The Canadian great outdoors. The best!
(via awesomecanadianthings)
The Canadian great outdoors. The best!
(via awesomecanadianthings)
Canadian skier Sarah Burke dead at 29 :(
Canadian skier Sarah Burke dead at 29
Sarah Burke, the skiing star who was badly injured in a training accident in Utah last week, has died from her injuries, the Canadian Freestyle Ski Association announced on Thursday.
The Midland, Ont. native was in an induced coma after suffering a serious injury during a training run at Utah’s Park City Mountain Resort on Jan. 10. She was 29.
“As the result of Sarah’s fall, she suffered a ruptured vertebral artery, one of the four major arteries supplying blood to the brain. The rupture of this artery led to a severe intracranial hemorrhage, which caused Sarah to go into cardiac arrest on the scene. Emergency personnel responded and CPR was administered on the scene during which time she remained without a pulse or spontaneous breathing,” the association said in a statement from Burke’s publicist.
While it appeared there was brainstem function after the injuries, subsequent tests showed Burke had “sustained severe irreversible damage to her brain due to lack of oxygen and blood after cardiac arrest.” Photo: Danny Moloshok/Reuters
(via nationalpost)
Ontario is rich in wrecks for scuba diving…
life:
A polar bear swims underwater at a Zoo in St-Felicien, Quebec. Canada is home to some 15,000 of the estimated 20,000 polar bears in the world.
(via theanimalblog)
News article from CBC news.

Sad story for wreck diving fans! Why didn’t they relocate it underwater? A farm doesn’t seem a very good place to park a shipwreck… Is it?


The Niagara Divers’ Association will present its 17th Annual Shipwrecks Symposium, “Shipwrecks/2011” on Saturday, April 2, at Centennial High School, 240 Thorold Road, Welland, Ontario.
Among other things, you could meet Cris Kohl, the author of numerous books on fresh water shipwrecks in the St. Lawrence Seaway.
For details and registrations, consult the Niagara Divers Association website.
Life in the Shallows of Lake Champlain (via nwwmark on You Tube)
This is about Lake Champlain in the USA, but… It’s right South of the Canadian border! Some of the information in that video and the underwater images are very similar to what we see in Canada.
Very interesting information about fresh water wild life.