Kalyna Country

Kalyna Country is a rural region of Alberta to the east of Elk Island National Park on either side of the North Saskatchewan River, straddling the Lakeland of Northern Alberta and the eastern portion of Central Alberta. The region marked by its history of Austrian, Polish, Romanian, and especially Ukrainian settlement and immigration. Here one is "behind the garlic curtain" in the "borshch belt" of Canada. This is the region where the first Ukrainians settled in Canada in 1892, followed by thousands of others.

The name kalyna ("kah-LIN-ah") in Ukrainian refers to the "low bush cranberry", a popular local wild fruit and close cousin of Ukraine's national floral emblem, the guelder rose.

Understand
This region is a self-declared "eco-museum", established in 1991 on the 100th anniversary of the arrival of the first Ukrainians in Canada, that seeks to preserve and showcase the local, predominately Ukrainian, culture of the region. The goal was to make Kalyna County the recognized "heartland" of Ukrainian-Canadian culture, just as Acadiana is for Cajuns. The eco-museum trust defines the core of Kalyna Country as Thorhild County, St. Paul County, Lamont County, Two Hills County, Minburn County, Beaver County and all the towns, villages, Indian reservations, Métis settlements within. But they sometimes also includes listings on their website from neighbouring regions such as Strathcona County, Sturgeon County, Vermillion River Country, the Municipal District of Wainwright, Westlock County, which expands the region to about 20,000 km² in size. This guide will only list accommodations and attractions in the core regions (minus St. Paul County), but much of the description of the landscape and culture is equally applicable to the Lakeland to the northeast. Kalyna Country is mostly made up of very small towns and villages, strung along the rail lines that once were the lifelines of the Prairies, as well as vast open fields between the train tracks with people living on isolated "homesteads" (farms). However with the consolidation of farms, and lure of oil-and-gas jobs in cities like Edmonton, the on-farm population is becoming smaller with each generation. In most cases, there aren't enough people left to use and maintain the historic houses, churches, community halls, and businesses built during region's settlement in the 1892-1914 era, or the prosperous 1920s. Sadly, much of the interesting built heritage had been abandoned or ruined, with a few examples saved at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village, an open-air museum. As far as intangible culture, a few Ukrainian traditions live on, or have been transformed in entertainment, for example stage dancing at the annual Pysanka Festival in Vegreville.

Of course, the Ukrainians were not the first to the region, and there is also a large Indigenous and French-speaking presence, from the First Nations ("Indian"), Métis ("mixed" First Nation-European), and French-Canadian cultures.



Get in
Most people with arrive via the Yellowhead Highway from Edmonton in the west or Lloydminster in the east. Edmonton is the closest international airport.

Get around
Only a private automobile can get you around this region, except once per year when the eco-museum trust puts on a coach tour.

See




Do
The Kylna Country Trust website lists 62 lakes and ponds that have game fish in them, as well as 25 golf courses.



Buy
Farmers' markets are found at:
 * Andrew – Andrew Arena. Apr-Oct: Sa 1-4PM.
 * Fort Saskatchewan – CN Station (parking lot). Jul-Sep: Th 4:30-6:30PM..
 * Gibbons – Gibbons Curling Rink, July-Sep: Th 6:30-8:30PM..
 * Innisfree – Senior’s Citizens Hall 1st & 3rd W 10:30AM-12:30 PM. April-Dec..
 * Long Lake Provincial Park – Day Use Area II off Hwy. 831 (S of Boyle) Jun-Aug: Sa 11AM-2PM..
 * Mannville – Recreation Centre. Year-round: Sa 10AM-2PM..
 * Morinville – Library, 10119-100 Ave. Jun-Sep: F noon-6PM..
 * Redwater – Pioneer Club. Jun-Sep: Th 4-7PM..
 * Sherwood Park
 * Festival Place, 100 Festival Way (parking lot). May-Oct: W 5-8PM..
 * Baseline Farmers’ Market, 390 Baseline Rd. (in the Home Depot parking lot). May-Sep: W 4-8PM..
 * County Market, 100 Ordze Ave. (Chamber of Commerce). July-Sep: Sa 10AM–3PM..
 * Smoky Lake – Agricultural Complex, April-Dec: Sa 10AM-noon..
 * St. Albert – St. Anne & St. Thomas Streets from July-Sept. At St. Albert Place & 55 St. Anne Street. Oct-Dec: Sa 10AM-3PM..
 * Tofield – Community Hall Main Street. April– Dec 2nd & 4th F, Feb Mar Dec: second F 2-5PM. No Market in Jan..
 * Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village – Hwy 16. Weekends & special events May-Sep: 10AM–6PM..
 * Vegreville – Elks Hall, 5002 – 55th Ave. Mar-Dec: F 8-11:30AM..
 * Vermilion – Elks Hall, 5018 – 49 Ave. Mar-Dec: Tu 10AM–1PM..
 * Viking – Community Hall, May-Dec: Th 2-4:30PM..
 * Vilna Country Market – Arena Complex, Main Street. May-Sep: Sa 1-3PM. Special Sales April 8, June 3..
 * Wainwright – Prairie Rose Farmers’ Market – 731 – 2 Ave. First Saturday of each month Mar-Dec: 10AM– 1PM..
 * Westlock – Bargain Shop Mall – 10211 – 100 St. Every F 11AM– 3PM..

Eat
Make sure to have some perogies at one of the small town diners or cafes.



Sleep
The Kalyna Country website lists more than 80 campgrounds and RV parks in the region. Hotels can be found in Lamont, Vegreville, St. Paul, Bonnyville, Fort Saskatchewan, and Sherwood Park.

Connect
Over 90% of towns and villages in Alberta have a public library with internet access. Examples in Kalyna Country include Vegreville, St. Paul, Mundare, and Lamont.

Go next
For more rural Ukrainian-Canadian settlements see Alberta's Peace Country, East Central Saskatchewan, and the Prairie Mountain and Interlake regions of Manitoba. For Ukrainian-Canadian culture in an urban context, try (in declining order of the community's size) Edmonton, Toronto, Winnipeg, or Saskatoon.

For other ethnic enclaves in Alberta, try the Scandinavian regions near Camrose and Red Deer, the French-Canadians in the Peace Country, the St. Albert-Morinville area, and in the Bonnyville-St. Paul area, or the Mormons in Southern Alberta.

Kalyna country's equivalent in Brazil, is the area around the city of Prudentópolis, which was also settled by Ukrainians.