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Don't forget, restraints can bring out the creativity in you!
Now go forth and astound us all with your devious profiles!
let's start with the east coast. the east coast is rugged and oceanic - lots of rocks, windswept trees, and fishing. that's way out in newfoundland and labrador. i've never really been that far east. in new brunswick, the tides are incredible. google "hopewell rocks." when the tide is out, there are these huge wet beaches with crabs and shells and stuff. nova scotia is pretty similar, i guess. the weather is often very mild, regulated by the ocean. never to hot, never to cold. quebec is, well, french. southern quebec is actually really historical and interesting - montreal and old quebec city are so beautiful. and northern quebec is rugged wilderness - huge fjiords, if you keep going north you find the ocean again, there are whales and stuff like that i live in ontario. i kind of hate southern ontario: it's the most heavily populated place in canada, pretty much huge cities like windsor and toronto. i prefer the north. northern ontario is very much shaped by glaciers that spread across the land a long time ago. i love camping, canoeing and hiking, so i spend a lot of time in the wilderness. my mom is a forester as well. um well, it is very hard to describe. up towards hudson's bay, it becomes fairly swampy, so i prefer northwest ontario - lake superior. it is the largest freshwater lake in the world, i believe. i spent six days hiking 60km on the coast of lake superior. picture huge rock cliffs and rugged white pine trees clinging to the stone, rugged hills with huge crashing waves roaring at the bottom. it is so beautiful and wild. i live in a forest/farmland area that is south of lake superior. there are beautiful hardwood and softwood forests, fields and lakes all over the place.
wow this is a lot harder than i realized.
i haven't spent a lot of time in manitoba, i don't think there is anything hugely interesting there. saskatchewan is made up of huge sprawling plains, picture fields of wheat as far as the eye can see, no trees in sight, nothing but the huge fields and wide expanse of the sky. yeah. that's saskatchewan. next is alberta. i was born there. it is the transition between the plains of saskatchewan and the mountains of british columbia - made up of foothills and growing mountains. when you get to british columbia, the landscape is almost surreal. huge mountains and valleys transform your world with huge towering forests and mountain peaks that cut across the sky. fjiords bring you to the ocean, deep salt water canals, where it is often like a cool rainforest - lots of vegetation and beautiful wildlife.
lot's of water and wilderness in canada.
i'm not going to describe the northern territories because i haven't been to them and wouldn't want to taint their beauty with false things. i'll go there some day.
cheers!
--
~§å®ßø¥~
"You've got to stand for something or you'll fall for anything."
--
~§å®ßø¥~
"You've got to stand for something
or you'll fall for anything."
Visit my profile, ~StarBoyDeath, that's me.
--
~§å®ßø¥~
"You've got to stand for something
or you'll fall for anything."
Visit my profile, ~StarBoyDeath, that's me.
let's start with the east coast. the east coast is rugged and oceanic - lots of rocks, windswept trees, and fishing. that's way out in newfoundland and labrador. i've never really been that far east. in new brunswick, the tides are incredible. google "hopewell rocks." when the tide is out, there are these huge wet beaches with crabs and shells and stuff. nova scotia is pretty similar, i guess. the weather is often very mild, regulated by the ocean. never to hot, never to cold. quebec is, well, french. southern quebec is actually really historical and interesting - montreal and old quebec city are so beautiful. and northern quebec is rugged wilderness - huge fjiords, if you keep going north you find the ocean again, there are whales and stuff like that
wow this is a lot harder than i realized.
i haven't spent a lot of time in manitoba, i don't think there is anything hugely interesting there. saskatchewan is made up of huge sprawling plains, picture fields of wheat as far as the eye can see, no trees in sight, nothing but the huge fields and wide expanse of the sky. yeah. that's saskatchewan. next is alberta. i was born there. it is the transition between the plains of saskatchewan and the mountains of british columbia - made up of foothills and growing mountains. when you get to british columbia, the landscape is almost surreal. huge mountains and valleys transform your world with huge towering forests and mountain peaks that cut across the sky. fjiords bring you to the ocean, deep salt water canals, where it is often like a cool rainforest - lots of vegetation and beautiful wildlife.
lot's of water and wilderness in canada.
i'm not going to describe the northern territories because i haven't been to them and wouldn't want to taint their beauty with false things.
cheers!
--
~§å®ßø¥~
"You've got to stand for something
or you'll fall for anything."
Visit my profile, ~StarBoyDeath, that's me.
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