MEDIA

The story of the Cassiar Cannery is an intriguing one. With its colourful history and colourful houses along the shoreline, we work with different media partners from helping partner tourism organizations showcase the North Coast to hosting independent media to scientists sharing their research.

Books

Books that Feature Cassiar Cannery

Comfortably Wild: The Best Glamping Destinations in North America
by Mike & Anne Howard

Take The Long Way Home by Jon Claytor

Blogs

Blog Articles

Growing Your Business with Events & Retreats

Top 10 Unusual Accommodations in BC

Weekend Trip from Vancouver to Prince Rupert, BC

Riding Route 16

How to Storm Watch in BC – Enjoying Winter Weather at a Cosy Retreat

Plan Your Trip to Prince Rupert

Next Door to Alaska – Discovering the Allure of Northern BC

BC Bike Ride – Smithers and Terrace

Family Friendly Resorts in Canada (by VIA Rail)

BC Bike Ride North 2017 Video

Spirit of the Skeena Swim

Television

Television

TV: Big Coast TV: Prince Rupert – Cannery Row

Newspapers & Magazines

Articles from Online and Print Newspapers and Magazines

Globe and Mail: Canada’s Hidden Gems!

Global News: Take a Trip to the Past in a Historic BC Town

Calgary Herald: BC’s Most Underrated Tourism Destinations

iheartradio: Cassiar Cannery Continues to Clean Up 12 Years Later

Vancouver Sun: Head to Prince Rupert for History and Adventure

UK Times: Two Weeks in British Columbia

Northword: Gone but not forgotten

Pique Magazine: A Many Splendored Thing (about Ecology Week)

Westworld

National Geographic: “As travel opens up, glamping is helping ‘indoorsy’ families get outside”

Science & Research

Scientists are always in various stages of their research. As publications become available, we will continue to update this area.

Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science Volume 232, 5 January 2020, 106516

Relationships between Potentially Toxic Elements in intertidal sediments and their bioaccumulation by benthic invertebrates

Assessing the relationship between community dispersion and disturbance in a soft‐sediment ecosystem

Cassiar Cannery welcomes UNBC biology students for research visit

UNBC class researches historically significant area of Skeena River

Northern B.C. tidal worms provide a window into human ecological impacts

Students Study Skeena River Plants Thanks to Donor Support

UNBC Class Researches Historically Significant Area of BC’s Skeena River