Banff National Park

Jill Hayward and her husband Bob have a number of items on their 'Bucket List'; like seeing the Salmon Glacier, British Columbia, on July 23, 2011 | Submitted by Bob Hayward | Submit yours!
Grizzly Bear. Photo taken near Kananaskis Lakes, Peter Lougheed Provincial Park, Kananaskis Country, Alberta | Submitted by Trevor Ward | Submit yours!
First summits! Photo taken at Mount Fairview, in 2010, Banff National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Tanya Koob | Submit yours!
Time to play! Photo taken at Deception Pass, in March 2011, Banff National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Michael Southward | Submit yours!
Binocular, photo taken at Lake Louise, in September 2011, Banff National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Yu Liu | Submit yours!
Wood Buffalo National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Gary Clennan, Calgary, Alberta | July 17, 2010 | Submit yours!
En route for Lake McArthur, British Columbia, July 2010 | Submitted by John Drew, Toronto, Ontario | August 10, 2010 | Submit yours!
Moraine Lake, Banff National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Debbie Sheridan, Kamloops, British Columbia | July 27, 2010 | Submit yours!
On the Bow River, Bow Valley, Alberta | Submitted by David Hudson, Taunton, United Kingdom | March 30, 2010 | Submit yours!
On the way to Miette Hot Springs, Jasper National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Damien Bottolier-Curtet, Haute-Savoie, France | February 21, 2011 | Submit yours!
Pyramid Lake, Jasper National Park, Alberta | Submitted by Dale Doram, Edmonton, Alberta | July 23, 2010 | Submit yours!
Self portrait on top of Panorama Ridge viewpoint overlooking Garibaldi Lake, British Columbia, July 2007 | Submitted by Claude Robidoux, Penticton, British Columbia | March 21, 2011 | Submit yours!
Submitted by Alexander Babos,
Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.A. | October 8, 2010 | Submit yours!
Discovering Athabasca, Icefields Parkway, Alberta |
Submitted by Anders Rempel, Steinbach, Manitoba | September 23, 2010 | Submit yours!
Looking over Lake Louise, Banff National Park, Alberta, in the morning. |
Submitted by Andrej Zlatos, Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A. | September 26, 2010 | Submit yours!
"True Canadian Splendor". Shot at Wilcox Pass in Jasper National Park, Alberta in July, 2010 | Submitted by Benjamin Barlow, Eaton Rapids, Michigan, U.S.A. | October 17, 2010 | Submit yours!
Submitted by Brian MacDonald, Grande Prairie, Alberta | August 29, 2010 | Submit yours!
Bow Valley, May 17th, 2010, taken off the Bow Valley road in between Banff and Lake Louise. | Submitted by Caroline Freebairn, Calgary, Alberta | August 1, 2010 | Submit yours!
Iceland poppies, Lake Louise, Alberta, August 2010 | Submitted by Cesar Bueno, Vallejo, California, U.S.A. | August 22, 2010 | Submit yours!
Sun rising on Victoria Glacier with the Death Trap below, Banff National Park, Alberta. | Submitted by Cindy Walker, Calgary, Alberta | August 31, 2010 | Submit yours!
Submitted by Claire Stanhope, Coldstream, British Columbia | October 30, 2010 | Submit yours!
"The 3 Amigos", Bighorn Sheep in Radium Hot Springs | Submitted by Dale Genest, Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia | September 3, 2010 | Submit yours!
Hiking along a Jasper trail, Jasper National Park, Alberta, August 2010 | Submitted by Dale Nally, Saint-Albert, Alberta | November 17, 2010 | Submit yours!
"A moment to remember", Edith Lake | Submitted by Darlene Nguyen, Edmonton, Alberta | August 12, 2010 | Submit yours!
Fly-fishing in the Kootenays, British Columbia, on August 2, 2010 | Submitted by Debbie Sheridan, Kamloops, British Columbia | September 8, 2010 | Submit yours!
My daughter enjoying the view from Whistler Mountain summit, British Columbia | Submitted by Fernando Ortiz, Naucalpan, Mexico | October 17, 2010 | Submit yours!
"Stop", Medicine Lake, Jasper National Park, 2009. | Submitted by Ganna Melekh, Edmonton, Alberta | August 1, 2010 | Submit yours!
Chipmunk on a stone barrier, Lake Louise, Banff, Alberta, August, 2010 on a hiking trail just next to the lake itself. | Submitted by Grace Mah, Edmonton, Alberta | August 28, 2010 | Submit yours!
Storm on Mount Vimy, Waterton Lakes National Park, October 5, 2009 | Submitted by Greg Abt, Ponoka, Alberta | August 8, 2010 | Submit yours!
A mother grizzly with her two cubs in Jasper National Park, Alberta, May 2010. | Submitted by Guy d'Anjou, Prevost, Québec | November 30, 2010 | Submit yours!
Elk | Submitted by Jaliya Rasaputra, Nepean, Ontario | October 14, 2010 | Submit yours!
Blue heron, Bowser, Vancouver Island, British Columbia | Submitted by Jennie Holt, Wabasca, Alberta | August 26, 2010 | Submit yours!
Canmore, Alberta, my first helicopter ride, and a view from the top, back in May 2009! | Submitted by Maria Roxas-Enriquez, Banff, Alberta | August 5, 2010 | Submit yours!
"Mountain Spectrum" From the end of Maligne Lake, Cornet Creek, Jasper National Park, Alberta. | Submitted by Laura Barlow, Eaton Rapids, Michigan, U.S.A. | October 17, 2010 | Submit yours!
Submitted by Marietta Pangan-Dutkoski, Calgary, Alberta | December 10, 2010 | Submit yours!
Submitted by Mark Brooker, Calgary, Alberta | October 7, 2010 | Submit yours!
Nothing more to ask for...Glacier Lake, Icefields Parkway, Banff National Park, October 2, 2010 | Submitted by Mylene Poulin, Calgary, Alberta | October 4, 2010 | Submit yours!
"Taking it all in", canoeing at Emerald Lake, Yoho National Park, British Columbia | Submitted by Owen Yuen, Calgary, Alberta | September 4, 2010 | Submit yours!
Mineral spring, Wells Gray Provincial Park, British Columbia | Submitted by Petra Wildschuetz, Fuerstenwalde, Brandenburg, Germany | August 15, 2010 | Submit yours!
Emerald Lake, Yoho National Park, British Columbia, my favourite lake of the Canadian Rockies | Submitted by Priscilla Turocy, Parma Heights, Ohio, U.S.A. | October 4, 2010 | Submit yours!
On our way to Vancouver, the girls by the river seemed to be comforting each other. July 10, 2010 | Submitted by Ray Chiang, Calgary, Alberta | September 7, 2010 | Submit yours!
One of the many wonderful landscapes in Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A. | Submitted by Tatiana Ciolacu, Moscow, Idaho, U.S.A. | August 8, 2010 | Submit yours!
Lake Louise, a few minutes after a rain squall had caused a wedding ceremony to finish up quickly. | Submitted by Stanley G. Munn, Calgary, Alberta | August 9, 2010 | Submit yours!
Baby loves hiking, Kananaskis Country | Submitted by Tanya Koob, Calgary, Alberta | August 9, 2010 | Submit yours!

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Baroness Elizabet von Rummel: Gracious Hostess of the Mountains

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It was September 1965 and outside the window there was only rain and gloom. Water dripped from the eves. But inside Lizzie Rummel’s little cabin the cook stove radiated warmth and the coal oil lamp cast a golden glow. Lizzie Rummel (actually Baroness Elizabet von Rummel) was teaching me to play crib. My climbing companion, Don Gardner, read quietly in the corner.

A few days earlier, Don and I had walked to Mount Assiniboine from Banff in a marathon 60 km hike over Allenby Pass. We had planned to climb the great peak but the rain, and snow at higher elevations, kept us valley bound. Lizzie and Don were close friends, his father Smitty Gardner was her doctor, and Don had spent summer holidays here at Lizzie’s camp below Mount Assiniboine.

Lizzie gave us the key to Ken Jones’s Ranger Cabin and said, “If you boys will chop a little wood for me, I will feed you.” I had little appreciation for the great honour that was being offered. For the rest of the week we hiked (in the rain), fished a little, chopped some wood and enjoyed Lizzie’s company and great food.

Lizzie was born February 19, 1897 in Munich Germany, the daughter of Baron Gustav von Rummel, an officer in the German army. She grew up, a privileged child, in the upper strata of European society, was well educated by governesses and could speak several languages. In later years she fondly remembered to me her days living near the Piazza del Popolo in Rome.

In 1914 she and her mother and two sisters were vacationing at their ranch south west of Calgary, near Priddis. Her mother by some accounts had won the property in a poker game, something that was not uncommon for folk of her station. When war broke out on August 6th, they were marooned here in Canada and all they had left was the ranch. But they adapted. They learned to work the ranch and Lizzie loved the life in the west. With the exception of brief visits to Germany after the war the four women stayed in Canada.

In 1938 Lizzie changed course: she was 41 years old and unmarried. She went west to the mountains to begin a new life. She first worked for Erling Strom at Mount Assiniboine Lodge. Then in 1942 she took over managing Skoki Lodge, high in the mountains east of Lake Louise. It was the start of a remarkable career as the hostess of the Canadian Rockies. She came to personify all that is special about mountain culture: modesty, generosity, hard work and a passionate love for the outdoors.

Lizzie was not the first of the nobility to experience Skoki Lodge. In March of 1932 Lady Jean Rankin, Lady in Waiting to the Queen of England and her husband Niall had spent a month skiing at Skoki Lodge. Niall telegrammed to a friend, “Skiing far better than any Alps. You must come Skoki. Have stayed an extra month.” Almost eighty years later Prince William and his wife Catherine would visit Skoki Lodge and later write that it was the highlight of their trip to Canada.


Assiniboine Sunburst Lake

Lizzie finally achieved her dream in 1951 when she bought Sunburst Lake Lodge, below Mount Assiniboine, from Pat Brewster. She had always wanted her own lodge. It was a simple affair — a central cabin, a storage shed and several wall tents. But it suited Lizzie who, despite her background, was modest, humble and down-to-earth.

For twenty years Lizzie welcomed guests from around the world at Sunburst Lake. She led them on hikes, told them of the flowers and the wildlife, fed them and sat round the fire philosophizing with them. She was the perfect hostess for this rugged country — a cheerful companion around the wood stove on a rainy night but the next day could work alongside the toughest cowboys and outfitters.

In 1953 she gave Hans Gmoser, a young immigrant from Austria, his first job as a mountain guide in Canada. The two of them spent the winter in her little cabin. Hans carried water, chopped wood and guided the guests while Lizzie cooked and kept the fires burning. Lizzie was a mentor and friend — a surrogate mother to this young mountaineer so far from home.


Lizzie Rummel's cabin

Hans later wrote of Lizzie, “At Sunburst Lake Lizzie was completely at home. She was one with the trees, the flowers and the deer that would visit her place. In the winter she loved the snow that almost covered her cabin, and she enjoyed to glide on skis through the larches and over the hills around her. I think that there has seldom been a situation where someone was so much a part of a place. In a way she was like Mount Assiniboine itself. She stood out above all around her — not domineering but like a beautiful spirit.”

Lizzie left Sunburst Lodge in 1970 and lived out the remainder of her life in Canmore. In her little house near Policeman’s Creek she continued to welcome visitors from around the world, who came to share in the peace and beauty that she radiated. Although pained by arthritic hips, she never complained. Lizzie received the Order of Canada in 1980 for her contribution to our mountain community. Not long after, on October 10 of that year, she died. Two beautiful lakes, a creek, an elementary school and a street in Canmore are named in her honour.

In 1966, the year after I first met Lizzie, I went back to Assiniboine, this time with another friend Gerry Walsh. Not wanting to bother Lizzie we stretched a piece of plastic between two trees near the campground. Of course it rained and we were wet and hungry. One day we came back from a sodden walk to find a brown paper bag by our shelter. Inside were bacon, eggs, bread, beans, and butter — all the things that taste so good around the campfire. When we asked the other campers where it had come from, they said that an older white-haired lady had left the bag. It was a gift that I will never forget. Thank you Lizzie.

By Chic Scott



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