Premier Listings for Kyuquot Sound

Kyuquot Sound on the northern west coast of Vancouver Island is a wilderness area except for a number of logging camps, and Kyuquot Village, the northernmost of the 14 Nuu-chah-nulth First Nation bands.

Also located on Kyuquot Sound is Fair Harbour. The community of Fair Harbour offers no services, other than a government dock, a rough boat launch ramp, an unsupervised campsite, and ample parking for vehicles.

Many visitors to the west side of Vancouver Island may never have had the chance to boat in the wind, the rain, and the ever-rolling seas that characterize the world of the outside waters, as the open ocean here is often called. One of three freighters (or ‘coasters’) that ply the waters of Vancouver Island’s Barkley, Nootka, and Kyuquot Sounds is based in Gold River, at the western terminus of Highway 28. Barkley Sound is not as exposed as Nootka and Kyuquot Sounds, where the MV Uchuck III makes its rounds. (The Uchuck III‘s sister ship, the MV Frances Barkley, is based out of Port Alberni on central Vancouver Island and sails through Barkley Sound.)

Exploring the outside waters aboard the Uchuck III as the former World War II minesweeper makes a weekly two-day round-trip voyage to the fishing hamlet of Kyuquot can be an adventure. For many passengers, particularly in storm season, the high (or low) point of the journey is the two-hour stretch each way spent tossing about on the open ocean waters between Port Eliza and Kyuquot. From the moment the 136-foot-long freighter leaves the dock in Gold River and begins its 10-hour journey the big question is whether your constitution can handle the rise-and-fall motion of the ship in high seas. (At such times it helps to remember that the word uchuck translates as healing waters.)

[FAGP id=26324]

On a typical voyage, ocean swells can run in the 6- to 9-foot (2- to 3-m) range: plenty chaotic for most voyagers, though the skipper will go out in anything short of 25 feet (8 m) to make his rounds. Although the Uchuck III has sometimes had to wait out a blow in Kyuquot or Port Eliza, she’s never foregone a regularly scheduled trip since 1982, when she was assigned to the Kyuquot run. (Most of the crew worked on the Lady Rose before coming to Gold River, and are clearly distressed at the trashing of the Broken Islands by campers in Barkley Sound. Despite the ever-present signs of similar treatment of the forest by logging companies along the Uchuck III‘s route, most crew members feel Nootka and Kyuquot Sounds are a cut above their former assignment.) If you’re inclined to be right in on the action during a bout on the high seas, the wheelhouse is the place to be. Although not the roomiest place aboard, there is space for several passengers to stand inside with the skipper and first mate. When ocean waters are too rough north of Port Eliza to negotiate a tricky inside passage called the Rolling Roadstead north towards Kyuquot, the Uchuck III heads west of Vancouver Island into the vastness of the open water.

In storm season, winds often blow at 30 to 50 knots from the southeast, while ocean swells run from the west; large breakers roll in from all directions. The slender nose of the Uchuck III is the thin edge of the proverbial wedge – a wave cutter par excellence. The nose of the Uchuck III rises as the horizon line falls, then slams down on a cresting wave. The horizon rises as the Uchuck III drops into a trough, then rises again. The skipper looks like a defensive lineman on a football team, braced for the onrush of yet another surge. The mate scans the radar, recording the ship’s position in a logbook. After two hours of this, it’s a relief to suddenly see the Mission Islands and Nicolaye Channel’s narrow entrance, beyond which lies Kyuquot. As the Uchuck III passes Aktis Island, there are signs of a clearing and several homes. This is the original village site where more than 2,000 Natives lived in the years before contact with the Europeans. Today there are fewer than 30 full-time residents here, who, by choice, shun such conveniences as telephones and electricity, except that provided by a limited-use generator.

The village of Kyuquot is home to 300 Natives and others, whose homes are built into the forest above the tideline. To turn into a small bay and find civilization after rocking and rolling for several hours in open water heightens Kyuquot’s value. Much of the architecture here is identifiably Canadian West Coast style: modern and well kept, a testimony to good years in the fishing industry. Despite the overwhelming sense a visitor feels that the logging industry is the only employer around, brought on by endless patches of clear-cut on all sides coupled with an absence of other marine traffic, fishing is the predominant vocation in Kyuquot. Here on Walters Island, in a series of small bays just beyond reach of the spirits of wind and water, people have sheltered and drawn a living from the ocean for generations. In recent years, with the fishing season becoming more limited, tourism is seen by some residents as a viable alternative profession. Kyuquot village has a bed and breakfast, motel and restaurant, a general store, a Red Cross medical clinic, phone service, boat charters and a water taxi.

In winter months, cargo aboard the Uchuck III consists of goods destined for a dozen or more logging camps (more commonly referred to as logging ‘shows’). Come warmer weather, when logging shuts down due to the threat of fires, ferrying passengers is the staple business of the Uchuck III. Instead of off-loading heavy equipment, in summer the ship’s deck is lined with kayaks and its towering Union rigging is busy wet-launching oceangoing adventurers. Although much of the coastline is rocky and rugged, there are choice campsites on beaches near Kyuquot, including Rugged Point Marine Provincial Park. Not everyone comes this far. At other times of the week, the Uchuck III makes day trips in the sheltered waters of Nootka Sound to Tahsis or Friendly Cove, the site of Captain James Cook’s first contact with the Native people of Vancouver Island in 1778. Today only one family remains in the settlement of Yuquot at Friendly Cove on Nootka Island.

The MV Uchuck III sails from Gold River to Kyuquot every Thursday morning at 7am. Gold River is a comfortable, four-hour, 155-mile (250-km) drive from Nanaimo. The cost of the round trip to Kyuquot includes bed-and-breakfast accommodation in Kyuquot. Shorter day trips aboard the Uchuck III include the Tahsis Day Trip, which departs every Tuesday year-round. This trip will take you through Nootka Sound to Tahsis (about five hours one way), with stops as required to deliver passengers and cargo at logging camps and settlements. A one-hour stop in Tahsis allows enough time for a walking tour of the village. The Nootka Sound Day Trip includes a brief stop at Resolution Cove and a 90-minute stop at Yuquot (Friendly Cove). The fare does not include a landing fee at Friendly Cove, the proceeds of which go to the Mowachaht Band for redevelopment of this historic site. Reservations are a must for all sailings.

Kayaking: The federal dock in Fair Harbour, about 22 miles (35 km) northwest of Zeballos, is the launching point for exploring Kyuquot Sound, Checleset Bay Ecological Reserve, and Brooks Peninsula / Muquin Provincial Park. This is a vast, windswept, sea-sprayed section of Vancouver Island’s northwest coast. The snout of Brooks Peninsula offers some protection for Checleset Bay from the winter storms that blow south from the Gulf of Alaska. Sea kayakers should beware the fury of the winds and surf that build around its protruding bulk, especially at Cape Cook and Clerke Point. The rewards for making the journey are the solitude provided by the surroundings and the sight of magnificent stands of Sitka spruce, the only species of tree able to thrive under the constant salt- and magnesium-loaded spindrift that the winds whip from the tops of the swells and carry ashore in the breeze.

In the sheltering forest, marbled murrelets nest in the deep moss that enshrouds the thick branches of the spruce. Herds of Roosevelt elk graze in the lush, green understorey, while black bears forage in the berry-laden bushes. If you are among the few visitors who make their way here each year, you will be treated to one of the last remaining environments on the west coast where logging has been held mercifully at bay. Brooks Peninsula Provincial Park is huge, 127,528 acres (51631 ha) of wilderness that is best explored with the help of a guide. Six-day tours of Kyuquot Sound, Checleset Bay Ecological Reserve, and Brooks Peninsula Provincial Park are operated from May to September. Separate sea-kayaking tours are offered for novice, advanced and all-women groups.

Sea Otters: Between 1969 and 1972, almost one hundred sea otters were relocated to the waters of Checleset Bay (north of Kyuquot Sound and south of Brooks Peninsula) from the Aleutian Islands as part of an experiment to replenish a once-thriving population that had been hunted to the point of extinction on the west coast of Vancouver Island. Checleset’s remoteness, coupled with an abundance of shallow reefs and a good food source (primarily sea urchin) have brought sea-otter numbers on the west coast of Vancouver Island to a current level of approximately 2,000 animals. The sea otters have spread out from the 81,500-acre (33000-ha) Checleset Bay Ecological Reserve and have been spotted as far south as Barkley Sound and north of the rugged Brooks Peninsula.

The re-introduction has become something of an issue recently, as the sea otters compete with the Native Indians for crabs, abalone and sea urchins. The unfortunate result is a decline in sea otter numbers. With the elimination of the endearing whiskered critters by greedy and thoughtless European fur traders and native hunters in the late 18th and early 19th century, the otters’ natural foods became more abundant, decimating their own natural foods, predominantly kelp. With the return of the sea otters to their natural habitat, the crabs, sea urchins and abalone are now being kept in check, with the revival of the kelp beds so important as a source of food, shelter and spawning grounds for so many species of fish and other marine life. This is having a positive affect on the marine life along this coastline. The Natives are upset that the sea otters are depleting the local shellfish levels, and the sea otters…well, they just want to continue doing what sea otters were doing for thousands of years before Natives and Europeans arrived and laid claim to their waters.

Rugged Point Marine Provincial Park is located on the eastern shore of Kyuquot Channel, approximately 35 km west of the town of Zeballos. This remote wilderness area offers magnificent scenery, challenging hiking trail and preserves one of the most beautiful stretches of beach on the entire west coast. Experienced kayakers and ocean paddlers launch from Fair Harbour to set off down Kyuquot Channel to explore the isolated waters around Rugged Point Provincial Park. Wilderness camping, swimming and fishing are added attractions of the park.

For a gripping description of wilderness hiking in Kyuquot Sound, read Written by the Wind by Randy Stoltmann, the late environmentalist.

Location: Kyuquot Sound is located on the northern west coast of Vancouver Island, south of Brooks Peninsula and north of Nootka Island. The only road access to Kyuquot Sound is at Fair Harbour on the eastern shore of the Sound.

The closest commercial centre and telephone by road is in the community of Zeballos (35 km southeast of Fair Harbour and 39km from Highway 19), a 1 km detour on the road between Fair Harbour and Highway 19. Take the left fork about 5 km before reaching Zeballos, then pick up the Fair Harbour road again across the bridge at the outside of town. The road west of Highway 19 is a BC Forest Service access road, usually well-maintained gravel.

Kyuquot Summer Market: Every Friday afternoon, from July to August, the little village of Kyuquot hosts an outdoor public market on the government dock on Walter’s Island. It’s the social gathering place for the summer. We sell locally made foods, crafts and art. It’s a true West Coast experience. Join us for some humour, conversation, food and shopping at the Kyuquot Summer Market. Everyone is welcome!

Premier Business Directory in Kyuquot Sound, Vancouver Island – Small Business BC

Photo of BC Oceanfront Real Estate Team: Shelley McKay Personal Real Estate Corporation, Ed Handja Personal Real Estate Corporation and Greg du Cloux Licensed Sales Associate
BC Oceanfront Real Estate Team: Shelley McKay Personal Real Estate Corporation, Ed Handja Personal Real Estate Corporation and Greg du Cloux Licensed Sales Associate
ROYAL LEPAGE Advance Realty Campbell River 972 Shoppers Row Campbell River BC V9W 2C5 Home Phone: 250-286-3293Work Fax: 250-286-1932Work Phone: 1-888-286-1932Cell Phone: 1-250-287-0011 Ed CellCell Phone: 1-250-830-4435 Shelley CellCell Phone: 1-250-895-1346 Greg CellVisit Website

Biographical Info

It’s a Coastal Lifestyle … Live It!

Specializing in marketing and selling local residential, recreational, unique oceanfront and commercial real estate throughout Campbell River, northern Vancouver Island, Discovery Islands, the Outer Islands and the BC Mainland Coast. Our real estate listings include homes to small oceanfront and lakefront recreational lots, private islands, remote island acreages, fishing lodges, wilderness / adventure resorts and vacation homes, oceanfront / lakefront cabins, marinas, remote & timbered acreages, and development investment properties on the west coast of BC and Vancouver Island – BCO has the Coast covered!

The BC Oceanfront Real Estate Team loves to bring people to the coast and introduce people to the coastal lifestyle. All members of the team live an active coastal lifestyle, and they bring that passion for the coast to all that they do. All three agents have their own boats and are very familiar with the many different regions surrounding central and northern Vancouver Island. With a team behind you, you can be sure that someone is always at hand to answer questions and lend assistance.

Return to top.
Photo of Walters Cove Resort
Walters Cove Resort
Walters Island Kyuquot Sound BC V0P 1J0 Mailing Address: Walters Cove Resort 305 – 918 Island Highway Campbell River BC V9W 2C3 Work Phone: 1-844-466-9453Visit Website

Biographical Info

Walters Cove Resort is a luxurious fishing lodge located in Kyuquot Sound on the remote and rugged northwest coast of Vancouver Island, BC. The intimate sport fishing resort is one of the most pristine and highly-praised fishing lodges in Kyuquot Sound with large luxury boats and internationally renowned salt-water fishing guaranteed to provide an unforgettable salmon and halibut fishing experience.

Walters Cove Resort makes BC saltwater fishing an exhilarating, affordable and challenging experience, no matter your skill level. Fly in or drive in, or bring your own boat. With everything you need for a fishing trip of a lifetime, our fishing lodge will help you reconnect with nature and improve your fishing game. Try one of our special west coast salmon and halibut fishing packages.

Return to top.
Photo of Houpsitas Village Suites
Houpsitas Village Suites
Village of Kyuquot Kyuquot BC Home Phone: 250-287-2223Work Phone: 1-844-466-9453Visit Website

Biographical Info

The newly renovated Houpsitas Village Suites property is situated oceanside in the village of Kyuquot, offering 4 rooms and 3 suites (studio, 1-bedroom and 2-bedroom). All rooms have Wi-Fi, satellite TV and varying degrees of cooking facilities.

Owned and operated by the Ka:’yu:’k’t’h’/Chek’tles7et’h’ First Nations, the Houpsitas Village Suites is only accessible by sea or air, by driving to Fair Harbour and then travelling by boat or water taxi to the HVS, or flying directly by charter plane, or arriving on your own boat. A boat launch is available in Fair Harbour.

Kyuquot is surrounded by 5 provincial parks and 4 ecological reserves and is well known for incredible salmon and halibut fishing, kayaking, surfing, camping and wildlife viewing. Kyuquot is the perfect place to stage your West Coast Vancouver Island adventure.

Return to top.
Photo of Fair Harbour Marina and Campground
Fair Harbour Marina and Campground
#1 Fair Harbour Forest Service Road Fair Harbour BC V0P 2A0 Home Phone: 250-483-3382Work Phone: 1-844-466-9453View Website

Biographical Info

When you’ve had enough of work and routine, it is time to escape to Fair Harbour Marina and Campground on Vancouver Island. Here you get back to nature with the most amazing fishing, surfing, kayaking, hiking, and camping in British Columbia. We are the undisputed premier launch point for unbeatable outdoor activities – a water lover’s paradise.

Located in the traditional territory of Ka:’yu:’k’t’h’/Che:k’tles7et’h’ First Nations on Vancouver Island, we feature a rugged and spectacular shoreline with beautiful islets and breathtaking beaches. There’s the ocean as far as the eye can see, and tidal pools teeming with ocean life. If you like to fish, you will be in heaven at Kyuquot! We feature some of the most productive, yet uncrowded, fishing spots on the west coast of Vancouver Island! You’ll find large salmon, halibut, ling cod, and more!

You can base your adventure out of one of our luxurious cabins, or if you prefer to camp, enjoy one of our spacious campsites surrounded by trees. Fair Harbour Marina provides supervised monitored moorage at our private dock in Fair Harbour.

New for 2020: Fair Harbour is pleased to be offering guided fishing and scenic tour day charters.

Return to top.