Parkland

Kootenays

Bare leafless tree silhouetted against a giant orange full moon over a dark hilly landscape at dusk

Tā Ch'ilā Park

a.k.a. Boya Lake Park

Skeena East

Silhouetted evergreen trees line a calm lake at dusk with their reflection mirrored in the water and a blue cloud filled sky above

Great Bear

Rain Forest

Cream colored bear standing at the edge of a mossy forest stream surrounded by lush green foliage

Edziza Parl

Tahltan Highlands

glaciated crater

Two hikers in bright jackets climb a rocky ridge with multicolored mountains behind them in a vast alpine landscape

Bare leafless tree silhouetted against a giant orange full moon over a dark hilly landscape at dusk

Tā Ch'ilā Park

kayaking

camping

Red kayak resting on a rocky shore beside a clear turquoise lake with pine forest and distant mountains

Tā Ch'ilā Park

Tā Ch’ilā Park offers scenic camping and a wide variety of water recreation opportunities. a.k.a. Boya Lake the superb water clarity and colour, beckons the traveler to explore its many islands and bays. Tā Ch’ilā is an area carved out by glaciers 20,000 years ago. The area is characterized by long ridges, or eskers, and elongated hills, or drumlins. Boya Lake is also one of the few lakes in the north that is warm enough for swimming. The park offers two short hiking trails, a mountain bike trail and limitless bays and islands to discover by canoe or motor boat.
Read More

terriroty of the Kaska Dene First Nation

territory of the Tahltan Nation

Mount Edziza Park

Mount Edziza Park encompasses over 230,000 hectares of the Tahltan Highlands in northwestern British Columbia. This remote park showcases a spectacular volcanic landscape that includes lava flows, basalt plateaus, cinder fields and cinder cones, with a glaciated crater nearly 2,500 m in diameter. The eruption that built the mountain and its central cone began approximately four million years ago. There is no vehicle access to Mount Edziza Park, and there are only a very few basic facilities. This isolated wilderness area, accessible by hiking trails or a float plane.
Read More

Great Bear Rain Forest

the Great Bear Rainforest is the largest remaining coastal temperate rainforest on planet Earth. Wildlife vastly outnumber humans in this pristine wilderness that stretches along The Infinite Coast, from the northern tip of Vancouver Island to where BC meets Alaska. Great Bear can be reached by road, often the only access is by ferry, private boat, or by floatplane.
Learn more

rare white Spirit bears found only in BC

Ready to Lock in Your Rate?

1201 Fort
rates & fees
CLOSE X
Call us (250) 220-2444