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More provincial parks offering Internet access

A lone paddler on Isaac lake in Bowron Lake provincial park. (BC Parks) A lone paddler on Isaac lake in Bowron Lake provincial park. (BC Parks)
A lone paddler on Isaac lake in Bowron Lake provincial park. (BC Parks)

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This is great for people who otherwise could not get out camping due to work obligations. Now it may make it possible for them to spend a little more quality time with the family.

Rob

More provincial parks offering Internet access

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More provincial parks offering Internet access

Date: Saturday Aug. 13, 2011 9:04 AM ET

Surfing the Web from a campsite in the great outdoors may seem odd to some Canadians, but it's becoming easier for patrons of the country's provincial parks to go online.

Of all provinces and territories Nova Scotia leads the way, offering "hotspots" at 14 provincial parks. Meanwhile Newfoundland and Labrador is experimenting with Internet access at five of its provincial parks.

In northern British Columbia, the remote Meziadin Lake park offers a wireless connection from its campground, for a fee of $5 per day. However, B.C. Parks has reportedly said it has no immediate plans to expand Wi-Fi service elsewhere.

Last summer Saskatchewan began offering Internet hotspots at Cypress Hills park in the southwest corner of the province.

And in Ontario, wireless connections were installed at the Pinery Provincial Park on Lake Huron in 2010. Park officials said they set up the service after campers began asking for a way to stay connected during their stay.

In the past, Parks Canada has also said it was considering adding online connectivity to areas of its parks to help boost the number of visitors it receives each year.

Owners of private campgrounds have also begun to offer wireless Internet to customers. At the Barrie KOA north of Toronto, owner Amy Raposo told a local newspaper earlier this summer that the she opted to supply Wi-Fi access in response "to peoples' reliance on technology."

The trend has also gained a toehold south of the border. California has set up Wi-Fi service in all 52 of its state parks, and boasted last year that it was receiving positive feedback about the initiative.

Wi-Fi is also available "in very limited areas" of Wyoming's famous Yellowstone National Park, partly to help ensure visitor safety.

However, park officials there have received complaints from hikers who overheard phone conversations while on back-country trails, suggesting that striking a balance between those who want to stay connected and those who want a break from modern communications could be tricky.

Peter Chow-White, a communications professor at Simon Fraser University, said the trend hints at what, for some, has become an increasingly blurry line between work life and private life.

"More and more people want to remain connected, even when they are camping in the great outdoors," Chow-White said in a statement posted to the university's website this week.

"They want to update their vacation in real time on social media like Facebook," he added. "For some, there is a dividing line between being connected and being unconnected, for others those lines have disappeared."

With files from The Canadian Press

Comments are now closed for this story

korie
said
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camping wifi...i can't get better than dial up speeds and i live just a few minutes off of the main line! telus sold internet rights to a society (that in the only provider based upon location) that now divvies up the bandwidth between a few thousand customers, used to be a few hundred but if you live here you only get the option of 1 provider thanks to telus and it's rental agreements. the more customers, the slower the speed! i want net flix but it takes a full 24 hours to download a show. i have a business but telus will not accept me as an internet customer (but they are fine as a phone customer) because they already sold the bandwidth rights to the society, the society will not give me enough bandwidth because they could only get so much from telus. maybe i should move out to one of these camp sites to get better service than telus is willing or able to provide to their interior customers?


Dino
said
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Sure, like hauling a trailer with generator, quad, dirt bike and sat tv is any different!


Rick
said
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Well I guess the 24 of beer and the smokes have been replaced with wireless internet. One habit replaces another.


Linda in Vancouver
said
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We take our kids camping to get them away from all of this screen time.Why would we spend all that time and effort to go somewhere nice if all we end up doing is the same things we do at home? For our kids,they'd be doing the same things they do at home,except they'd be doing it ouside. We have a cell phone when we camp.They're great fo emergencies.But we don't use it on a regular basis when we're camping.Most of the time they don't work in the mountains anyway.As far as sharing their experiences with all their friends, they can do that when they get home.If they spend more time camping,and less time on the computer or the phone,they will have more experiences to share.And better experiences,I am sure.We have their full attention when they aren't on line or waiting for a text message.


Carol
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I think it's sad that people can't leave behind their busy lives and jobs for just one week, or even one weekend, to spend time with thier families. The children will not always be children, and they won't remember what you bought them at the toy store with all that money you are making but they will remember how you spent time with them to teach them to fish or swim, walk in the woods or sit around a bonfire.


Peter Frampton
said
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Anyone who can't go a week without the www is an addict. Addictions are not healthy. I can understand if you're running a business and you need to keep on top of things but then why are you taking a vacation? This mostly appeals to pathetic narcissists who actually believe the world cares about what they're doing 24/7. Get over yourselves. The world was going before you were born and it will go on after you die. If you can't give your family your undivided attention on a camping trip, you'll be remembered as the guy/gal who didn't care about the family camping trip. What misguided priorities some people have.


Tent pitcher
said
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what ever happened to just camping? Spending time with family and friends, leaving electronic social devices at home? The days where you pitch a tent, cook food over a fire, and share good times in real time? Not a great idea. I'm off to go camping the old way....


Chris, Alberta
said
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You can always say "don't use it if you don't want to" but part of the experience of the wild is to know that you are out there and away from the reach of modern civilization. Sure it's great to have communication access literally anywhere and now with a sat phone you can. There is even cell service (a few bars) at the top of Everest. I love modern technology but I also miss the good old days when life was simpler and there were places you could go where you were truly on your own, out-of-touch and self-reliant in all respects. I see the day coming when that will be gone...


Mark
said
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How fast can you google 'What to do when confronted by a bear?'


stevo
said
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This just in... Not to be outdone by the wireless announcement from the park system the Canadian Business Association has announced that it will be encouraging businesses to plant trees, stock the ornamental fountain in their lobby with bass and trout, relocate beavers, squirrels and moose, and put outhouses on every floor so that employees can partake in the outdoor experience from the comfort of their work cubicle. What's the point of camping if you feel the need for the internet? About the only thing more ridiculous than this is the Church announcing that they now have wireless available in the confessional.


Anthony
said
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Love it or hate it. This is the life some people have Prof. Some technology you don't need - until you use it. Then your hooked.


maggie
said
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The provincial park we go to in North Eastern Ontario is in a remote area, cell phones don't work. There is computer access there. It ticks the kids off because they can't text their friends, And no five bucks each for them to use the computer.


jazz
said
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complete nonsense. we do not need the internet 24/7 even in a campground for crying out loud. if you are 'so important' that you can't get away because of 'work commitments', you have a terrible employer or more likely, you have some issues yourself.


Adapting or Adopting?
said
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Doesn't matter what we think, it's supply and demand and all about running a recreation business. Recreation is a state of mind. Notice older folks don't have cell phones, while teenagers text 24-7 @ 365. What concerns me is one day a solar flare will take out comms satellites, the internet and the power grid. How will the youth integrate in 24 hours as their batteries die and the cell tower battery back-up trickles to an end. Humans are very adaptive creatures.


Rob
said
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This is great for people who otherwise could not get out camping due to work obligations. Now it may make it possible for them to spend a little more quality time with the family.


Prof. Pye Chartt
said
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"Hey, Terry. We're out here in the peace and quiet for a few days, getting away from it all. How are you? What's new? Remember to schedule that barbeque fundraiser for next Saturday. I'm working on finishing the ACME Widget proposal today. Should have it done by midnight. I'll email it to you! This whole back-to-nature thing is fantastic. A little boring, though. You know how I like the frenzied action of a hyperactive, kinetic-frenetic society. This unwinding is doing me some good, I think. If I lose my wireless connection, however, I'm going to freak out and spew on that Park Ranger. Anyway, I gotta get back to work on this proposal. Kathy and the kids have gone out in a boat or something. Not sure where they are. I'll text or email you later this afternoon. If you have any e-jokes today, forward them my way. Thanks. Take care."


Gary Earle
said
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The whole point of camping is getting away and being with nature. The new generation doesn't know how to enjoy these things because of the invisable dependance cord between their brains and the electronic devices they so need to have and use. Get out and see what so many older people know whats there, you might be surprised to find that nature has alot to offer. The natural beauty of the land, plants and animals. To see this you have to go out and open your eyes, and show your children whats there. To have access to internet you should open your wallet. Nothing wrong with staying in contact for emergencies, but if they want access make them pay for it. Not have the tax payer!


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