The
Kalyna Country Ecomuseum is a heritage and eco-tourism district in East Central
Alberta, named after the highbush cranberry plant, pronounced (Ka-lin-na)
in Ukrainian. Kalyna berries were a popular source of food
amongst the early pioneers, fur traders and natives. Kalyna Country is a
year round playground with culture as diverse as the
landscape that offers it. Here the Aspen Parkland and the
Boreal Forest converge, split by the scenic
North Saskatchewan River Valley,
all amidst thousands of hectares of prime agricultural land.
Throughout
the region you will see natural rolling hills, abundant livestock and
wildlife, beautiful crops and farmland, parks and wilderness areas,
unique roadside attractions, scenic hilltop views, pioneer homesteads
and picturesque valleys.
All waiting to be discovered
by you!
Leave
the hustle & bustle behind. Pack the camper, hit the highways, take the
trails, and enjoy a journey into our history, culture, and adventure in
Kalyna Country.

Our Proud
Legacy at a Glance...
East Central
Alberta can rightly be described as a wellspring of Canada's Western
heritage. For untold centuries native bands roamed alongside vast herds
of bison. Early trailblazers include Anthony Henday who came in 1754,
Peter Pond, Peter Fidler, David Thompson, and the artist Paul Kane.
Legendary lawman Sam Steele forged through Kalyna Country during the
great March West in 1874, and Sandford Fleming surveyed the region prior
to the coming of the railway in 1905 and the ensuing boomtown era.
The historic
North
Saskatchewan River
first linked Edmonton with the outside world by means of canoe and york
boat, and for a time, steamboats. Fort George and Buckingham House,
founded in 1792, were part of a succession of trading posts that spanned
the length of the lush river valley. A preserved part of the
Victoria Trail
is the oldest road in Alberta, and leads to both the Victoria
Settlement historic site and the new Métis Crossing, to be
officially unveiled this summer.
In the
late 1800s the Kalyna Country region attracted a massive influx of
settlers, many from Eastern Europe, in the process becoming the oldest
and largest agricultural colony established by Canada's Ukrainian
pioneers. Their legacy is evident in the more than 100 Byzantine Rite
churches that dot the picturesque countryside. Today over 40 museums and
historic sites showcase the rich multicultural heritage that is yours to
explore between Alberta's Capital City area and the Saskatchewan border.