[2] A majority of the route between Wauchope and Govenlock going through the Palliser's Triangle is also referred to as the Ghost Town Trail.
[4][5][6] Highway 615 provides access north to Fort Walsh National Historic Park and the highest point of land in Saskatchewan.
Travel continues north-east until the junction with Highway 21 which provides access to Cypress Hills Provincial Park and Maple Creek.
[5][6] At the junction of Highway 18 south is the small hamlet of Robsart, to the east of this intersection, the AADT declines to about 160 vpd.
[5][6] Highway 13 travels past the intersection with Sk Hwy 633 north before arriving at the access road to the village of Dollard.
There is a short concurrency with Sk Hwy 629, before it leaves the highway in a southerly direction providing access to the small hamlet of Admiral.
Highway 13 is upgraded to a class 5 granular pavement as traffic can reach a high of 530 vpd east of this intersection.
[12] After leaving Ponteix, the next junction is with Highway 612 and west of this intersection is the village of Aneroid home to Indianola one room sod schoolhouse built in 1911.
[16] The terrain of the Missouri Coteau features low hummocky, undulating, rolling hills, potholes, and grasslands.
[20] The Royal Canadian Mounted Police Academy and RCMP Heritage Centre are both located in the capital city of Regina.
Located in south-western Saskatchewan, it oversaw activities in the Big Muddy Badlands north of the Canada–United States border.
Sitting Bull, James Walsh, Big Bear, James Macleod, Sam Steele, Dutch Henry, Jones-Nelson gang, Sam Kelly, Chief Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, John A. Macdonald, and George Armstrong Custer are some names of historic legend in this area.