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Article Title:
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Heart of the Badlands: Spa Amidst History

Article Description:
====================

It's been a gruelling day of spa-ing at the Heartwood Manor in
the central Alberta Badlands northeast of Calgary, where
dinosaurs once roamed and travellers now throng for a taste of
prehistory.


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===============================

1143 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-02-06 11:36:00

Written By:     Travel Alberta
Copyright:      2007, All Rights Reserved
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Heart of the Badlands: Spa Amidst History
Copyright (c) 2007 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved
Written by: Travel Alberta
http://www.travelalberta.com




It's been a gruelling day of spa-ing at the Heartwood Manor in
the central Alberta Badlands northeast of Calgary, where
dinosaurs once roamed and travellers now throng for a taste of
prehistory.

First, I spent 90 minutes with Inn and Heartwood Spa esthetician
Katie Fisher as she turned my calloused and bunion-plagued feet
into sleek paws worthy of strappy shoes and jewel-toned nail
polish.

Then, massage therapist Mike Begg twisted me into a happy human
pretzel on the floor of my antique-furnished suite on the second
storey of the lavishly restored Victorian inn. Who needs yoga?
With Thai massage (dare I admit this?), Mike does the stretching
for you. Who knew a weekend spa vacation could be so conducive to
health and fitness?

Soon after came my Indian Head Massage with therapist Rita
Cumming, followed by 45 minutes of polarotherapy – a uniquely
sedating spa treatment I'd never heard of, but highly recommend.
(This should come with its own warning: even the energizer bunny
can't withstand the relaxing powers of this ancient East Indian
form of bodywork).

And now, with a full afternoon of primping behind me and a tasty
plate of pub fish and chips in my belly, I am ready for sleep.
After a hot soak in my private jetted hot tub, I climb the steps
to bed, wondering what pleasures tomorrow might bring on my spa
vacation.

Enjoy One-of-a-Kind Beds

Did I mention I'm climbing the stairs to BED? Not my bedroom,
but my BED. Like everything in this central Alberta town, my
sleep machine is larger than life – a wood-hewn, quilt-laden
creature that requires its own portable set of stairs to clamber
atop.

These one-of-a-kind beds – the monolithic cousin, if you will, to
the ordinary mattress and boxspring – are just one of the unique
touches to be found among the hoodoos and coulees of the Alberta
badlands.

You can spot the Heartwood, with its sky-blue clapboard exterior
and gingerbread trim, as you head into town on Highway 9 east. As
you wind your way into the Red Deer River valley, the spa resort
looms invitingly to your right on Railway Avenue. (Several
secondary highways converge in the town, so you have a variety of
travel options when traveling from Calgary or Edmonton.)

You might not even make it into the foyer before owners Zeke and
Patrice Wolf open the front door to welcome you to the Heartwood.
The pair, who took over operations at the historic 10-suite hotel
and health spa in June, are eager to show off the inn's many
features.

Zeke, a semi-retired gas well consultant, asks if I'll be having
his famous flaming French toast for breakfast. Hold on now – I
haven't even had lunch yet! But there's no time for eating: my
spa caregivers are waiting to show me their wares. (In all
fairness, Zeke offers me a snack, but I decline because I'm
eager for my treatments to begin.)

The Heartwood is a member of the Charming Inns of Alberta, an
association of intimate, smaller hotels and bed-and-breakfasts
that provide a comforting alternative to the motels and hotels
that road warriors so often rely on. The inn is also home to the
organization's only destination spa – allowing you to run
straight for bed should the pampering be so intense that a nap is
just a woozy blink away.

Discover Antique Furnishings

The furnishings are mostly antique, from the double-sided clock
in the stylish breakfast room to the ornately carved guest
check-in desk and the furnishings in each suite. Patrice, who for
seven owned the town's only antique shop, is continually
scouting for new finds for the heritage inn. Aside from the
sprawling main house is a self-catered miner's cabin (perfect
for girlfriend or family getaways) as well as a one-room
honeymoon cottage tucked beside the manicured gardens.

While the Heartwood - like all of Drumheller's accommodations –
is fully booked over the summer months, the shoulder season
offers a slower pace and a welcome chance to explore the former
coal-mining region's offbeat attractions and historic sites.

The world-famous Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, which
teems with tourists during high season, is much easier to explore
when the crowds have thinned. The museum, which blankets more
than 11,200 square metres (120,000 square feet) and boasts more
than 4,400 square metres of displays, is open year-round but on
reduced hours during winter months (closed Mondays).

Kids love the Shell Discovery Centre, which features giant
flowers than can be 'fed' by foam balls. Or, hike the trails
around the museum and learn how flood waters from melting
glaciers carved out the lunar-like landscape. (The 1.2-kilometre
self-guided interpretive loop takes about 50 minutes to complete,
weather permitting.) The museum itself is loaded with exhibits
that pay homage to the town's prehistoric heritage, include
multimedia exhibits (build your own dinosaur and see if it could
have survived), life-sized replica dinosaur skeletons, authentic
fossils and other artifacts.

Travellers who spend time strolling the streets of downtown
Drumheller are often tempted to take some time out on one of the
town's many benches – most come complete with your own personal
dinosaur statue to make your photo op complete.

Explore the World's Largest Dinosaur

If you're feeling energetic, fork out $3 (family and group rates
available) to explore the town's newest and most talked-about
tourist attraction – the world's largest dinosaur. Situated at
the Drumheller visitor centre, this five-year-old attraction has
one several tourism awards for innovation and originality.

Clamber the 106 steps through the innards of a Tyrannosaurus Rex
– the infamous T-Rex – passing by artifacts and prehistoric
paintings as the roars and squawks of dinosaurs are piped through
the 26-metre (86 feet) structure for effect. Your reward at the
top is a panoramic view of the river valley, the town and the
badlands – all from a glass-encased balcony that peeks out from
massive dinosaur teeth. (Hint: do this BEFORE your spa treatment.
It's not terribly taxing, but you will feel it in your legs when
you make your descent.)

Also worthy of your time is Horseshoe Canyon a few kilometres
west of the town; helicopter tours are available in the summer
months, but you can still get a great look from the signed canyon
viewpoint. And the Atlas Coal Mine site, while closed from
mid-October to spring, allows visitors time travel to the days
when coal was king and the area's mines provided valuable fossil
fuels to people across Canada.

Another key area attraction (stay-and-play packages are available
through the Heartwood Inn) is the Rosebud Dinner Theatre.
Situated about 22 kilometres south of Drumheller, Rosebud is a
tiny artisan community with a theatre arts school, the historic
Rosebud Opera House (performances are offered year-round) and
several shops, galleries and cafes.

And when you've all that, remember – there's aways the spa to
recuperate.




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Copyright (c) 2006 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved

Travel Alberta (http://www.travelalberta.com) is the destination 
marketing organization for the Province of Alberta. Guided by the 
Strategic Tourism Marketing Council, Travel Alberta is the steward 
for the effective delivery of tourism marketing programs. For 
information about our organization, please visit our Travel 
Alberta industry web site at http://industry.travelalberta.com


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