West Central Saskatchewan is a region of Saskatchewan, Canada.
West Central Saskatchewan is most made up of flat Prairie land, but also serves as a transition between the dry grasslands to the south and boreal forests of the north. The region is bisected by both the South Saskatchewan and North Saskatchewan Rivers.
Its economy is primarily associated with agriculture. Saskatchewan grows a large portion of Canada's grain and canola (for cooking oil). Other grains such as flax, rye, oats, peas, lentils, canary seed, and barley are also produced in the province. Beef cattle, and oil and natural gas production are also very important industries.
Saskatoon, the main city, is home to a university, and agriculture, information technology, and environmental, life sciences and agricultural biotechnology industries.
West Central Saskatchewan typically has warm summers and long, cold winters, and gets more sunlight per year than is typical for Canada.
Most of the region observes Central Standard Time (CST) (GMT−06:00) year-round, similar to the rest of the province; except for Lloydminster and the surround area which observes Mountain Time year-round and changes its clocks forward to Mountain Daylight Time each summer. Because of this, the time is the same during the summer months (matching neighbouring Alberta) but different during the winter months.
Fly into Saskatoon John G. Diefenbaker Airport with Air Canada, Air Canada Express or WestJet.
The Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16), part of the Trans-Canada Highway, is the major east-west highway; it enters the region from the west side at the Alberta border from Edmonton and exits the region into East Central Saskatchewan on-route to Winnipeg; alternatively, Highway 7 enters the region from the west side at the Alberta border from Calgary. Highway 11 (Louis Riel Trail) is the main north-south route that enters the region from Regina and continues to Northern Saskatchewan. There are many other highways that travel throughout the region.
Rider Express connects Saskatoon and Prince Albert to Regina, and on to Edmonton and Vancouver.
Via Rail provides trains to Saskatoon from Edmonton and points further west, and from Winnipeg and eastern Canada.
Saskatoon draws visitors in with many festivals in the summer: Jazz, Folk music, fringe theatre, food, Shakespeare, and children's fun.
Pike Lake Provincial Park and The Battlefords Provincial Park provide a wide range of recreational opportunities.
The region is known for its saskatoon berries, after which the city is named. Also called serviceberries, or western juneberries, they are used in saskatoon berry pie, jam, wines, cider, and beers, or are sweetened and dried and used like dried cranberries.