest road in Alberta that is still in
regular use. Tourists can enjoy all of its charms by picking up a copy
of Kalyna Country's
Historical Walking & Driving Tour of Victoria Trail guide.
Pine Creek Post Office
As
you explore the Victoria Trail, east of Secondary Highway 831, and south
of the Village of Waskatenau, watch along the north side of road for the
historic Pine Creek Post Office and General Store, built in 1908, by the
original Post Master, Sam McDonald. Used as a Post Office, general
store and fur trading post until about 1913, the building was used as a
private home by the McDonald Family until 1992 when his children sold it
to Harold and Margaret West.
The
West’s have fully restored the original structure in cooperation with
the Alberta Historical Resources Foundation and is now their private
residence. Visitors are welcome to photograph the home anytime, but are
requested to call for an appointment if they wish to view the
inside. Phone (780) 358-2444.
RCMP Memorial Sculpture
A
tribute to the original 20 members of the NorthWest Mounted Police who
traveled Victoria Trail in 1874 on route to Ft. Edmonton. The sculpture
is 12 feet wide, 14.5 feet high, 1 inch think plated steel and was
erected by the Victoria Home Guard Society. Hand picked river rocks
engraved with each riders' name commemorate the 20 North West Mounted
Police Officers, who rode to fulfill the vision of nation-wide police
force. Located near Waskatenau, 15 km East from Highway 831 along the
Victoria Trail. Contact (780) 358-2208.
Iron Horse Trail
Experience
walking, wagon and cycling adventures as well as snowmobile, ATV and
horseback riding on the Iron Horse Trail!
The Iron Horse Trail is a
most remarkable multi-use recreational corridor, taking its name from
its former use as a railroad. Because this corridor has been in
existence since the beginning of the twentieth century, the ecology of
the Trail is relatively untouched.
The Trail runs through
mixed wood forest, farmland, crosses streams and rivers, and skirts
lakes. The user of the Trail will find a total of eighteen railroad
trestles, those marvels of engineering that have stood the test of time.
The Iron Horse Trail is
278 km long, and runs from Heinsburg in the east to Waskatenau in the
west to Cold Lake in the northeast. The trail passes through several
rural communities which provide complete services for the traveler. It
can be accessed from any town along the route. |

Located at the village
entrance, our Heritage Garden welcomes you!

Hwy 831 sign to Victoria Trail, just 5kms south of Waskatenau

Costumed interpreters
with children at Victoria Settlement on the Victoria Trail

Pine Creek Post Office
is a provincially designated historic site and private home of Harold &
Margaret West on Victoria Trail

RCMP Memorial Sculpture
on Victoria Trail

From Rails to Trails,
the Iron Horse Trail begins in Waskatenau

Trans Canada Trail Centennial Relay
traveling on the Iron Horse Trail in Waskatenau

Horse & wagon
Centennial Relay riders near Waskatenau
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