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IN THIS EMAIL
  • How Peace by Chocolate, the small-town chocolate factory from Syria, is making a big impact across Canada 
  • A look at how the Nature Conservancy of Canada is working to protect and restore some of Canada's most valuable ecosystems 
  • A collection of some of Canadian Geographic's favourite lagomorph facts to celebrate the Lunar New Year 
  • An Adventure Canada trip to the Arctic
Peace by Chocolate: from Syria to Antigonish
How this small town chocolate factory in Nova Scotia is making a big impact

By Robin Esrock
The Hadhad family. (Photo courtesy Peace by Chocolate)

This is a story about peace, the human spirit, refugees, chocolate, and the promise of a small-town Canadian dream. It is a tale that inspired a community, a film, a book, the prime minister’s speech at the United Nations, and even astronauts in space. It certainly inspired me.

We begin in Damascus, where a former civil engineer named Isam Hadhad reinvented himself as a chocolatier, pouring his heart into a business that eventually grew into the second-largest chocolate manufacturer in the Middle East. He courted his future wife with a box of chocolates and a note that read: ‘I don’t make chocolate, I make happiness.” Life is good until war comes to Syria, and bombs begin to fall.

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Travel with Robin Esrock
Robin Esrock is a bestselling author, journalist, TV host and public speaker. Having travelled to over 110 countries on 7 continents, his stories and photography have appeared in major publications on five continents, including National Geographic TravelerThe GuardianThe Chicago  TribuneSouth China Morning Post and Sydney Morning Herald. A former
travel columnist for The Globe and MailVancouver SunOutpost and MSN, Robin has been profiled as a travel expert by 60 Minutes, CBC, MSNBC, ABC, CTV, Global, Travel and LeisureThe Wall Street Journal and many others.
Trips with Robin
Spotlight on conservation: Kootenay River Ranch

Thanks to contributions from donors like Kruger Products, the Nature Conservancy of Canada is restoring and protecting some of Canada’s most valuable ecosystems

By Madigan Cotterill
Kootenay River Ranch Conservation Area protects part of a critical wildlife corridor in a rapidly developing valley in the Rocky Mountain Trench in southeastern British Columbia. (Photo courtesy Nature Conservancy of Canada)

When you think of the Rocky Mountains, you likely don’t think of open grasslands and wetlands. And yet, in the valleys below the snow-capped peaks and glaciers that dominate our imagination lies an astonishing diversity of habitats that support a wide array of wildlife. This is especially true at the Kootenay River Ranch Conservation Area, which protects part of a critical wildlife corridor in a rapidly developing valley in the Rocky Mountain Trench in southeastern British Columbia.  Here, thanks to the efforts of the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) and its partners, crucial habitats are being protected and restored. 

Located in East Kootenay, B.C., the Kootenay River Ranch Conservation Area is a crucial expanse of land that encompasses prime grassland and open forest habitat for hundreds of species, some of which are at risk. Bordered by the Rocky Mountains in the east and the Purcell Mountains in the west, the area is home to dozens of ecosystems essential to maintaining the life and beauty of the region.

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11 fun lagomorph facts for Lunar New Year
It's the Year of the Rabbit! Here are Can Geo's favourite facts on the taxonomic order that houses rabbitshares and pikas 

By Can Geo Staff
We're entering the year of the rabbit! (Photo: Leo Junghans/Can Geo Photo Club)

Do rabbits really love carrots? Is Pikachu actually based on a pika? January 22 marks this year’s Lunar New Year, ushering in the Year of the Rabbit. Lunar New Year is a time-honored festival celebrated in numerous countries in Asia, including China, Vietnam, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Japan, Philippines and Indonesia, as well as by each nation’s respective diaspora here in Canada. Each lunar year corresponds to one of the 12 animals that form the Chinese zodiac. This year’s star, the rabbit — along with its fluffy cousins, the hare and the pika — belongs to the lagomorph taxonomical order. How much do you really know about them? Read on for Can Geo’s 11 favourite lagomorph facts.

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TRAVEL WITH CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC 
Featured trip: High Arctic Explorer

At the top of the planet is a whole other world. The sea is solid, the night is bright, narwhals and polar bears outnumber humans, glaciers grumble, and history is — quite literally — frozen in time. When you sail through the far north you become one of the lucky few on Earth to experience this sublime, surreal realm.  

Journey to the Canadian Arctic where you will marvel at towering icebergs, cruise pristine natural areas to spot amazing Arctic wildlife, enjoy the warmth of an Inuit welcome, and explore the spectacular west coast of Greenland. You’ll travel with local guides who know the place best and can share their cultures with you firsthand.  

Expand your knowledge of the places we visit alongside Canadian Geographic ambassador Joseph Frey and Adventure Canada experts on this life-changing journey. 

Meet your ambassador
Start your adventure
Get inspired!
Life at the Arctic floe edge
Welcome to the sinaaq, or floe edge, where landfast ice meets open Arctic Ocean and species thrive
By Susan Nerberg

Check out these other upcoming trips:

- Egypt Nile Cruise with Joseph Frey
- Annapurna Sanctuary Trek with Javier Frutos

- Classic Dolomites with Marlis Butcher

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