| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Bay on the East Coast with the highest tides in the world | Bay of {Fundy} | 87%
|
| Capital city of New Brunswick | Fredericton | 67%
|
| Highly populated valley in southwestern British Columbia | {Fraser} Valley | 53%
|
| Provincial park in British Columbia named after a Norwegian coastal feature | {Fjordland} Conservancy | 47%
|
| City named after a fictional prospector on the border of Manitoba and Saskatchewan | Flin Flon | 47%
|
| Eighth tallest peak in the Canadian Rockies. Shares name with a business magazine | Mount {Forbes} | 40%
|
| Mining town in Northwest Territories buried in a rockslide in 1903 | Frank | 33%
|
| Ski resort city in the Kootenay Mountains of British Columbia | Fernie | 27%
|
| Bay in Nunavut. Former name of its capital, Iqaluit | {Frobisher} Bay | 27%
|
| Town in Yukon with the world's largest open pit lead-zinc mine | Faro | 20%
|
| Newfoundland community sung about in 'I'se the B'y.' Largest offshore island | Fogo | 20%
|
| River in Ontario associated with French explorers of the 17th century | {French} River | 20%
|
| Town in northeastern Quebec. Name means 'Iron Mountain' in French | Fermont | 13%
|
| Island off the west coast of Vancouver Island. Name shared with an Indonesian island | {Flores} Island | 13%
|
| French trading post destroyed by the British in 1758 during the Seven Years War | Fort {Frontenac} | 13%
|
| National park in Quebec located at the outer tip of the Gaspé Peninsula | {Forillon} National Park | 7%
|
| Large, natural bay on the south coast of Newfoundland | {Fortune} Bay | 7%
|
| Site of a massacre during the Northwest Rebellion in 1885 | {Frog} Lake | 7%
|
| Birthplace of the last soldier of the British Empire to be killed in the First World War | Falmouth | 0%
|
| Small, barren, foul-odored island northeast of Newfoundland with a musical name | {Funk} Island | 0%
|