No, the Canadian flag is NOT blue. It is red and white. The maple leaf and the 2 bars are red and the rest is white.
The Canadian flag does not have anything blue.
I'm sorry You must be mistaken, there isn't any blue on the Canadian Flag. Do you mean the blue colour on one of the provinces in Canada?
Type your answer here... My recollection is that in 1963 or 1964, there was a competition to select a Canadian Flag. Up until that time the Canadian flag was the Red Ensign with the Canadian emblem on the fly. The final designs included a flag very similar to the current flag, except that the color at both ends was blue, to indicate the oceans from Atlantic to Pacific (my choice). I have always felt that including blue in the flag was more symbolic of the country; red, white and blue and ocean to ocean. Obviously I lost.
The present Canadian flag was established in 1965.
Officially the two red bars have no special meaning.In an earlier design concept of the Canadian Flag promoted by Prime Minister Lester Pearson, it had two narrow blue bars on the sides, which were to represent the Atlantic and the Pacific, and the fact that the nation was united from "sea to sea"; however during the Great Flag Debate of 1964-65 the blue bars were changed to red; since the idea of a red white and blue flag did not appeal to some of the Flag Committee.
It is called "Red Ensign". The Ontario's flag is called "Red Ensign".
The Canadian Flag was made on October 22, 1964
The present Canadian flag was introduced in 1965.
There is only 1 leaf on the Canadian Flag which is a maple leaf. It is in the middle of the flag.
The present Canadian flag was designed by Jacques Saint-Cyr.
The rule is that the American flag has to be higher up than the Canadian flag.
The first Canadian flag was the "Flag of the Governor General of Canada," which was adopted in 1870. It consisted of the Union Flag of the United Kingdom with the shield of the Coat of Arms of Canada in the middle.