Keremeos, British Columbia, Canada
By Jane Cassie, Photos by Brent Cassie
Thirty kilometers from the town of Keremeos and two thousand meters skyward, awaits Cathedral Provincial Park and sixty kilometers of the most heavenly hiking that you’ll find in BC. The 33,000hectare (80,000acre) mountain wilderness is splashed with azure lakes, cloaked with alpine meadows, and backed by some mighty majestic jagged peaks.
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| Soaking in the Awesome Alpine |
Although you might think hoofing to such a heady elevation would be a quest considered by only serious mountaineers, thanks to the convenient location of Cathedral Lakes Lodge, at 2050 meters (6,800 feet), even novice trekkers are able to partake.
The journey to this divine destination actually commences at the park’s base camp where, after a twentytwo scenic kilometer drive through the Ashnola Valley, high country seekers rise up 1200m (3,900 feet) via four wheel transporters to the shimmering oasis of Quiniscoe Lake.
Thick stands of spruce, fir and larch enshroud the glistening gem, and snowtipped peaks provide a breathtaking backdrop. Varied accommodations that sprawl the shoreline include cozy log hewn cottages, a modern day Mongolian yurt for the meditationminded, a horde of well groomed campsites and the grand focal point, a Bavarianstyle lodge that hosts half a dozen guest rooms. Here, a soothing hot tub waits to offer therapeutic reprieve for strained and mountainworn muscles, a fireside lounge entices game lovers and bookworms, and three times a day the clanging dining gong stimulates some serious salivation.
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| Top of the Rim, 360 Degree Vista |
A myriad of trails, wellmarked by stonepiled cairns, leads to a full range of hiking options and a chain of sevenlinked lakes that possess their individual allure. While Lake of the Woods snuggles in the shade of sub alpine greenery, the turquoise gem of ladyslipper sparkles against its rugged granite embankments. Four of the wilderness wonders were well stocked with trout in the 1930s, and today the natural spawning promises abundant angling rewards that vary from pansized cutthroat to trophysized rainbow.
Before escalating to what we deemed as being the ‘top of the world’, we decided to build up our stamina by plodding the less arduous five kilometer Diamond Trail, which showed an elevation gain of two hundred and twentyfive meters. The green carpeted forest floor bordered our welltrod path, and the interspersing of Indian paintbrush and sunshine yellow buttercups in the alpine meadows created a picture postcard setting. Similar caliber climbs can be explored by taking the tundra trails that scoot off to Scout and Glacier Lake and the more advanced can be challenged by inclines like The Boxcar, Lakeview and Quiniscoe Mountain.
No matter what the route, all naturalists will be swept away by the bio diversity and splendor. The lower level terrain is lush with towering stands of Douglas fir that eventually thin out to outcroppings of Lodgepole pine. Englemann spruce and subalpine fir gather around the lodge site and the colourful alpine is attributed to the plethora of Lyall’s larch, heather and lupines.
The operating season runs from early June to mid October and everchanging scenery evolves in each of its three stages. Those who visit early will be smitten by snow dusted trails and the blushing from new buds. Midseason guests will ogle over the blaze of wildflowers that sweep the alpine meadows, and late comers will awe when the entire landscape becomes aglow in golden autumn hues.
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| Cozy Accommodations |
When it came time to leave, we too lingered on our treasured memories collected over our two day stay, and agreed that as well as feeling on top of the world, Cathedral Lakes Park was probably the closest place to heaven on earth.
Contact Information
Cathedral Lakes Lodge
S.4 C.8
Slocan Park, BC V0G 2E0 Canada
Phone: Toll free: 1888CLLHIKE
18882554453
www.cathedral-lakes-lodge.com


