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IN THIS EMAIL:

  • Learn about Canadian Geographic's new series, Discovery: Language, which will take readers on a linguistic journey across the lands and waters we now call Canada 
     

  • Researchers are taking a new approach to kelp conservation; read about how they are learning to protect kelp forests from climate change 
  • Looking back on one of our favourite features: How Newfoundland's cod industry changed overnight 

  • Ready for your next adventure? Learn about karibu adventures and their incredible trip exploring Vancouver Island with RCGS Ambassador Robin Esrock

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Introducing: Discovery Language


A new Canadian Geographic series in print and online will take readers on a linguistic journey across the lands and waters we now call Canada
 

By Gin Sexsmith

Gin Sexsmith is the Discovery Language editor at Canadian Geographic. (Photo: Alyssa Bardy)
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Our immensely popular Canadian Wildlife Photography of the Year competition is accepting entries until June 30, 2025.
 

This year, we are awarding our grand prize winner the opportunity to take on a two-year term as a Canadian Geographic Emerging Photographer-in-Residence. During this time, they will have up to three winning images in print, be promoted in Canadian Geographic’s masthead, have opportunities to shoot on assignment and more! We also have four category winners and runners-up, who will also have their images published in our November/December 2025 issue.
 

As always, we’re looking for your best shots of wildlife in Canada — plus non-animal wildlife!  The Canadian Wildlife Photographer of the Year will be selected from among entries to all four categories. Visit the competition website to read the full list of rules and read about the four categories.  

Enter now

Lending a kelping hand: how genetics research is innovating seaweed restoration

Researchers are taking a new approach to kelp conservation by studying how their genes could be key in protecting B.C. kelp forests from climate change
 

By Hannah Charness

A washed-up stipe and bulb of bull kelp (Nereocystis luetkeana) on the coast of Barkley Sound, B.C. (Photo: Hannah Charness)
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Cod moratorium: How Newfoundland’s cod industry disappeared overnight 

A bountiful cod industry is pictured on a 1920s map. Decades later, a moratorium would change everything.

By
Michela Rosano 
One of a series of advertising posters to promote Canadian exports and trade within the British empire, this map was displayed in British train stations, schools, shops and factories. (Image: "Canada and Newfoundland. Portraying their products and fisheries." Library and Archives Canada, ACC. No. 1983-27-36)
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Featured partner: karibu adventures
Sea kayaking, wildlife viewing & Indigenous exploration
Departing Aug. 11, 2025

There are few animals that elicit such a sense of awe as the killer whale. And there is no better place in the world to see them than in the famed Johnstone Strait and Broughton Archipelago off the remote, northeast coast of Vancouver Island. A land of deep, glacier carved channels, snow-capped peaks and lush coastal rainforest, this is the ancestral home of the Kwakwa̱ka̱’wakw people. 

Their iconic art, ancient totem poles and indomitable spirit are imprinted throughout this wild and beautiful place.This special edition six-day tour combines the best of the North Island. We spend three days kayaking the Inside Passage and some of the most wildlife rich waters in the world, on the look out for orca and humpback whales, Steller sea lions, dolphins, sea otters and more. 
We journey into the Great Bear Rainforest on the BC mainland, in search of grizzly bears fishing for salmon. And we take a deep dive into Indigenous culture and history, with a unique invitation into the lives and land of the Kwakwa̱ka̱’wakw people.
Book your spot
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