Saskatchewan Highway 13

[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.

Saskatchewan Highway 13, near Antler
Smoke from the BC wildfires turning the skies of south-east Saskatchewan hazy. Sunset over Highway 13 three miles west of Stoughton (August 2021).