Tourist attractions include the Tunnels of Moose Jaw, The Moose Jaw Trolley, the
Temple Gardens Mineral Spa Resort, The
Western Development Museum,
Casino Moose Jaw, Moose Jaw Museum and Art Gallery, Yvette Moore Art Gallery, the Murals of Moose Jaw, and the historic downtown. Every July, the four-day
Saskatchewan Festival of Words showcases top Canadian writers from a wide variety of genres. The free three-day Sidewalk Days Festival draws tens of thousands to Main Street the weekend after Canada Day. The
Snowbirds flight demonstration team is based at
CFB Moose Jaw, south of Moose Jaw in
Bushell Park, where the now defunct
airshow was performed every summer. It will be brought back in 2019. Moose Jaw has many parks. Crescent Park is located in downtown. It features a creek, picnic tables, a library, an art museum, a playground, an outdoor swimming pool,
water park, a tennis court,
lawn bowling field and an
amphitheatre. Casino Moose Jaw and Temple Gardens Mineral Spa are across Fairford St. E. and 1st Ave. NE. from Crescent Park. "Wakamow Valley" follows the
Moose Jaw River and features both natural and maintained areas. There are many trails throughout the park for hiking and cycling, including picnic tables, barbecues, and four playgrounds. There is also an
RV park, Lorne Calvert Campground, formerly known as River Park Campground, which was founded in 1927 and is the longest-running campground in North America. Canoe and kayak rentals are available across the road from the campground. The Moose Jaw Canoe and Kayak Club has been around since the late '90s and is inside the campground.
Old Wives Lake, a
saline lake is 30 km southwest of the city on
Highway 363.
Buffalo Pound Lake a
eutrophic prairie lake is 28 km north on
Highway 2.
Buffalo Pound Provincial Park is on the south shore and can be accessed by
Highway 202 and
Highway 301.
Tunnels of Moose Jaw The tunnels present two tour attractions:
Passage to Fortune and
The Chicago Connection. While
Passage to Fortune is construed by many visitors to be historically accurate, there is no evidence to suggest that Chinese Canadians lived in the tunnels of the tours outside of minimal anecdotal testimonies. Historically accurate information such as the
Chinese Exclusion Act,
Chinese Head Tax and the case of
Quong Wing v R which occurred at the site of 1 Main street across the location of the tunnels are mentioned throughout the tour. However,
Passage to Fortune also circulates misinformation about Chinese Canadians in Moose Jaw. Moose Jaw Tour attendees are called "
Coolies" at an early stage of the tour. Tour attendees are then guided through the tunnels from the position of Chinese workers indentured to the fictional laundry owner Mr. Burrows who were forced to live underground. In actuality, early Chinese Canadians were often proprietors of their own laundries, a labour-intensive industry many found themselves in due to prejudice barring them from entering other industries. In 1890, the first Chinese business opened in Moose Jaw, was a Chinese laundry. in 1908, nine laundries can be found in the City directory, with eight businesses notably Chinese-run. The tunnels became a hub of renewed activity in the 1920s for
rum-running during
Prohibition in the United States. They were reported to have warehoused illegal alcohol that was shipped to the U.S. via the
Soo Line Railroad. The tunnels were also used for gambling and prostitution, all without interference from the corrupt police. In the 21st century, the city capitalized on this notoriety to restore the tunnel network into the Tunnels of Moose Jaw, a tourist attraction that opened in June 2000.{{cite web == Sports and recreation ==