Sir Wilfred Laurier in the Cariboo Mountains
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Cariboo Mountains
Provincial Park is a true wilderness area, dominated by densely forested
valleys and high serrated peaks and glaciers, featuring attractive
lakes and lush wetlands. The Park is situated in the interior wet
belt, between Bowron Lake and Wells Gray Provincial Parks. These three
parks combined now create one continuous protected area in the Cariboo
Mountains that is over 1.87 million acres (760,000 hectares) in size.
The 280,268-acre
(113,469-hectare) Cariboo Mountain Park incorporates a diverse landscape
ranging from mountain peaks and tarn lakes in hanging alpine valleys,
to extensive meadows, large wetland complexes, and ancient red-cedar
and hemlock forests.
The park also
protects the complete Niagara Creek watershed, from its headwaters
on the icefields of the Cariboo Mountains to the shores of Quesnel
Lake. It also protects the majority of the Mitchell River watershed.
Significant features are Niagara Falls on the shore of Quesnel Lake,
and small tarns in hanging alpine valleys.
Vehicle access
camping is available at Ghost Lake. The 5 small sites are open year
round, when accessible. This small, remote site features views down
the lake and up into the surrounding mountains, and is adjacent
to the scenic Matthew River Falls. Camping reservations are not
accepted at this park. All campsites are available on a first-come,
first-served basis. Wilderness and backcountry camping is allowed.
Cariboo Mountains
Provincial Park offers extensive opportunities for backcountry adventures,
but few facilities are provided. Anglers can fish for sockeye, coho,
chinook, kokanee, bull trout or rainbow trout. Park visitors can
cross-country ski or snowshoe in the park, but no trails are set.
There are no defined or maintained hiking trails in the park. Horseback
riding is permitted, but this is not horse country. It is very wet,
and old routes are overgrown and impassable by horses. Visitors
must be self-sufficient and experienced in wilderness travel. Bring
your own drinking water as potable water is not available in the
park.
The diverse
habitat of the park supports an equally diverse array of wildlife
species. Wildlife in the park includes grizzly bear (one of the
largest populations of grizzlies in BC's interior), black bear,
mountain goat, moose, wolf, many small mammals, and the rare mountain
caribou that depends on the arboreal lichens found in old-growth
forests, which they reach by walking on top of the deep winter snowpack.
The lower Mitchell
River and its tributaries provide critical spawning, rearing, and
foraging habitats for salmonids, including sockeye, coho, chinook,
kokanee, bull trout, and rainbow trout. The lower Mitchell River
also provides a spring staging area for numerous species of waterfowl.
Cariboo Mountains
Provincial Park is located northeast of Likely and east of Quesnel
in the Cariboo region of BC. The Ghost Lake camping area can be
accessed by travelling to Barkerville from Quesnel via Highway 26,
and then taking the 3100 Forestry Road (gravel) from Barkerville.
The park is located approximately 70 km (allow 1.5 hours) from Barkerville
on the 3100 road. This is an active logging road: please drive cautiously
with headlights on. Turn right onto a sign-posted 4-km access road,
which leads to the camping area.
Another route
to Ghost Lake is via Likely (about 90 km). The 8400 Road (Cariboo
Lake Road) from Likely leads north past Cariboo Lake, and eventually
connects up with the 3100 Road. Follow this to the Ghost Lake turnoff
(signed), turn right and drive another 4 km to the campsite. The
park can also be accessed from the McBride Valley via the Castle
Creek Forest Service Road, which leads up Castle Creek and ends
about 5 km from the park boundary.
Cariboo Mountains
Provincial Park can also be accessed from Quesnel Lake by boat or
along logging roads. No trails link Bowron
Lake Provincial Park and Wells Gray Provincial Park to Cariboo Mountains
Provincial Park.
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