Occupying the northern half of the North American continent, Canada's land mass is 9, 093, 507 km2, making it the second-largest country in the world after Russia. From east to west, Canada encompasses six time zones.
In addition to its coastlines on the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, Canada has a third sea coast on the Arctic Ocean, giving it the longest coastline of any country.
To the south, Canada shares an 8, 891 kilometre boundary with the United States. To the north, the Arctic islands come within 800 kilometres of the North Pole. Canada's neighbour across the Arctic Ocean is Russia.
Because of the harsh northern climate, only 12 percent of the land is suitable for agriculture. Thus, most of the 30 million population live within a few hundred kilometres of the southern border, where the climate is milder, in a long thin band stretching between the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans.
If you fly over Manitoba or northern Ontario in summer, you will see more water than land: lakes, big and small, so many that they could not possibly be counted. It has been estimated that Canada has one-seventh of the world's fresh water. In addition to the Great Lakes, which it shares with the United States, Canada has many large rivers and lakes.
Canada's Climate
Canada's climate is characterized by its diversity, as temperature and precipitation differ from region to region and from season to season. While it is true that in the extreme north temperatures climb above 0�C for only a few months a year, most Canadians live within 300 kilometres of the country's southern border, where mild springs, warm summers and pleasantly crisp autumns prevail at least seven months of the year.
The seasons dictate the look of the land: according to whether the natural environment is in a state of dormancy or growth, Canadians may be alpine skiing...or water skiing.
While seasonal change signals fluctuations in temperature and the number of hours of sunshine, the shifting position of air masses also plays a part. The usual air flow from west to east is often disrupted in winter when cold, dry air moves down from the Arctic, and in summer when warm, tropical air moves up from the southeast. Added to these factors are the effects of mountain ranges, plains and large bodies of water. Today's weather!
The West Coast
The coast of British Columbia has the most temperate climate in Canada, thanks to warm, moist Pacific Ocean airstreams. The province's most populous cities, Vancouver and Victoria, enjoy comfortable and relatively dry summers and mild, wet winters. Snow seldom falls in low-lying areas, and when it does, it usually melts the same day.
The Cordilleran mountain system, which includes the Coastal Range and the Rocky Mountains, alters the warm, moist Pacific air from the interior plains of the Prairie Provinces. As the moist air is forced to rise over the mountains, it cools and falls on the western slopes in heavy amounts of precipitation, as rain at lower altitudes and snow at higher ones. The valleys between the mountain ranges receive much less precipitation and experience warm, even scorching, summers.
The Prairies
Part of the vast central plains of North America, the Canadian Prairies extend east from the Rocky Mountains to the Great Lakes. Here, cold winters and hot summers are the norm, with relatively light precipitation. For instance, in the dry southern portion of Saskatchewan, annual precipitation averages less than 300 millimetres. Manitoba, the wettest of the Prairie Provinces, receives about 500 millimetres each year.
Spring rains and dry autumn conditions have helped make the Prairies one of the top grain-growing areas of the world. Farming is not without its risks, however, in the form of wind erosion, drought, floods, thunderstorms and hailstorms and unseasonably early autumn frosts.
Among the most remarkable features of the Alberta winter is the "Chinook," a warm, usually dry winter wind that affects much of southern Alberta. The Chinook sweeps down from the Rocky Mountains and has been known to raise temperatures as much as 10�C in one hour.
The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Region (Brockville region)
More than half the Canadian population lives close to the Great Lakes or along the St. Lawrence River . Here, winter brings heavy snowfalls. Summers tend to be longer and more humid than elsewhere in Canada. Rainfall varies little year to year and is ample enough to sustain some of the best farming areas in Canada. Mean daily temperatures range from the mid-teens to low twenties from mid-June to mid-September, with week-long heat waves in the 30s not uncommon. Warm, sunny days and crisp, cool nights make the fall season popular.
Atlantic Canada
The combined influence of continental air masses with air currents off the ocean give this region one of the most rugged and most variable climates anywhere in the country. In winter, mean temperatures can vary markedly as Arctic air is replaced by maritime air from passing storms. Snowfall in winter is relatively heavy, and fog is common in spring and early summer. The warmest month is July, when mean temperatures are in the 16 to 18�C range, except near coastal areas where August is often warmer.
The North
Spanning the entire country north of the Prairies and the populated Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Region is the boreal forest. This area is usually snow-covered more than half the year; its "summer" - the frost-free period - lasts barely two months. Precipitation is light, except along the coast of Labrador where the influence of Atlantic storms is felt.
Farther north, above the tree-line, lays the Arctic. Here, temperatures rise above freezing only a few weeks a year. Just a meter below the delicate but tenacious vegetation that grows in summer, the ground remains permanently frozen.