No witchcraft hysteria in Canada, ever. There were occasionally single trials in 17th c New France (Quebec) where witchcraft was raised - as usual witchcraft was not the basis of trial but functioned as evidence and motivation related to other injuries. Perhaps most famous of them, René Besnard of Montreal was convicted of sorcery in 1658. This article by Jonathan L. Pearl is useful, Witchcraft in New France in The Seventeenth Century: The Social Aspect, Historical Reflections, Vol. 4, No. 2 (Winter 1977), pp. 41-55 .
In late 17th and early 18th c colonial United States there were periodic accusations, trials and capital executions of witches, including a rash of them at Hartford, Connecticut in the 1660s. In the 1690s, again in Connecticut, there was another rash of accusations but no convictions. Here is a useful list of witchcraft trials across the USA, the first half of which derives from a good article by Frederick C. Drake, Witchcraft in the American Colonies, 1647-62, American Quarterly, Vol. 20, No. 4 (Winter, 1968), pp. 694-725
Since there's no equivalent of the witchcraft scare of Salem in Canada, i'll entertain you with a bit of folklore. The famous La Corriveau is a widely known story and legend in Quebec. A woman named Marie-Joseph Corriveau was hanged shortly after the british conquest of New France, while the territory was under British military regime for three years.
She was convicted in front of a military court for the murder of her second husband on the Island of Baccus near Quebec city. Her husband used to beat her, so she hit him in the head with two hatchet blows while asleep. She was hanged in chains to everyone to see at La pointe de Lévis, on the other side of the St-Lawrence, in front of Quebec city. Her body was bound to a metal skeletal-like cage and exposed for a month on a gibbet for everyone to see.
In later years, stories became legends, and La Corriveau became a witch in the popular culture, having cursed and killed as much as 7 husbands on her island, using dark magic and a terrible pact with the devil. Her fate to be hanged in chains and let rot to the four winds reinforced the unusual, unsettling character of La Corriveau
Source: La Corriveau, de l'histoire à la légende, Dave Corriveau et Catherine Ferland, Septentrion.
On top of what /u/idjet has said, it is also important to point out that there had been several popular cases in the New England area before Salem occured, the most famous being the case of Ann Glover, who was hung in Boston in 1688. Cotton Mather reported on this in his Memorable Providences, as well as a range of other cases. In terms of scale though, Salem was by far the largest hunt in all the Americas, and even it was rather small in absolute terms compared to activity on the Continent. What makes it stick out, though, was the lateness of the hour - by this point in the 17th century, the vast majority of territories had stopped witch-hunting altogether.