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  • A labour of love: Using photo-identification to track Pacific white-sided dolphins 
  • Featured Fellow: John England
  • The new CBC series examining what it means to be Asian Canadian
  • The Da Vinci Code of the Prairies
  • A Great Canadian Trails adventure through the Canadian Badlands and Rocky Mountains
A labour of love: Using photo-identification to track Pacific white-sided dolphins
“What are they doing and why are they here and what’s their story?”

By Olivia Wiens with photography by Ryan Tidman
Pacific white-sided dolphins are known for their distinct colouring and are a highly playful and social marine mammal.

Dr. Erin Ashe discovered her fascination for Pacific white-sided dolphins more than 10 years ago when a daunting white wall of rushing water along the horizon gradually advanced on her small boat. She didn’t know what it was at first, thinking it might be a squall.

And even as her now-husband and co-researcher Rob Williams pointed to the charging water, exclaiming, “Look, Lags!” Ashe still didn’t quite understand what she was seeing. It wasn’t until she peered through her binoculars that she realized the “wave” was actually hundreds of Pacific white-sided dolphins (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens, or Lags) crashing through the water, stirring up foam and whitewash, stampeding like an army into battle. Immediately, Ashe wanted to know their story.

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Featured Fellow: John England
The 2022 Massey medallist has dedicated his career to documenting environmental change in the Arctic

By Sarah Malina
Photo: Jennifer England

John England’s lifelong fascination with the Canadian Arctic took root when he was just 18 years old. The year was 1965, and England, an undergrad at the University of Windsor, Ont., recalls feeling a sense of profound wonder the second his feet hit the ice during a field session to Baffin Island’s fiords. Over the course of his 50-plus-year career, England — now Professor Emeritus in the Department of Atmospheric and Earth Sciences at the University of Alberta — has had an indelible impact on our understanding of the Arctic. In recognition of this lifetime of achievement, the Royal Canadian Geographical Society awarded England its annual Massey Medal in 2022, citing his contributions to documenting environmental change in the Arctic from the Ice Age to the present day.

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Carrying our culture: new CBC series examines what it means to be Asian Canadian

In honour of Asian Heritage Month, CBC Quebec journalists asked Asian Canadians how they carry their culture

By Tori Fitzpatrick

Jennifer Yoon speaking with Korean artists Kevin Park Jung-Hoo and Jin Hee Wong. Their exhibition at Montreal, arts interculturels, titled Migrant Instability, explores feelings of loss and isolation. (Photo: Tim Chin)

A series called Carrying Our Culture has launched for Asian Heritage Month. The CBC Quebec team, all first or second-generation immigrants, spoke with Asian Canadians and asked them “How do you carry your cultural heritage, in big ways or small?” Canadian Geographic spoke with four of the producers about what the series means to them.

Shahroze Rauf is a Pakistani journalist based in Montreal. They work with CBC radio Quebec. 

Jennifer Yoon is a Korean Canadian multi-platform journalist. She is a news reporter with CBC Quebec. 

Rana Liu is a communications officer with CBC Quebec. She works to bridge the gap between the newsroom and the community. 

Jessica Wu is a Montreal based journalist. She works on the CBC Quebec radio morning show. 

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The Da Vinci Code of the Prairies
A local historian unlocks the mysteries of Winnipeg’s Manitoba Legislature

By Robin Esrock
The Golden Boy perched on the dome of the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg, Manitoba. (Photo: Robin Esrock)

What if I were to tell you that the Manitoba Legislature was built with concrete, steel, and 6,000 years of architectural magic? Would you believe that every aspect of the building’s design and construction was reserved exclusively for Freemasons? That occult symbols and ancient Biblical secrets hide in plain sight? According to a renowned local historian, the Manitoba Legislature is not just a seat of government, it’s the Da Vinci Code of the prairies. 

Winnipegger Frank Albo is a professor with Master’s degrees in Ancient Near Eastern Civilization and Hermetic Philosophy. You might ask yourself, “Hermetic what?” because that’s exactly what I did. Hermeticism encompasses a wide range of grand wisdom that might date back to ancient Egypt, passing along divine knowledge through sages, philosophers, Masonic grandmasters and initiates. It is a shadowy rabbit hole of rich history encompassing alchemy, astrology, religious mysticism, reincarnation, and Freemasonry. Think of Albo as a real-life Robert Langdon, the fictional Harvard professor of religious iconography in Dan Brown’s blockbuster literary series (played by Tom Hanks in the films). The real-life Frank Albo is far more animated and these days teaches at Princeton. It’s fascinating stuff, but what does this have to do with a government building in Winnipeg?

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TRAVEL WITH CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC 
Featured trip: Canadian Badlands and Rocky Mountains

For many, Alberta is all about the Great Plains; for others, the province is all about the Canadian Rockies. This itinerary provides the perfect mix of the scenic rural landscapes of the westernmost province of the prairie, as well as its aquamarine glacial lakes and majestic snow-capped mountains. Home to the

third-largest Indigenous population in Canada, your experience in Alberta includes significant historic sites like dinosaur fossil beds and buffalo jumps. As we leave the multi-hued canyons and wind-sculpted hoodoos of the Canadian Badlands, we go along the foothills of the mountains into Waterton Lakes. While the landscapes are spectacular, remember to also keep your eyes open for the abundant wildlife including bighorn sheep, grizzly bears and bison recently reintroduced in Alberta as a conservation project. From here we keep the mountain backdrop for scenic drives to some of the world’s best hiking trails in Banff & Yoho National Parks. We take a big dose of fresh air wandering endless forests, admiring the panoramic mountain views, the turquoise colour of the glacier-fed lakes, and rainbows at the waterfalls.

Meet your ambassador: George Kourounis 

Learn more
Get inspired!
Explorer-in-Residence George Kourounis discusses his career as a storm chaser

The global explorer, adventurer, and TV host highlights his most dangerous experiences, regrets, what he has learned, and more

By Robin Esrock

Check out these other upcoming trips:

- High Arctic Explorer with Joseph Frey
- Haida Gwaii with David Gray 

- Heli-hiking in the Cariboos with Robin Esrock

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