The Turtle’s Back - Submitted to CBC’s Search for the 7 Wonders
of Canada
There’s a rise of land in
southwest Manitoba that embodies the
understated greatness of Canada.
We can take back-roads lined by 100 year-old oaks up to Lake William
– watching for moose, elk and white-tailed deer along the way. Curving around a
carefully tended park we come to the trail’s head where we’re invited to hike,
ski or ride up to the Turtle’s Back. A look-out tower steps
us over the tree line at the apex and even we who live here are struck by the grandeur
of the Prairie from this vantage point.
Metis and Dakota hunters once
spotted herds of bison from this perch. Remnants of their settlements,
ceremonies and enduring spirit remain in this place. This was the first land to
appear on the Canadian prairies after the last ice age and has for 10,000 years
provided protection and food.
Looking south and west, to the
US border, the International Peace Garden
towers rise above the woodland canopy. To the north we point out grain elevators
in Ninga, Boissevain, and Minto
– small places with big personality. For a glorious two weeks in summer our eyes
brush over a patchwork of blue flax, yellow canola, golden winter wheat, cut
through here and there by green-bluffed ravines. British, Mennonite, and Belgian
settlers have added their layers of colour to life and land. We bow in
thankfulness, resolving to elevate these hills and this country as a refuge for
all its children. Gentle, persistent hope in action, like a prairie breeze,
makes us, each of us, great.
Shedding all distraction we
take in the magnificence of a tea-cup blue sky. Our timing is perfect as spreading
fans of setting light on one hand cause a rising, golden harvest moon on the
other - while loons yodel from misty ponds below. How sweet to be on paths less
traveled and how ‘cool to be hick’ in the Turtle
Mountains – one of the seven wonders
of Canada.
Note. ‘Cool to be Hick’ is a quote from a local high
school student who was explaining the ‘settledness’
he feels in this.