Great Canadian Rivers

Watch Great Canadian Rivers

  • 2002
  • 3 Seasons
  • 8.6  (11)

The show Great Canadian Rivers is a documentary series that premiered in 2001 and is hosted by Canadian actor and musician, Tom Jackson. The series explores the many rivers in Canada and their significance to the country's history, culture, and environment. Each episode focuses on a different river, with Jackson taking viewers on a journey down the waterway, from its source to its mouth, and highlighting key landmarks and stories along the way. Through interviews with local experts and residents, Jackson offers insight into how the rivers have shaped the lives of the people who live along their banks, and how they continue to play an important role in both indigenous and modern Canadian culture.

The series is divided into 13 episodes, with each episode focusing on a different river. The rivers covered in Great Canadian Rivers include the Yukon, the St. Lawrence, the Mackenzie, the Bow, the Churchill, the Ottawa, the Saskatchewan, the Red, the Fraser, the Athabasca, the Columbia, the Peace, and the Slave.

Throughout the series, Jackson showcases the diversity of the Canadian landscape, from the rocky mountains and lush forests to the windswept tundra and frozen arctic. Viewers are treated to stunning footage of the rivers themselves, as well as the surrounding wildlife and natural beauty.

The series also offers a glimpse into the history of Canada, with episodes exploring the role that the rivers played in the fur trade, the exploration and settlement of the country, and the building of key infrastructure such as the Canadian Pacific Railway.

While the focus of the series is on the rivers themselves, Great Canadian Rivers also touches on contemporary issues facing Canada, such as environmental concerns and the importance of preserving the natural landscape for future generations.

Overall, Great Canadian Rivers is an engaging and informative series that offers a fascinating look at the rivers that have helped shape the culture, history, and identity of Canada. With Tom Jackson as the host, viewers are in the hands of a knowledgeable and passionate guide who brings each river to life and offers insight into what makes them so important to the Canadian psyche.

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Seasons
Hayes River
5. Hayes River
January 1, 2004
The Hayes River was the only navigable route from Fur Trade Headquarters on Hudson Bay to posts south of Lake Winnipeg. Its sudden, early fall into disuse ensured that it remain in pristine wild state while evocative remnants of its auspicious past line its banks The landscape is spectacular - boreal forest gradually becomes arctic lowlands, and the river empties into the vast Hudson Bay estuary.
Red Deer River
4. Red Deer River
January 1, 2004
The Red Deer has a magnificent mix of nature and culture. It rises out of a glacier in Banff, meanders through the grasslands, and cuts through the Alberta badlands. The ancient waterway has carved buffalo-jumps out of the plains, has the highest concentration of tipi rings and medicine wheels in the world, and continues to expose great paleontological treasures in Dinosaur Park.
Margaree Rivers
3. Margaree Rivers
January 1, 2004
The Margaree River shows itself off best in autumn, when it is framed by the vibrant reds and oranges of changing trees. It makes it's way over waterfalls, through deep salmon pools and across floodplains, en route to the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The Margaree Valley has among the richest and oldest cultural heritage in Canada; Miqmag, Acadian and Scot
St. Croix River
2. St. Croix River
January 1, 2004
The St. Croix International Waterway has been an important travel way for close to 12, 000 years, and since 1798, has marked the boundary between the United States and Canada. It has always provided fishing stock in it's lower reaches. And through access to forests in the ship building era, played a key role in the development of the maritime railways.
Athabaska River
1. Athabaska River
January 1, 2004
The Athabasca is the longest and largest river in Alberta, and one of few relatively unaltered by human impoundment. The river begins at Columbia Icefield, and ends at the Peace-Athabasca Delta - the largest inland freshwater delta in the world. Adjacent to the river, large actively migrating sand dune fields roll over the trees, creating skeleton forests and a near desert environment.
Description
  • Premiere Date
    February 2, 2002
  • IMDB Rating
    8.6  (11)