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Great Bear Snowshed (2007) BC Highway 5 Nicola Valley (2007) Between Hope and Kamloops , Highway 5 is known as the Coquihalla Highway (colloquially "the Coq", pronounced "coke"). It is a 186-kilometre-long (116 mi) freeway , varying between four and six lanes with a speed limit of 120 km/h (75 mph) for most of its length.
Canyon Drive — — Highway 944:1174: 32.85: 20.41 Cecil Lake Road north for Fort St. John: 264 Road north of Rose Prairie: Rose Prairie Road — — Section not part of unofficial Hwy 103 Highway 945:1564: 15.40: 9.57 Hwy 27 north of Vanderhoof: Nechako River: Braeside Road — — Highway 951:1502: 7.70: 4.78 Daajing Giids: Hwy 16 near the ...
In the mountains of the Pacific Northwest, on the Coquihalla Highway, a small job turns into a major headache and a father's dreams of his stepson joining the family business backfires as Brandon Kodallas' aspirations of being a gym instructor and his disdain to drive a manual transmission vehicles does not sit well with anybody else, while ...
Needle Peak is a prominent 2,095-metre (6,873-foot) mountain summit located in the Coquihalla Summit Recreation Area, in the North Cascades of southwestern British Columbia, Canada. [3] It is situated immediately southwest of Coquihalla Summit , and 4.2 km (3 mi) south-southwest of Yak Peak . [ 2 ]
Coquihalla Summit (el. 1,244 m or 4,081 ft) is a highway summit along the Coquihalla Highway in British Columbia, Canada. [1] It is the highest point on the highway between the cities of Hope and Merritt .
The bird flu outbreak has taken concerning turns, with more than 60 human cases confirmed. Experts outlined four signs that the virus is going in the wrong direction.
In this week's video, I cover need-to-know news about Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) from the week of Dec. 2. Check out the short video to learn more, consider subscribing, and click the special offer link ...
Highway 97 is a major highway in the Canadian province of British Columbia.It is the longest continuously numbered route in the province, running 2,081 km (1,293 mi) and is the only route that runs the entire north–south length of British Columbia, connecting the Canada–United States border near Osoyoos in the south to the British Columbia–Yukon boundary in the north at Watson Lake, Yukon.