Saskatchewan — Land of Living Skies
Capital: Regina · Population: approximately 1.23 million · Joined Confederation: 1905
Saskatchewan is the province Canadians joke about without having been there. It's flat, it's cold in winter, it doesn't have mountains, and the drive across it on the Trans-Canada Highway is the longest-feeling stretch of the cross-country trip. All true. What's also true is that Saskatchewan has some of the best night skies in North America (the licence-plate motto, "Land of Living Skies," is not marketing — the light is genuinely different here), a food culture that's a quiet mix of Ukrainian, Indigenous and British farmhouse traditions, and a social-democratic political history (medicare was invented here under Tommy Douglas in the 1960s) that shaped the rest of the country.
A Compact History
Cree, Saulteaux, Assiniboine, Dakota and Dene nations have lived across what is now Saskatchewan for millennia. The Métis Nation settled in the river valleys from the 1700s onward. The North-West Rebellion of 1885, led by Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont, played out largely in Saskatchewan — at Duck Lake, Fish Creek, and Batoche. The province was carved out of the North-West Territories in 1905, along with Alberta.
Twentieth-century Saskatchewan is the story of wheat. Mennonite, Ukrainian, German, Hutterite and Scandinavian settlers broke the prairie for farms between 1900 and 1930. The Dust Bowl and the Great Depression hit harder here than almost anywhere else in Canada. Out of that came Tommy Douglas and the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (later the NDP), who built the first universal hospital insurance in North America in the 1940s and the first universal medicare program in the 1960s.
Saskatoon
Saskatoon is the largest city in Saskatchewan, metro population about 340,000. It sits on the South Saskatchewan River, which cuts a broad valley through the prairie. Seven bridges span the river inside the city; "the City of Bridges" is the unofficial nickname.
Is Saskatoon worth visiting?
For most travellers, it's a stop rather than a destination, but it's a better stop than its reputation suggests. The Meewasin Valley Trail runs 90 kilometres along both sides of the river through the city. The Remai Modern art gallery (opened 2017) has the largest collection of Picasso linocuts in the world, which is a sentence that reads strangely and is also true. Broadway Avenue in the Nutana neighbourhood is the walkable shopping-and-restaurant strip. Wanuskewin Heritage Park, just outside town, is an Indigenous heritage site and active archaeological dig that has been continuously occupied for 6,400 years.
What's the weather like?
Extreme and sunny. Winter averages in Saskatoon are comparable to Winnipeg (highs around -10°C, lows around -21°C in January). Summer is warm (highs around 25°C in July, occasionally 32°C). Saskatoon has the most sunshine of any city in Canada at about 2,381 hours per year, which mostly means very bright, very cold winter days.
How expensive is Saskatoon?
Cheap. A one-bedroom apartment rents for CAD $1,100 to $1,400. The benchmark detached house is around CAD $390,000. Saskatchewan has a 6 percent PST on top of 5 percent GST (11 percent total). Restaurants and groceries are similar to Winnipeg.
Regina
Regina is the provincial capital, a city of about 255,000 on a flat plain in southern Saskatchewan. It was named in 1882 for Queen Victoria ("regina" is Latin for "queen"). Before that it was called Wascana — a Cree name meaning "pile of bones" — which referred to the bison-bone middens the Cree had built up at the site over centuries.
What's worth doing in Regina?
Wascana Centre — a 9.3 square kilometre park around Wascana Lake in the middle of the city — holds the Legislative Building, the Royal Saskatchewan Museum and the MacKenzie Art Gallery, and is a pleasant walk in almost any season. The RCMP Heritage Centre, at the RCMP's training academy ("Depot") on the west edge of the city, tells the story of Canada's national police force with unusual candour (including the force's role in Indigenous policy). Roughriders football at Mosaic Stadium is, for many Saskatchewan people, the single most important social event of the week between August and November.
Is Regina smaller than people expect?
Yes. The downtown is compact and walkable — you can see it all in a morning — and the city has a small-capital feel rather than a commercial-centre energy. Saskatoon has overtaken Regina in size, business activity and cultural presence, but Regina still has the legislature, the archives and the ceremonial centre of the province.
Moose Jaw & the South
Moose Jaw, population about 33,000, sits 70 km west of Regina on the Trans-Canada. Its name comes from a Cree word for a creek with a bend in the shape of a moose's jaw (or possibly from the Assiniboine word "moos gaw" meaning "warm winds" — both origins are widely claimed). The tunnels beneath downtown Moose Jaw — built in the early 20th century and used, at different times, by Chinese railway workers, bootleggers during Prohibition and possibly by Al Capone on his bootlegging runs — are the kitsch tourist attraction of the region.
Further west, Grasslands National Park protects one of the last patches of intact mixed-grass prairie in North America. It's also one of the darkest night-sky preserves on the continent. Bring a telescope.
Prince Albert & the North
Prince Albert, population about 38,000, is the gateway to the forested, lake-dotted northern half of the province. Prince Albert National Park, 200 km north of Saskatoon, is where Grey Owl lived in the 1930s. Lac La Ronge, Waskesiu Lake and the boreal lake-canoe country that stretches north from here are some of Canada's best canoeing country and some of its least-visited.
Saskatchewan FAQs
Is Saskatchewan really flat?
The southern third is, yes — you can see to the horizon in any direction. The middle third is gently rolling. The northern third is boreal forest and Precambrian shield and not flat at all. The "Saskatchewan is flat" stereotype is a southern stereotype that most of the province doesn't actually fit.
What's the time zone?
Central Standard Time year-round. Saskatchewan does not observe daylight saving, so in summer it lines up with Alberta (one hour behind Manitoba) and in winter it lines up with Manitoba (one hour ahead of Alberta). This confuses people every spring and fall.
Is there any mountain scenery?
Not really — the Cypress Hills in the southwest are the highest elevation between Labrador and the Rockies, but they're more rolling hill than mountain. For the full mountain experience you need to cross into Alberta.
What's potash?
A mineral salt mined from ancient sea deposits, used mainly as fertilizer. Saskatchewan sits on one of the world's largest reserves, and potash has been the province's second-biggest export after wheat for decades. The mining companies (Nutrien, formerly PotashCorp) are among Saskatchewan's largest employers.