
Jellystone Park Debuts New Prince Edward Island Camp-Resort
Niagara Falls, Woodstock Locations Enhance Water Attractions
Families Urged to Book Summer Vacations Now
Editor's Note: A limited number of complimentary and discounted stays are available to qualified journalists, influencers and content creators. Visit request form here: https://form.jotform.com/250484170348154
SOUTHFIELD, Mich., May 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- More fun, adventures, and memories await Canadian families this year with the opening of a new Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Cavendish and the recent addition of a huge new water zone at the Niagara Falls location.
Jellystone Park Camp-Resorts are renowned for their attractions such as pools and wagon rides, non-stop family activities, up-close fun with the Yogi Bear characters, and glamping-style accommodations. With more than 75 franchised locations across the United States and Canada, Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park Camp-Resorts operates in partnership with Warner Bros. Discovery Global Experiences.
In addition to Cavendish and Niagara Falls, there are Jellystone Park locations in Kingston, NS and Woodstock, NB.
With many families opting to vacation closer to home this year, Jellystone Park locations in Canada are expected to book up quickly. Visit www.jellystonepark.com to make reservations. Discounts and promotions may be available, depending upon location.
The new Jellystone Park Cavendish, PEI, which opened May 15, features a swimming pool, jumping pillow, petting zoo, RC track, game room and arcade, as well as a large playground. Yogi Bear, Boo Boo, and Cindy Bear will entertain the kids when they are not creating arts and crafts, enjoying wagon rides, or dancing at the silent disco. Formerly a KOA campground, the location offers new fully equipped glamping cabins, traditional cabins and cottages, RV sites, and rentals.
The Cavendish Camp-Resort is owned by Maritime Fun Group, which operates leading family amusement parks and attractions in New Brunswick and on Prince Edward Island. 'In preparation for opening as a Jellystone Park, we have given the park a major facelift,' said Maritime Fun Group President Matthew Jelley. 'Families will appreciate all the new attractions, activities and theme weekends, along with a fresh new look.'
More information: https://www.jellystoneparkpei.com/
Visitors to the popular Jellystone Park Niagara Falls this summer will enjoy the location's huge new water zone which opened last summer. The multiple water slides, splashground, and giant dump bucket will entertain kids for hours.
'Jellystone Park Niagara Falls was already home to the world's tallest inflatable water slide and a heated pool, which have always been a big draw for kids,' said Greg Amadio, owner. 'Now the water zone is definitely a park favorite.'
The closest campground to the falls, Jellystone Park Niagara offers a full array of attractions and activities, ranging from mini golf and a jumping pillow to Jellystone Park character interactions and theme weekends. Lodging includes fully equipped luxury cabins, glamping yurts and three-bedroom trailers for rent. Shaded RV and tent sites range from rustic to full hook-up.
More information: https://jellystoneniagara.ca
The Kingston, Nova Scotia location is celebrating its 25 th year as part of the Jellystone Park brand this season. In time for summer vacations, the pool has been refurbished and more RV rentals have been installed.
More information: https://jellystonens.com/
About Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park Camp-Resorts
With more than 75 locations across the United States and Canada, Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park Camp-Resorts feature fun attractions such as pools and water slides, non-stop family activities, up-close fun with Yogi Bear characters, and glamping-style accommodations. For more information about Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park Camp-Resorts, please visit www.jellystonepark.com. For information on franchising opportunities, please visit www.jellystonefranchise.com.
About Warner Bros. Discovery Global Experiences
Warner Bros. Discovery Global Experiences (WBDGE) is a worldwide leader in the creation, development, licensing and operating of location-based entertainment based on the biggest franchises, stories, and characters from Warner Bros.' world-renowned film, television, animation, and games studios, HBO, Discovery, Cartoon Network and more. WBDGE is home to the groundbreaking locations of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal theme parks around the world, award-winning Warner Bros. Studio Tour locations in London, Hollywood, and Tokyo, the iconic Harry Potter New York flagship store, Warner Bros. World Abu Dhabi, The WB Abu Dhabi, The FRIENDS Experience, The Game of Thrones Studio Tour and countless other experiences inspired by Harry Potter, DC, Looney Tunes, Scooby-Doo, Game of Thrones, FRIENDS and more. WBDGE is part of Warner Bros. Discovery's Revenue & Strategy division.
YOGI BEAR and all related characters and elements © & ™ Hanna-Barbera (s25).
Contacts:
Warner Bros. Discovery Global Experiences
Lindsay Kiesel
Lindsay.Kiesel@wbd.com
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CTV News
31 minutes ago
- CTV News
Kendrick Lamar gets two-minute ovation after ‘Not Like Us' in Toronto
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CBC
34 minutes ago
- CBC
4 memorable moments from Kendrick Lamar and SZA's Toronto concert
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Globe and Mail
38 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Make space in your life for ‘blue space'
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That departure took place early in the summer of 2023, which turned out to be one of the hottest ever on the continent (at least for now). Now it's late July, and nearly two months of immersion journalism, and about 40 self-propelled kilometres every day, are draining my energy and resolve. But Mr. Donahue and his crew are inquisitive and enthusiastic. They are happy for me. That somebody on an offbeat expedition is passing through their part of the state. There is teasing and laughing, high-fiving and rib-digging. Their joy makes me joyous. Mr. Donahue gives me another beer for later and we hug. Not awkward, one-armed back-patting. A real hug. 'Where else,' I ponder while paddling away, 'do two middle-aged men who've just met hug like that?' My obsession with blue space was sparked when I got my first paddleboard a decade ago. I had lived in half a dozen cities across Canada, all on either a river, lake or ocean, but never owned a watercraft of any kind. With a SUP, which can be carried under one arm, or in an oversized backpack if it's inflatable, I suddenly had intimate access to aquatic environments. When paddling, I could gaze at shoreline forests or the shimmering horizon, or down into the water at fish and plants, the primordial soup our ancestors clambered out of. When it was hot, it was easy to jump in for a swim. Whether in urban or rural areas, being perched atop a SUP always made me feel better. And while we interact with blue space in individual ways, I'm far from the only person for whom water is an elixir. The science is clear that being in nature is generally good for our bodies and brains. We tend to be more active and less anxious. Although it's difficult to differentiate between green and blue spaces, according to Mat White, an environmental psychologist at the University of Vienna and arguably the world's leading authority on this subject, water seems to uncork a multiplier effect. Dr. White explores what happens when we do anything (paddle, swim, surf, walk, sit) in, on or near just about any type of water, from vast seas to downtown fountains. After leading several research projects and crunching the data, he believes that blue space has a mostly positive and, compared to other outdoor environments, a more pronounced impact on our mental and physical health. 'The crucial point about that research was that it was the poorest communities and individuals who got the benefits,' Dr. White told me. 'If you're rich, it doesn't matter how often you spend time in blue space. You're healthy and happy anyway. But if you're poor, it matters hugely.' Water is a double-edged sword, Dr. White cautions. Drowning is the third leading cause of unintentional injury death around the world. Around two billion people don't have access to clean drinking water. Rising seas, intensifying storms, widespread flooding and water-borne diseases are among the deadliest consequences of global warming, and they tend to displace and kill those with the least capacity to escape or adapt. These realities notwithstanding, people are happiest in marine and coastal margins, a pair of British environmental economists determined, gathering more than a million pings on their 'Mappiness' app. Blue neighbourhoods are 'associated with lower psychological distress,' reports a paper out of New Zealand. And taking the sea air – breathing in 'bioactive compounds that may originate from marine algae,' in the parlance of Belgian biologist Jana Asselman – appears to give our immune systems a boost. These settings also offer opportunities for social interaction, suggests a Scottish literature review, kindling 'a sense of community [and] mutual support between people.' Moreover, hanging out in blue space promotes 'pro-environmental behavior,' especially among children. In other words, we pay more attention to others and take better care of the planet. To decipher the mechanisms at play, I contacted another environmental psychologist, Jenny Roe at the University of Virginia. Blue space triggers our parasympathetic nervous system, Dr. Roe said to me before I left home, which basically tells the brain what our bodies are doing and then acts like a brake, dampening the stress response. Water can instill a sense of being away and boundless possibilities, she added, yet also a feeling of compatibility with our location, of comfort and belonging. Evolutionarily, this makes sense. Our bodies are mostly water and, like all living things, we need it to survive. Even looking at a creek or pool is enough to lower blood pressure and heart rates, a pair of University of California, Davis, psychology researchers concluded, attributing this link, in part, to our forebears successfully detecting drinking water in arid environments. I was thirsty throughout my trip. Lukewarm electrolytes don't cut in when you're paddling for hours in hot, humid conditions. But the kindness of strangers kept me hydrated. People in boats and on shore offered me cold water and sports drinks; they shared snacks, stories, local intel about guerrilla campsites and, on several occasions, let me tent on their lawns. Poor and rich and every socioeconomic status in between, Black and brown and white and every blended colour on the spectrum, they welcomed me and looked out for me. The interviews I had set up in advance were validating my holistic health thesis: in Kahnawake, Que., a Mohawk reserve near Montreal, I saw young leaders re-establishing their community's relationship to the river decades after the St. Lawrence Seaway was bulldozed through their front yard; I met kayakers on the Lower Hudson whose non-profits fight for free access to the river, so everybody can take advantage of its healing power. But it was serendipitous encounters that buoyed me the most. And even academics like Howard University's Lemir Teron affirmed that despite long histories of injustice, waterways such as the Erie Canal hold promise as public realms where a cross-section of people can gather. Why does blue space seem to encourage connections between strangers? There's no peer-reviewed paper on this topic, but I think it's because of the impact of aquatic places on our well-being, coupled with a latent danger that compels us to watch out for one another, and the fact that we tend to slow down around water, creating opportunities for face-to-face conversation. Much of my paddle took place in upstate New York, which leans Republican. One muggy morning on the Erie Canal, I pull over and chat with a man sitting on a staircase that descends into the water, feet submerged, below his Trump-flag-adorned RV. We discuss whether the dark clouds gathering to the northeast will blow this way. He thinks I'll be fine. Soon, I'm out of sight upriver and it's pouring, but there's no thunder and the rain feels like the best kind of shower. Had lightning struck, my new friend would probably have granted me refuge.