2. Canada is home to the longest street in the world. Yonge Street in Ontario starts at Lake Ontario, and runs north through Ontario to the Minnesota border, a distance of almost 2,000 km.

4. The Hotel-de-Glace in Quebec is built every year using 400 tons of ice and 12, 000 tons of snow. Every summer it melts away, only to be rebuilt the following winter.





5. Canada’s only desert in British Columbia is only 15 miles long and is the only desert in the world with a long boardwalk for visitors to walk on.





6. Toronto’s Rogers Centre, formerly known as the SkyDome, is home to the largest Sony big screen in the world, measuring 10 m x 33.6 m.





7. The Blackberry Smartphone was developed in Ontario, at Research In Motion's Waterloo offices.





8. The Big Nickel in Sudbury, Ontario is the world's largest coin. It is a huge reproduction of a 1951 Canadian nickel and measures nine meters in diameter.





9. Canada has twice been invaded by the USA, first in 1775 and again in 1812.





10. Canada holds the record for the most gold medals ever won at the Winter Olympics, taking 14 Golds at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics.





11. Montreal is home to many beautiful churches and is often called The City of Saints or City of a Hundred Bell Towers.





12. Ontario is believed to be home to the world's smallest jail, which measures only 24.3 sq metres.





13. Canada was named through a misunderstanding. When Jaques Cartier, a French explorer, came to the new world, he met with local Natives who invited them to their 'kanata' (the word for ‘village’). The party mistakenly thought the name of the country was "Kanata" or Canada.





14. The Mounted Police was formed in 1873, with nine officers. In 1920, the group merged with the Dominion Police to become the famous Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which today has close to 30, 000 members.





15. Canada is home to approximately 55,000 different species of insects.



