Travel Guides to Canada

Travel Guide to Canada 2024-25

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Take a weekend camping and exploring tour from Minto Landing to Fort Selkirk, Yukon's largest historic site. Immerse yourself in the Gold Rush, listen to the stories of local Indigenous Tutchone tour guides and sample easy grab and go cuisine while enjoying breath- taking scenery and wildlife (www.tutchonetours.com). Explore the Yukon! Rent a camper van or a 4x4 jeep with camping gear and rooftop tent—perfect for exploring the Dempster Highway (www.overlandyukon.com). The Yukon Black Spruce Cabins are four modern cabins perched in the Boreal Forest, just five minutes from downtown Whitehorse (www.yukonblackspruce.ca). Yukon Heli Ski operates in the Northern Coast Mountains of BC and Yukon Territory and includes all kinds of terrain for skiers of all abilities. Accommodation is at the Tiny Town base camp with tiny houses, a saloon, sauna and meals catered by professional chefs (www.yukonheliski.com). CITY LIGHTS Whitehorse, the capital of the Yukon, gained its name from the roiling White Horse Rapids on the Yukon River. Whitehorse is the urban heart of the territory, with historic and heritage sites, a vibrant arts locale, and a wide range of dining and accommodation choices (www.travelyukon.com). Quirky and historic Dawson City preserves its storied Gold Rush past with false-fronted buildings, rustic log cabins, can-can dancing and a frontier energy. Downtown Dawson is designated a national historic site (www.dawsoncity.ca). THE GREAT OUTDOORS In the Yukon's unspoiled wilderness, outdoor enthusiasts can explore on foot or by mountain bike, or retrace the prospectors' footsteps by hiking the challenging Chilkoot Trail. Angle for trophy fish in a northern glacier-fed lake or climb a mountain. Go heli- hiking or heli-skiing, kayaking, canoeing or rafting part of the Yukon River—Canada's second longest. The Yukon, home to some of the most renowned rivers in Canada, is a paddler's dreamscape. In addition to the Yukon and Klondike rivers, the territory has four Canadian Heritage Rivers: the Alsek, Thirty Mile, Tatshenshini and Bonnet Plume. These ribbons of water offer challenging whitewater to flat waters, with outstanding opportunities to observe wildlife. Anglers come from around the world to experience some of Canada's best fishing for lake trout, northern pike, Arctic grayling and rainbow trout in the Yukon's pristine lakes and rivers. Experi- enced guides can create a day of superb fishing in remote waters where you can really get away from it all. Fishing outfitters like Inconnu Lodge offer personalized, small-group packages to introduce visitors to the northern lights, while enjoying fishing and viewing glaciers and local wildlife (www.inconnulodge.com). Spectators cheer on mushers in the famous Yukon Quest Sled Dog Race (www.yukonquest.com). Winter, summer or fall, dog lovers can paddle, hike, sled or snowmobile on guided outings with Muktuk Adventures, where there's a dog along on every outing (www.muktuk.com). Yukon Wild, a group of professional adventure travel companies, holds year-round trips with experienced local guides and equipment. Activities range from fishing, hiking, canoeing, mountain biking, horseback riding or rafting, to dogsledding, snowshoeing, skiing and snowmobiling (www.yukonwild.com). YT 85 CANOEING, MILES CANYON • GOVERNMENT OF YUKON/CATHIE ARCHBOULD

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