Experiences in the park

Banff National Park

Thank you to everyone who visited Parks Canada places, and joined our interpreters for inspiring programs this season.

Our interpretive programs have concluded for 2024, and we look forward to seeing you next year!


2024 Guided hikes and walks

Join Parks Canada interpreters on guided hikes and walks.

Learn more about local species at risk, conservation efforts, and human history. Get an insider’s look at Parks Canada’s ecological restoration projects and find out how you can help.

The Banff Area

Métis Plant Identification Walk

Enjoy a leisurely walk to identify local plants from an Indigenous perspective. Learn how plants of the Rocky Mountains are used for food and medicine by Alberta’s Métis communities, with stories from a Métis herbalist. The gentle pace of this tour is suitable for most participants and their families. Please wear weather-appropriate clothing and comfortable walking shoes.


2024 Evening programs

The Banff Area
Evening Programs start June 27, 2025!

2024 programs

A Quagga Carol: An “almost” ghost story

Based on Dickens’ classic, ‘A Christmas Carol’, three ghosts guide a paddleboarder to take action to prevent aquatic invasive species from entering Banff’s waterways.

Bat, Batty, Battier: Correcting myth-conceptions about bats

A high-flying adventure about the perils faced by Banff’s Little Brown Bat.  Learn the reasons to love this endangered species and learn how you can protect them.

Bison on the horizon

Parks Canada staff visit Banff’s reintroduced bison herd in the backcountry. Discover why bison are flourishing and what they are teaching us about this special place.

Shout Out for Trout! 

Join our favourite local trout host as they share current information about aquatic species-at-risk, and learn how you can help support their water-wise friends.

Wildlife RULES! - Mountain WIT’s live music show! 

Join Parks Canada’s award-winning musical troupe as they share songs and tips about how we can all keep wildlife safe in the park.  Sing along, tap your toes, and you might learn something too!

Indigenous Voices – Short film series

A selection of short films featuring Indigenous Peoples with past, present, and future connections to the rocky mountains and surrounding areas.

Presented in collaboration with Heritage Programs.

Speaker Series: Staying Safe and Having Fun in Bear Country

Join Emma Russell from the Parks Canada Resource Conservation team, as she shares how to recreate safely, respecting wildlife habitat in Banff National Park.

*Please note, dates and programs may change with little or no notice. Please visit the campground kiosks for the most up-to-date information on theatre programs.

Lake Louise Campground

Lake Louise Campground Theatre, 131 Fairview Drive, Lake Louise
Please visit the campground kiosk for the detailed theatre program schedule. Programs only offered in English, but all are welcome. You do not need to be staying in the campground to attend.

Bear Necessities

Come one, come all for activity night at the campground theatre! Learn about wildlife in the park and how we can keep them and us safe.

The Great Banff Burn Off

Get ready to turn up the heat in The Great Banff Burn Off! Get a taste for the regenerative role of fire in the ecosystem as you compete in three fire creation challenges.

Mussel Invasion

Mussel Monarch and their army are known to be ruthless in their destruction and expensive in their aftermath. It’s up to us humans to protect waterways from invasive mussels, both in Banff National Park and beyond.

The Pride of the Parks: Return of the Keystones

Come along on an adventure to meet some of Banff’s keystone species, and learn how you can help them return to their homelands and restore balance to the ecosystems!


Interpreters in the wild

Connect with Parks Canada interpreters at busy day-use areas and trails around Banff National Park.
Discover and experience what makes Banff National Park so special, through drop-in activities about human-wildlife coexistence, aquatic invasive species, prescribed fire, and species at risk.

Pop-up Programs include:

Peaks and Pines

Sulphur Mountain Boardwalk

Join Parks Canada interpreters at the top of Sulphur Mountain for a drop-in program where you can see the endangered Whitebark Pine in real life! Learn about its unique role in the ecosystem and why this special tree is endangered.

Cool, Clean, and Connected: Bringing Life back to Cascade ponds

Cascade Ponds Day-Use Area

Get your hands wet as Park Interpreters share the story of Cascade Creek. Learn about what makes great trout habitat, identify aquatic insects from the creek, and how you can ‘leave no trace’ at Cascade Ponds. Please wear weather appropriate clothing.


Mountain World Heritage Interpretive Theatre

Parks Canada’s award-winning interpretive theatre troupe! Mountain WIT makes the stories of Banff National Park come to life with hilarious sketches, catchy songs, fascinating stories, clever puppet shows, and interactive exhibits!

Pop-Up Puppet Theatre

2024 Programs:

A Beary, Berry Good Day – a 10 minute storybook puppet show about a little grizzly bear, Ursa and her adventures in Banff National Park.

Fish Wish You’d Swish – a 15 minute puppet show about keeping park waters healthy.

Wildlife RULES! Mountain WIT’s live music show!

Join the nature party with Parks Canada’s theatre troupe, Mountain WIT, singing new favourite songs from their award-winning recording, Wildlife Rules.

Find a sneak peek here: https://parks.canada.ca/banff-music


Living With Wildlife Interpreters

These specialized interpreters are here to help you have safe experiences in our parks. Discover more about how we can keep wildlife wild and give them the space they need to survive.

Living With Wildlife Interpreters can be found at busy trail heads, day use areas and on the road, patrolling for wildlife jams.

Pop-up programs include:

Bear Aware in Banff National Park

Stewart Canyon Trailhead at Lake Minnewanka

Join Living With Wildlife interpreters to learn all about Banff’s bears and how to stay safe while exploring Banff National Park. Share your experiences, learn how to use bear spray, and discover how these incredible animals live. This program is suitable for all ages.

Learn more about wildlife safety!


Indigenous-led programs

The lands and waters of Banff National Park have been used for millennia by Indigenous Peoples for sustenance, ceremony, trade, and travel. Parks Canada is working with Indigenous groups to include authentic presentations and share Indigenous histories and cultures within the park.

See below for 2024 Indigenous-led interpretive events. 
The Banff Area

Métis Plant Identification Walk

Enjoy a leisurely walk to identify local plants from an Indigenous perspective. Learn how plants of the Rocky Mountains are used for food and medicine by Alberta’s Métis communities, with stories from a Métis herbalist. The gentle pace of this tour is suitable for most participants and their families. Please wear weather-appropriate clothing and comfortable walking shoes.


Blackfoot Medicine Speaks

Celebrate Blackfoot culture with traditional drumming, dancing and storytelling.


Watâga dancers and singers

Celebrate Îyârhe Nakoda culture with singing, drumming, and dancing.


Indigenous Voices

The Cave and Basin National Historic Site presents programs that celebrate “Indigenous Voices” from communities with traditional and contemporary ties to Banff and the greater Bow Valley Region.
Cave and Basin lies within the traditional territories of many Indigenous Nations, including Îyârhe Nakoda (Chiniki, Goodstoney and Bearspaw), Siksika, Kainai, Piikani, Tsuut’ina, Ktunaxa, Secwépemc and Métis.


Parks Canada is honoured to present this collection of Indigenous-led exhibits and projects, featuring artists, Elders, Knowledge Keepers and other esteemed voices from these vibrant Indigenous communities.

Lake Louise Area

Join us for Indigenous-led programs in Lake Louise!

In 2024 the member Nations of the Indigenous Advisory Circle for Banff National Park shared stories, culture, and history through interpretation programs in Lake Louise. Programs included traditional dance lessons and demonstrations, tipi raising, cultural crafts, language lessons, music, drumming, and storytelling.

Indigenous-led Interpretation Event Schedule 2024

June and July

Date and Time: June 29 — 10 am to 12 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Kainai Nation
Events: Niitsitapi dance performance with Theron and Cindy Black.


Date and Time: July 5 to July 7 — 9 am to 4 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Métis Nation
Events: Trappers tent set-up and history, storytelling, fiddling and jigging, finger weaving, fish scale art, Métis medicine teachings, Michif lessons, lessons on the Red River Cart, lessons on the birch bark canoe, pemmican making, hide tanning, medicine tea making, tufting demonstration.


Date and Time: July 6 — 7:30 pm to 8:30 pm
Location: Lake Louise Campground Theatre — 131 Fairview Drive, Lake Louise
This program is open to anyone and you don’t need to be staying in the campground to attend.
Presented by: Métis Nation
Events: Alex Kusturok, Métis fiddler, will be playing from his new album, Wedged in Tradition, with guitarist Eric Provencher.


Date and Time: July 16 to July 17 — 10 am to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Tsuut’ina Nation
Events: Dance demonstrations, storytelling, and hand-games.


Date and Time: July 24 — 10 am to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Piikani Nation
Events: Dance performances, storytelling, traditional games, questions, and photo opportunities.


Date and Time: July 30 to August 1 — 11 am to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Siksika Nation
Events: Tipi-raising, storytelling, and dance demonstrations.

August and September

Date and Time: July 30 to August 1 — 11 am to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Siksika Nation
Events: Tipi-raising, storytelling, and dance demonstrations.


Date and Time: August 14 — 11 am to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Piikani Nation
Events: Dance demonstrations and storytelling.


Date and Time: August 21 — 1:00 pm and 2:30 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Bearspaw Nation
Events: Tipi, dance and singing lessons, storytelling with Elders, questions.


Date and Time: August 24 to August 25 — 12 pm to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Goodstoney Nation
Events: Dancing and singing demonstrations, and storytelling.


Date and Time: September 3 to September 5 — 12 pm to 3 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Siksika Nation
Events: Dancing demonstrations and storytelling.


Date and Time: September 7 — 11 am to 2 pm
Location: Lake Louise Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting the Lakeshore)
Presented by: Chiniki Nation
Events: Tipi, dancing and singing performances, and storytelling.


Date and Time: September 8 — 11 am to 2 pm
Location: Moraine Lake Lakeshore (Learn more about visiting Moraine Lake)
Presented by: Chiniki Nation
Events: Tipi, dancing and singing performances, and storytelling.

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