2016 Lillooet Visitors Guide
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Transcript of 2016 Lillooet Visitors Guide
2016LILLOOET
& AREAVISITORS
GUIDE
For more information, please see our webpage:
www.lillooetchamberofcommerce.comor call us at 250-256-3578
Come explore the opportunities Lillooet has to offer.
Discover our potential,Reap the rewards.
Your new life awaits.
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The Best of Lillooet
What makes Lillooet Lillooet? Is it the spectacular mountain scenery with its call to adventure? The great climate (hot summers and mild winters)? The strong Aboriginal heritage that flourishes here? The spirit of the place? The diversity and independence of the people who call it home? It is all that and more. And now it is yours to explore. Let’s begin with some of the best activities, attractions and amenities Lillooet offers.
AROUND TOWN
Lillooet’s Farmers Market is open every Friday from early May to the Thanksgiving weekend in October. Check out the local produce for sale, sample bannock (a traditional Aboriginal fry bread) or fritters, buy jam or a home-baked pie for the road or the campsite. Browse through the crafts for sale, perhaps listen to an impromptu performance by local musicians, meet old friends and make new ones.
Dining Options Recently named one of the Top Five Places to Eat in the Sea-to-Sky Corridor, the Ponderosa Kitchen at Fort Berens Estate Winery opens May 21 and will remain open until Oct. 10. Executive chef Dylan Foss blends fresh, local ingredients and classic old-world techniques. Enjoy
the exquisite food and friendly, attentive service; savour an award-winning wine; feel the summer breeze on the patio; and drink in the view over the lush green vine-
yard towards the Coast Mountains. The kitchen’s open daily for lunch, and for tapas-style dinners Friday nights and set-menu dinners Saturday evenings June 24-Sept. 3.
Lillooet NewsEstablished by ‘Ma’ Murray in 1934
Bridge River
www.lillooetnews.net
The Lillooet Visitors Guide is produced by The Bridge River - Lillooet News.www.lillooetnews.net • Email: [email protected] Toll Free: 1-877-300-8569 • Phone 250-256-4219 Fax: 250-256-4210 • Cover Photo Credit: Melissa Paulhus
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ACCOMMODATIONS4 PINES MOTEL108 8th Ave. 250-256-4247FRASER COVE CAMPGROUND1234 Davis Rd. 250-256-0142HOTEL DEORO639 Main St. 250-2560-2355MILE 0 MOTEL616 Main St. 250-256-7511RETASKET LODGE & RV PARK1264 Bouvette Rd. 250-256-2090REYNOLDS HOTEL1237 Main St. 250-256-4202WILLOWS AT 6 MILEwww.willowscampground.com 250-256-0429
AUTOMOTIVEINTEGRA TIRE & LILLOOET GLASS561 Main St. 250-256-4111KAL TIRE249 Main St. 250-256-4198LORDCO AUTO PARTSOld Mill Plaza 250-256-0599SHULAPS SERVICE CENTRE151 Moha Rd. 250-256-4040
CHURCHES BETTER LIVING CENTRE-7TH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH603 Main St. 250-256-9218LILLOOET GOSPEL CHAPEL1147 Main St. 250-256-7655
DINING/BARSDEANO’S PIZZA682 Main St. 250-256-0064DINA’S PLACE690 Main St. 250-256-4264FORT BERENS ESTATE WINERY1881 Hwy 99 North 250-256-7788ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION BRANCH 66737 Main St 250-256-7332SUBWAYAcross from Old Mill Plaza 250-256-7807
RECREATIONBLACKCOMB AVIATIONwww.blackcombaviation.com 250-256-6000DISTRICT OF LILLOOET REC CENTRE930 Main St. 250-256-7527HISTORIC HAT CREEK RANCHwww.hatcreekranch.ca 250-457-9722LILLOOET MEMORIAL CURLING CLUB178 Mountainview Rd. 250-256-4370LILLOOET SHEEP PASTURE GOLF COURSE5000 Texas Creek Rd. 250-256-0550MIYAZAKI HOUSE643 Russell Lane 250-256-7527SPLITROCK ENVIRONMENTALSplitrock Centre, Hwy 99 250-256-3109XWISTEN EXPERIENCE TOURSwww.xwisten.ca 250-256-7844
RETAILABUNDANCE ARTISAN BAKERYUnit A - 657 Main St. BUY-LOW FOODSOld Mill Plaza 250-256-7922CARIBOO APIARIES4007 Moha Rd. 250-256-7231CREATIVE HAVEN657 Main St. 250-256-2280 ENERGY PLUS626 Main St. 250-256-4796GRANT A WISH600 Block Main St. LILLOOET FARMERS MARKETMay - October Fridays 250-256-7797LILLOOET TIMBER MART129 Moran Place 250-256-4141LINDA’S PLACE ON MAIN777 Main St. 250-256-1884OLD AIRPORT GARDENS FARM MARKETHwy 12 South 250-256-7051PHARMASAVEOld Mill Plaza 250-256-4262TAFFY’S TWOONIE TOWN86 7th Ave. 250-256-0066WINNER’S EDGE644 Main St. 250-256-4848
SERVICESBRIDGE RIVER - LILLOOET NEWS979 Main St. 250-256-4219CAYUSE FLATS TRANSPORTHwy 99 250-256-7155DIRECT ELECTRIC250-256-4157DISTRICT OF LILLOOET615 Main St. 250-256-4289HUB INTERNATIONAL BARTON INSURANCE682 Main St. 250-256-7596LILLOOET CONTRACTING109 Main St. 250-256-7669LILLOOET & DISTRICT CHAMBER OF COMMERCEwww.lillooetchamberofcommerce.com 250-256-3578LILLOOET ELKS250-256-7972LILLOOET LIONS CLUB250-256-1968LILLOOET MUSEUM & VISITORS CENTRE790 Main St. 250-256-4308LILLOOET NATURALIST SOCIETYwww.lillooetnaturalistsociety.orgLILLOOET PUBLIC LIBRARY930 Main St. 250-256-7944LILLOOET REGIONAL INVASIVE SPECIES SOCIETYwww.lriss.ca 250-256-4292LILLOOET ROYAL PURPLE250-256-4523LILLOOET SPA & WELLNESS836 Main St. 250-256-2156RADIO LILLOOETwww.radiolillooet.ca 250-999-2086RE/MAX REAL ESTATE LILLOOET909 Main St. 250-256-7166SKOOKUM TOWING250-256-4789THOMPSON RIVERS UNIVERSITYOld Mill Plaza 250-256-4296THOMPSON VALLEY FUNERAL HOMEwww.tvfh.ca 1-800-295-5138TRADEWINDS HAIR PLUSOld Mill Plaza 250-256-7431
Lillooet Business Directory
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Visitors can also enjoy outdoor dining on the patio at Dina’s Place Restaurant, which specializes in Greek dishes such as souvlaki, spanakopita and moussaka as well as pastas. Locals recommend the thin crust pizza at Deano’s Pizza; Subway is a quick and healthy lunch option; and the DeOro Coffee Lounge is a comfortable place to relax over an espresso. Other cafes serve sushi and Chinese food. Or ask a local and they will point you in whatever direction your taste buds crave.
The Jade Walk is a relaxing stroll through downtown Lillooet. Start at the Jadehenge at the Lillooet Museum and Visitor Centre and proceed along Main Street, paus-ing to admire the 30 pieces of jade on display. These art pieces have been cut, polished and mounted to reveal each individual “face” of jade, whose colours, shapes and fractures all have different quali-ties. For good luck, Asian visitors rub the tall jade boulders at the Jadehenge.
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Enjoy your stay in elegant comfort & quiet serenity
Beautifully appointed furniture, appliances & linens
8 Full Service RV Sites
1264 Bouvette Rd., Box 286, Lillooet, BC V0K 1V0 Phone: 250-256-2090 RESERVATIONS: 1-866-456-2090 Fax: 250-256-2091
Website: www.retasketlodge.com Email: [email protected]
• 2QueenBedswithcozyduvets• Microwave&barfridge• Air-conditioning• Fullbathroomwithtub&shower• Freelocaltelephonecalls• Hairdryers•In-roomcoffee&tea
•ShawHigh-SpeedWirelessmodems ineveryroom• CableTV• Complimentarycoffee&tea• FreeContinentalBreakfast• Allnon-smokingrooms• GuestLaundry
ElectricVehicleChargingStation
Where to find us:Travel West on Main Street, turn right on Mountainview Road,
up the hill turn right on Bouvette Road, around the and curve you’ll see our sign.
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The REC Centre is the heart of Lillooet. Paying the drop-in fee gives visitors access to the public swims in the indoor pool (opening for the summer season in mid-May); the weight room, squash court and the bouldering wall, where wannabe mountaineers can test their climb-ing skills; as well as public skating in the arena in the winter. The REC Centre – the REC stands for Recreational, Educational and Cultural – is home to Radio Lillooet (CHLS-FM, 100.5 on your dial), and the Lillooet Library, which offers free WiFi and public computers.
Taste the difference. The Lillooet area has been known for its agricultural produce since the 1920s when a box of Seton
Portage apples was delivered to Buckingham Palace every year. Today while shopping in local stores, be sure to pick up organic greens from Green Dirt Farm, gar-lic from Ucwalmicw’s Community Garden, organic carrots grown at Fountainview Farms and Golden Cariboo Honey produced by local bees working for Cariboo Apiaries.
If you love fresh, healthy home-grown produce – and who doesn’t? – be sure to visit Airport Gardens on Highway 12 in East Lillooet. Believe it when they say their tomatoes are the best in B.C., with that just-picked, fresh-from-the-vine aroma of Lillooet’s sun and soil. It’s not unusual for folks from the Lower Mainland to make their annual trip
Photo: Alex Waterhouse-Hayward
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Fraser CoveCampground & Guest Cottage• Full Hook-ups • Hot Shower• 30 & 50 amp available • Free Wifi• Shady Riverfront Tent Sites• Scenic walk or bike over Historic “Old Bridge” to Shopping Mall• Fraser River Beach Fishing for Sturgeon and Salmon• 1.5 km north of Fort Berens Estate Winery
1234 Davis Road (Just off Hwy 99)[email protected] Free: 1-800-936-2040
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CLINToN
BRIdgE RIvER
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WHISTLER
Legend
Paved HighwaySecondary Roads(Most of these roads are unpaved. Some have rough conditions in places)
Forest Service Roadsor Seasonal Roads(Some of these roads impassable in winter and some have very rough conditions)
(Some sites maintained to minimal levels)
Scale in kilometres
5 0 5 10 15
Camp Sites
JoffRE LakES
NaIRN faLLS
Finding Your Way
Lillooet NewsEstablished by ‘Ma’ Murray in 1934
Bridge River
www.lillooetnews.net
The Lillooet Visitors Guide is produced by The Bridge River - Lillooet News.www.lillooetnews.net • Email: [email protected] Toll Free: 1-877-300-8569 • Phone 250-256-4219 Fax: 250-256-4210 • Cover Photo Credit: Lorrie Carson
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Finding Your Way
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here to take home a hundred kilos of tomatoes for canning, preserving and plain good eating.The new Abundance Artisan Bakery sells cookies, sourdough ryes, chal-lah, a very popular flax bread, baguettes, cinnamon buns burst-ing with local fruits and berries, sausage rolls made with local beef and two kinds of croissants (the chocolate croissants are deliciously decadent.) Fort Berens Estate Winery operates the first commercial vineyard in Lillooet. Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company Fort that began con-struction here in 1859 on what is now the winery site, Fort Berens wines have won acclaim nation-ally and internationally. Their 2012 Riesling received the 2014 Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Excellence in B.C. Wine and earlier this year the 2013 Pinot Noir won Fort Berens its first-ever platinum medal. Just up the road from Fort Berens is the Bitterbine Hop Farm, home to Harvesters of Organic Hops (HOOH). Established in 2009, the local farm serves B.C.’s growing micro-brewing industry. In 2013, Old Jalopy Ale – the Canadian Brewing Awards Beer of the Year – was made with organic hops grown at Bitterbine. And Pemberton Distillery makes a Lillooet Apricot Liqueur from – you’ll never guess! – Lillooet apricots.
Walking the Dog Whether you’re visiting overnight, enjoying a weekend jaunt or staying longer, your dog is on holiday, too. Walk your four-legged pal on the Lions Trail along the Fraser River or the dock at Seton Lake (dogs aren’t permitted on the beach). Pooches on leashes are also welcome for a walk along the spawning channels at Splitrock Environmental or at the Restoration Site. Please clean up
after your pet and be aware that the latter two sites are fish and wildlife habitat areas.
THE GREAT OUTDOORS
Come Fly with Me. Is it time to get down on bended knee and pop the question? Do it in high style on a mountaintop with stunning vistas and popping champagne corks. Blackcomb
Photo: Kevin Aitken
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Old Mill Plaza 250-256-4262 www.pharmasavelillooet.com
email: [email protected]
• Pharmacist on Duty 5 Days/Week• Gift Shop • Toys• Seasonal Supplies• Books/Magazines• Greeting Cards• Lottery Centre
Hours: Mon. - Thurs. - 9:30 am - 6 pmFriday - 9:30 am - 8 pm
Saturday - 9:30 am - 6 pm Sunday - 11 am - 5 pm
Pharmasave Lillooet
HISTORIC HAT CREEK RANCH
Fun for the whole family with:~ Guided Tours of 1860’s Roadhouse & Native Interpretation Site~ Stagecoach ~ Restaurant & Gift Shop~ Goldpanning, Archery & More~ RV Sites, Camping, Cabins, & Public Shower House~ Stay in a Covered Wagon
Open Daily May to OctoberTelephone. 250-457-9722 or Toll Free 1-800-782-0922
Email: [email protected] www.hatcreekranch.ca
‘Relive the 1860s Gold Rush and Native History!’Located 80km east of Lillooet along scenic Hwy. #99
LILLOOET PUBLICLIBRARY
• Free WiFi and Public Computers• Summer Reading Club• Branches in Gold Bridge and Shalalth at the Bridge River Power Site
Contact info and hours of operation at:
http://lillooetbc.libraries.coop
Visitors Welcome
4pines4pinesMOTEL
• 47 Units • Air Conditioned• Cable TV • Kitchenette• Honeymoon Suites with Jacuzzis• Suites with Jet Tubs• Guest Laundry• Direct Dial Phones/Voice Mail• Internet Access available• Seniors Discount• Reasonable Rates• Complimentary Tea, Coffee & Ice
Quiet, Comfortable & Clean in
Downtown Lillooet2 1/2 Stars on Canada’s
Select Star RatingToll-Free Reservations1-800-753-2576
Ph: 250-256-4247 Fax: 250-256-4120www.4pinesmotel.com108 8th Ave. Lillooet, BC
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Helicopters offers heli fishing, alpine picnics, sightseeing, hiking and flights to uniquely romantic locations for proposals and wed-dings. Local pilot Scott Taylor is a world traveler who’s just returned from his own adventures in Antarctica. With Gold Bridge as a base, take a flight-seeing tour for a once-in-a-lifetime flight to the Lillooet Ice Fields’ Bridge Glacier. Watch ice bergs calve into the glacier’s lake and take a walk to the toe of the two-kilometre long mass of ice. British Columbia Magazine recently named the Bridge Glacier flight as one of B.C.’s Top 7 Tours.
Geocaching is an outdoor treasure hunt using GPS enabled devices. Participants navigate to a specific set of GPS coordinates and then try to find the geocache container hidden at that spot a treasure hunt. There are 11 fun and fascinat-ing geocaching locations in the Lillooet area. They are the Xwisten fishing rocks, the Old Bridge over the Fraser River, the Lower Seton Spawning Channels, the Kaoham Shuttle, Red Rock, the Burkholder Lake Trail, Camelsfoot Peak Trail, Horseshoe Bend Trail, Mission Ridge Trail, Pavilion Lake and the Seton Ridge Trail.
The Lillooet Geocache sites are part of Gold Country Geotourism Adventures, the largest geo-tour in all of Canada. FYI: The B.C. Geocaching Association meets here at the Cayoosh Creek Campground on the Labour Day weekend.
Go for the GoldGold seekers came here in the 1860s seeking their fortunes in the sandbars and gravel bars of local rivers and creeks. Follow in
their footsteps and try your luck gold panning. Cayoosh Creek Campground is a provincially-des-ignated Recreational Gold Panning Reserve. Easy access to the Fraser River’s back eddies can also be found at the BC Hydro Restoration Site, located off Powerhouse Road. Gold seekers are welcome to use hand pans, hand shovels and metal detectors in their search for pre-cious placer gold nuggets and “colour” that has washed free of the motherlode.
Photo: Lloyd McNary
Photo: Brad Naylor
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Providing Quality Guest Services since 1941
Where Old Fashioned Friendly Service meets . . . Comfortable, Modern Convenience
www.reynoldshotel.com
Reservations 1-877-655-5506 or 250-256-4202
1237 Main Street Lillooet, BC
• Classic Rooms • Restaurant • Pub • Cold Beer, Wine & Liquor Store
Recently Renovated • Free Wireless Internet
• B.C.’s Best Tomatoes• Fruits, Veggies, Herbs• U-Pick • We Pick
Old Airport GardensFarm MarketOld Airport GardensFarm Market
TAKE YOUR PICK!TAKE YOUR PICK!
Phone/Fax: 250-256-70511/4 Mile South
of Lillooet Turn-Offon Hwy 12
Mile 0 MotelCanada's Best Value Inn
• 36 New Units – Air Cond – Cable TV• Free wireless Internet – Movie Channels• Honeymoon suite (Fireplace – Jacuzzi)• Family Suite w/Separate Room – Jet Tub• Banquet Hall – Guest Coin laundry
‘Your Home Away From Home’P: 250-256-7511 • F: 250-256-4124
Toll Free: 1-888-766-4530Email: [email protected]
Located at 616 Main St.Downtown Lillooet, B.C. V0K 1V0Website: www.mileomotel.com
Great Scenic View of the Fraser River
Lillooet Memorial Curling Club
• 4 Sheets of Jet Ice• Bar & Lounge• Lockers• Concession• Pro Shop
Season runs from October to the end of March, ending with our fun-filled
April Fool’s Bonspiel!
178 Mountainview Rd., LILLOOET 250-256-4370www.lillooetcurling.ca [email protected]
Leagues • Ladies • Mens • Mixed • Drop-In
Please email for specific days and
times.
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Gone fishin.’ Rainbow trout, lake trout, Dolly Varden, steelhead and salmon abound in the rivers, lakes and creeks in and around town. Seton Lake offers good fishing for trout and Dolly Varden off the dock or by boat at the south end of the lake at Seton Portage/Shalalth. Fountain, Pavilion, Crown and Turquoise Lakes are all favourites for those using flies or conventional tackle, and there are great trout fishing lakes in the Bridge River Valley as well. The Bridge and Fraser Rivers are both home to chinook, the largest salmon species. Sockeye salmon are found in the Bridge River in the fall, while steelhead are common in the winter. The salmon and steelhead fisheries are subject to local open-ings, so please check local regula-tions before wetting a line.
How about a hike? The “bible” for hikers in this area is the Lillooet Naturalist Society’s “Canyon to Alpine Hiking Guide.” It includes trail and access informa-tion on 32 hikes, dazzling colour photos by Ian Routley, route maps and topographical information. Close-to-town hikes include the
Bridges Walk (it’s a total distance of approximately 10 kilometres and includes the Old Bridge and the Bridge of the 23 Camels; this is also the route of Lillooet’s annual Terry Fox run); the Lions Trail, the Powerhouse Restoration Site, the Seton Spawning Channels, the Canal Walk and the trail above Lillooet to Red Rock (becoming known among the hiking fraternity as the Lillooet Grind).Tips for the trails less traveled: - travel in a group of at least three people- carry enough water and food for your trip. Hiking in the mountains
requires extra energy and Lillooet’s hot, dry climate can cause heat exhaustion- leave enough time to return in daylight- leave an outline of your intend-ed hike, including your location and expected time of return, with someone who can report you miss-ing in case of an emergency- please remember your wilder-ness ethics. Walk on established trails, bring along a small garbage bag so you can pack out your gar-bage and be respectful by staying back from nests, young animals, dens and feeding and rutting spots.
Photo: Kansas Allen
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SPLITROCK CENTRE SEKW’EL’WÁS EXPERIENCE TOURS
Tours - Spawning Channel - Nursery
SPLITROCK CENTRE SEKW’EL’WÁS EXPERIENCE TOURS
Tours - Spawning Channel - Nursery
Walk with us to discover our land and cultureJoin one of our knowledgeable guides.
Get up close as you explore our culture, plants and wildlife. Hands-on and interactive!
One-hour tours - June to October10:00 am tour time or drop in by requestPlace: Splitrock Centre, Highway 99, Lillooet
Contact: [email protected]
www.splitrockenvironmental.ca
SPLITROCK CENTRE SEKW’EL’WÁS EXPERIENCE TOURS
Tours - Spawning Channel - Nursery
E S T. 2 0 1 5
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a bun danceA R T I S A n
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a bun danceA R T I S A n
Unit A - 657 Main St. [email protected] 657 Main St. 250-256-2280
LILLOOET
Creative Haven
Like Us On:
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Featuring Work by “Local”•Arisans •Crafter
•Producers
Art & Crafting Supplies
BCAA Authorized Road Service
Serving Lillooet and Area Call us Anytime - 24/7
250-256-4789Lyle & Delphine
•RECOVERIES•TOWING
•CARGOHAULING
•LOCK-OUTS
©2008 Doctor’s Associates Inc. SUBWAY® is a registered trademark of Doctor’s Associates Inc.
250-256-7807
Lillooet BC
Acrossfrom
Old Mill Plaza
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All aboard the Kaoham Shuttle! No less an authority than the BBC has called the Kaoham Shuttle “Canada’s Greatest Hidden Rail Trip.” Adventurers will discover that truth first-hand when they climb aboard the two-car, 30-passenger train on its trip from Lillooet to the remote lakeside communities of Seton Portage and Shalalth. The shuttle provides great oppor-tunities to see California Bighorn sheep, deer, bear, eagles and water-fowl. It makes unscheduled stops to allow passengers to capture those vivid wildlife images on their cam-eras and phones. For train buffs, the shuttle winds along some of the sharpest curves on the entire CN Rail line and through CN’s third-longest tun-nel in B.C. The trip takes one hour from Lillooet to Seton Portage, with options of overnighting in Seton Portage or doing a one-day round trip on Fridays. Reservations must be made for the shuttle. 1-250-259-8300. In the St’at’imc language, the word “Kaoham” means “to meet the train.”
Mountain BikingThe Thrill of it All. For years, local riders have explored and enjoyed numerous trails. Now, the rest of the mountain biking community is discovering our area. Cyclist Kevin Aitken says the five best-known
trails are:- Seton Ridge, located about 17.5 km. from Lillooet off the Duffey Lake Road and then another six km. along the gravel Seton Ridge Road. - Shulaps Traverse, located off Highway 40 and up the Yalakom Forest Service Road towards Lake La Mare.- Burkholder Lake, off Highway 40 and up the Yalakom Road and then turn onto the Branch 1 forest road. - Red Rock, above Lillooet and
reached by an old road that switch-backs up the mountainside. - Della Creek, halfway between Lytton and Lillooet on Texas Creek Road and accessed via a logging road. “This is the one that every-body who comes to Lillooet wants to ride,” says Aitken. In Lillooet’s Guaranteed Rugged landscape, there’s an array of trails to explore whether you are a begin-ner, intermediate or advanced rider. It’s your choice - go for the adrena-line rush or take it more slowly. A
Photo: Kevin Aitken
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Dream it...Let us help you Do it.
• Heli Fishing • Picnics• Hiking • Sightseeing• Heli Golf • Weddings & Proposalss.
www.blackcombhelicopters.com250-256-6000
Make Hotel DeOro your home during your visit to our area. Located in the heart of historic downtown Lillooet, Hotel DeOro is one of the finest accommodations available.
• Free Wireless Internet• Free Continental Breakfast (seasonal) at D’Oro Cafe
Our on-site coffee lounge uses only 100% organic, fair trade coffee and espresso beans to ensure the
purest of aromas. Drop by for great music, or snuggle up on one of our comfy couches.
• Air Conditioned • 100% No Smoking • Please, No Pets
• Full Bath, • Microwave• Fridge
639 Main St., Lillooet • Tel: 250-256-2355www.hoteldeoro.com
www.deorocoffeelounge.com Coffee Lounge: 250-256-2255
• Registered Massage Therapy
• Acupuncture• Naturopathic Services
• Weight Loss, Gifts• Spa Services: REHAB
•Eminence Organic Skin Therapy
• Beauty & Body Therapy• Spray Tanning
Intense Pulsed LightE-mail: [email protected]
www.lillooetwellnesscentre.ca250-256-2156
836 Main St., Lillooet, BC
Welcome to Lillooet!
See us for all your automotive accessories and parts needs.
Old Mill Plaza 11 - 155 Main St.250-256-0599
Open
7 Days/
Week
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bonus: the area’s low elevation and dry climate make for a longer riding season. Lillooet is a gateway to South Chilcotin Mountains Provincial Park, which attracts bikers from around the world. The park offers almost 300 km. of trails through broad valleys, alpine meadows and ridges, with an excellent variety of
loop trips of varying difficulty and distance.Many of the trails are multi-use trails and bikers are asked to respect trail etiquette by giving way to hikers and horses. Bikers are also asked to respect gates and road clo-sures; respect St’at’imc values; stay on the trails; be aware of grizzly bears, especially in the Della Creek
area; and Play, Clean, Go to prevent the spread of harmful invasive plant species. That means thoroughly washing off your bike prior to mov-ing from one trail to another, giving invasives the brush-off by cleaning your boots and gear and properly disposing of soil, seeds or plant parts from cleaning.
A Paradise for RockhoundsA rockhound has been defined as an amateur mineralogist, but really it’s someone who enjoys collect-ing interesting rocks and miner-als. For decades, the Lillooet area has been a popular destination for rockhounds. While Lillooet is most famous for its gold and jade, agates and jasper have been found on each side of the Bridge of the 23 Camels and the sandbars down-stream. The aptly named Yalakomite can be found at the Horsehoe Bend of the Bridge River on Highway 40. The Yalakom River Road area is significant for cinnabar, pyrite, gold and nephrite jade. The green gemstone can also be found off Highway 40 in the Marshall Creek area. The Bridge River Valley is also home to the oddly named thunder
Photo: Chris Kelly
• Award winning VQA wines
• Tasting room open daily: May-Oct: 10am-6pm Nov-April: Thu-Sun 10am-4pm
• Kitchen open daily for lunch May 21-Oct 10: Noon-5:30pm
• Kitchen open for dinner Friday & Saturday June 24-Sept 3: 5:30pm-7:30pm
Fort Berens Estate Winery Ltd1881 Highway 99 North, Lillooet, B.C. V0K 1V0 Canada1-250-256-7788 • [email protected] • www.fortberens.ca
your next discovery is here.
L i L L o o e t ’ s f i r s t W i n e r Y
• Award winning VQA wines
• Tasting room open daily: May-Oct: 10am-6pm Nov-April: Thu-Sun 10am-4pm
• Kitchen open daily for lunch May 21-Oct 10: Noon-5:30pm
• Kitchen open for dinner Friday & Saturday June 24-Sept 3: 5:30pm-7:30pm
Fort Berens Estate Winery Ltd1881 Highway 99 North, Lillooet, BC V0K 1V0 Canada1-250-256-7788 • [email protected] • www.fortberens.ca
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egg, a rock in the shape of a rough sphere that is formed within vol-canic ash layers. Fossils 50 million years old are embedded in the rocks at Fossil Cliffs above Spruce Lake. Fossils can also be discovered near the foot of the limestone slides at Marble Canyon where they bor-der Highway 99 at the west end of Pavilion Lake.
Seton LakeOn a hot summer day, there’s noth-ing like a refreshing dip in the shiver-cold waters of Seton Lake, just five minutes from Lillooet. Pack a picnic lunch and relax on the tree-lined beach. Be sure to stay for the sunset as the sun dramatically disappears behind the jagged peaks surrounding the lake. In the summer, the Bridge River Indian Band runs a free Community Link bus that will pick you up at any number of locations around town, drop you off at the lake and bring you back into town. Seton Lake derives its unique green colour from the glacial water that’s piped into the lake from the BC Hydro penstocks carrying water from the Bridge River to the hydroelectric power plant located at the far end of the lake.
The Sheep Pasture Golf Course The name says it all. This nine-hole course promises a fun and challeng-ing golfing experience for all levels of players. Just watch out for the mobile hazards on the fairways – a herd of sheep who keep the course fertilized and nicely grazed and are a source of amusement for local and visiting golfers. The course is managed by the volunteers in the Lillooet Golf Club, has a pro shop with club and pull-cart rentals and offers snacks and beverage service. It’s eight km. from Lillooet on Texas Creek Road.
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Grassroots GolfAs it should be!
2 Can Play for the Price of 1
Purchase one round of golf andReceive one round of golf Free
by showing this ad at the Clubhouse.One redemption per person. Valid until October 1, 2016
5000 Texas Creek Rd 250-256-0550www.lillooetgolf.com
Celebrating Lillooet’s History!
Public Washroomslocated in Museum
Lillooet Museum and Visitors Centre
• See artifacts from the Cariboo Gold Rush days• First Nations Displays • View the old presses & printing equipment used by ‘Ma’ Murray to print the Bridge River - Lillooet News• Free local, regional & provincial information & maps
790 Main Street, Lillooet, B.C. [email protected]
www.lillooetbc.ca
OPEN - JULY & AUGUST - Every Day - 9 am to 5 pmMAY, JUNE, SEPT. & OCT. - Tues. to Sat. - 10 am to 4 pm
We can help you make BC Ferries & Accommodation Reservations and so much more! FREE WIFI
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Split Rock Environmental is a Lillooet success story. It succeeds on so many levels – first, as an award-winning aboriginal-owned business, owned by the St’at’imc community of Sekw’el’was. Remaining true to St’at’imc values, Split Rock specializes in ecological stewardship, environmental moni-toring, native plant propagation and ethnobotany. It provides a variety of environmental services, carries out restoration work and operates a native plant nursery. Split Rock also offers hands-on eco-cultural tours with knowledge-able aboriginal guides. Learn about their land, culture and the local fish and wildlife as you stroll along the Seton River Spawning Channel. Tours are available June to October. The name Sekw’el’was translates as “split rock” and refers to the split in the mountains surrounding the community.
The mighty Fraser River Sturgeon. In all the world of freshwater fish-ing, there’s nothing to match the
sheer exhilaration of hooking a monstrous white sturgeon in the Fraser River and there’s no bet-ter place than Lillooet. Fraser River sturgeon grow to lengths of more than three metres and can top out at more than 600 kilos. When hooked, they often raise their entire girth out of the water and perform an amazing tail walk, sometimes more than once. It’s a sight – and a fight – not to be missed. These fish weren’t born last month, last year or even in the last 50 years. They have a long life span and many of the Fraser’s sturgeon are 100 to 150 years old. Fishing is strictly catch-and-release and quickly returning a caught sturgeon to the water is critical to its sur-vival.
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Winter Wonderland. Churning waterfalls in summer give way to massive icicles in winter that are perfect for climbers brave enough to come and conquer them. The Lillooet region offers stunningly beautiful mixed vertical ice terrain. The Joffre Glacier Group, easily accessible off the Duffey Lake Road (Highway 99) south of Lillooet, is one of the more popular places for beginners and advanced climbers alike. Mount Matier and Mount Joffre are high-lights. Marble Canyon Provincial Park, located 35km/22mi northeast of Lillooet on Highway 99, is also easily accessible and features a labyrinth of canyons leading off the main canyon. There’s more to our winter wonder-land – powder skiing in the South Chilcotin Mountains, snowmobiling in the Bridge River Valley where the South Chilcotins meet the mighty glaciers of the Coast Mountains, snowshoeing and cross-country ski-ing. Or how about a pickup game of good, old-fashioned pond hockey on Pavilion Lake?
Xwisten Experience Tours. Join a walking tour along the Bridge River fishing grounds to learn about dip-netting salmon and the traditional wind-dried method of preserving
the fish – a staple of the St’at’imc diet for millennia. Hear songs and stories and see an archaeological site which contains more than 80 identified pit houses (s7istken) – the traditional winter homes of the St’at’imc. The Bridge River commu-nity has reconstructed a pit house and visitors can enter the s7istken to see what a winter home would have been like. A team of archaeologists from the University of Montana will be working at the site this summer and tour members can watch their excavations as they sift through layers – and centuries - of history. Who knows what artifacts they’ll discover? The tour concludes with a salmon lunch that includes a tra-ditional dessert of whipped soap-berries (sxusum). Tours are avail-able June to September.
Photos: Xwisten Experience Tours
Photo: Kevin Aitken
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Lillooet News
Bridge River LILLOOETEGION
Fort BerensWinery
The St’at’imc people have lived here for more than 8,000 years, thriving on abundant Fraser River salmon and the bounty of the land. Archaeological evidence from the Keatley Creek site reveals that the ancestors of today’s St’at’imc lived in circular earthen dwellings called s7istkens. They obtained and traded large number of salmon, practised ceremonies and rituals and lived in a hierarchical society where the wealthiest families apparently owned the most valuable fishing and hunting areas. They had leisure time to produce jade adzes, make copper jewellery and carve antlers and bone. In 1808, when Simon Fraser became the first European to explore the river that bears his name, the St’át’imc welcomed him to their territory. The Cariboo Gold Rush of the 1850s and 1860s changed every-thing. With its 13 saloons and 25 licensed premises, Lillooet briefly became a raucous boom town. Multiple trails to Cariboo gold fields came through here. It was British Columbia Governor James Douglas who named the town of Lillooet and it was Douglas who, under intensive lobbying pressure, ordered a new road built in the 1860s. The new route - and the gold boom - bypassed Lillooet. Although placer mining con-tinued in the lower Cayoosh, it wasn’t until the 1915 arrival of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway that Lillooet enjoyed another period of prosperity. The railway opened up the Interior of British Columbia and visitors discovered the local area’s
spectacular beauty. Lillooet was incorporated as a village in 1946 and in the post-war period survived floods and cata-strophic fires. The opening of gold mines in the Bridge River valley and the construction of the Bridge River hydro-electric project made Lillooet a service centre for the district.
1. The Bridge of the 23 Camels Following the discovery of gold in the Cariboo in 1858, horses, mules and oxen were used to haul the heavy loads to the gold fields. Then Lillooet entrepreneur John Calbraith had the bright idea that camels would be ideal pack
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Hwy 99 N
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Seton Spawning Channels, Seton Lake, Pemberton, Whistler, Vancouver
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Bridge of the23 Camels
CNRail
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LILLOOETMUSEUM(picnic site)
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Mile '0' Cairn
Chinese Rocks
Miyazaki House
PostOffice
District Office
St.AndrewsChurch
Hangman's Tree
The Camel Barn
'Ma' Murray'sNews Office
First NationsFishing Grounds
The Old Bridge
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14To: Gold Bridge Bralorne Gun Lake Seton Portage Shalalth
To: Fountain Pavilion Cache Creek Kamloops Prince George
Lillooet’s Golden Mile of History
animals, and so 23 two-humped Bactrian camels were imported from Asia to B.C. But the bright idea soon became a nightmare as the high-strung beasts ate miners’ clothing, kicked at anything or anyone who came close, frightened other animals with their pungent odor, and had their soft feet cut to ribbons on the treacherous roads. They were soon abandoned by their owners and left to roam in the wild. Some were killed for food, and some perished in winter storms, while others were kept as curiosities. The last camel died on a farm near Westwold, B.C. in 1905. Before the bridge opened in 1980, a contest was held to select a name. Local resident Renee Chipman submitted the winning name “Bridge of the 23 Camels,” in honour of the ornery beasts.
2. The CN Rail Station
The old Pacific Great Eastern (PGE) Railway reached Lillooet in 1915 and continued on into the Interior of BC. Construction of the railway during times of war and economic depression is a credit to the railway crews who built the PGE on some of the toughest and most challenging sections of rail line anywhere in North America. Still, in its early days, the PGE’s reputa-tion for reliability was occasionally
less than sterling and it was jokingly referred to as Past God’s Endurance, Please Go Easy and Prince George Eventually. Its name was changed to the British Columbia Railway in 1972. The station seen today was built in 1986, replacing the old station con-structed in the 1930s. Until 2002, Lillooet had daily passenger ser-vice from Vancouver via B.C. Rail’s Cariboo Prospector and its famed Budd cars. Unfortunately, the entire B.C. Rail passenger service was dis-continued in 2002.
3. The Lillooet Museum
The Lillooet Museum and Visitor Centre is situated in a for-mer Anglican church, St. Mary the Virgin. The original St. Mary’s, which was torn down in 1961 after a century of serving the community, stood on this same spot. Although it was endowed with furnishings and silver liturgical service by a wealthy English gentlewoman, the doors of the original church were never locked in a century. It is a matter of record that min-ers and other travelers slept in the church when there was no room elsewhere and cooked their food on the stove that heated the building. The original chancel was incor-porated in the new St. Mary’s and the melodeon and bell from the old church are displayed in the museum. The museum also features native artifacts, Gold Rush era rel-ics, and a recreation of Ma Murray’s old news office downstairs. As you enter the building, look to your left to see the largest mounted Rocky
Mountain elk head ever registered in B.C.
4. The Mile O Cairn
At the urging of MLA George Murray, the Mile O Cairn was erected in 1939, marking Mile Zero of the old Cariboo Road. From this point in the early stage coach days, all road houses and stopping places from here to Barkerville were known by their mileage from Lillooet - 70 Mile, 100 Mile, etc. In 1858, Governor James Douglas ordered the construc-tion of a trail from Fort Douglas on Harrison Lake to Lillooet. The Royal Engineers supervised the construction and miners with picks and shovels contracted to build the road for the sum of five English pounds each, which they received upon arrival, by land and portage, at Lillooet. While the Mile O Cairn is located in the centre of town, the actual Mile O was across the river in East Lillooet.
5. The Mining Rocks
Just downstream from the old suspension bridge and on both sides of the Fraser at Lillooet, one can
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find “Chinese Rocks,” a reminder of the search for gold by Chinese pros-pectors in the 1800s. Washing the sand and gravel for the elusive yel-low metal, the Chinese neatly piled the washed rocks - in some places more than four metres high - in long rows. Some people believe the piled rocks beneath Hangman’s Tree are also “Chinese Rocks.” However, local historian Mike Kennedy says the rocks on the terrace there are remnants of an 1890s ground sluice operation by placer miners named Peters, Ward and Santini. They used water carried by a flume from Dickey Creek aka French Creek aka Four Mile Creek.
6. The Miyazaki House Lillooet’s most beautiful home is also its most treasured heritage asset. Miyazaki House is located directly behind the Post Office on Russell Lane. Its large porch, shut-tered windows and unique Mansard roof reflect the 1880s era when it was built by Gold Commissioner, Government Agent and prominent merchant Casper Phair and his wife, Cerise. Like his father, the Phairs’ son Artie held many of the town’s offi-cial positions but, above all, is remembered as a photographer who documented the rugged landscapes, people and events of the area. Artie Phair was taking pictures in Bridge River (South Shalalth) when he met WWII Japanese-Canadian internee Dr. Masajiro Miyazaki. As Lillooet was without a doctor, Phair drafted a petition that allowed the Miyazaki
family to move into his fine home and turn one of its front rooms into a medical office. In 1945, Dr. Miyazaki purchased the prop-erty. In 1950 he became the first Japanese-Canadian elected to pub-lic office in Canada. He was award-ed the Order of Canada in 1977 for his “unselfish service” to Lillooet and his home is now a community landmark. Dr. Miyazaki donated his home to the Village of Lillooet in 1983. His office is preserved as he left it. A new society has taken over the running of the House. Visitors to the house and grounds are welcome. For more information, please visit http://miyazakihouse.com/
7. Post Office
Built in 1939, the post office was originally designed and decorated to complement the provincial government building. It replaced a small two-room house with verandah that had been the local post office.
8. District of Lillooet Office
The former provincial govern-ment building was built in 1926. Later additions and renovations have altered the original French provincial design of the structure. The provincial building was pur-chased by the District of Lillooet in 2003 and now houses the munici-pality’s offices in addition to the court, probation and conservation
offices. The provincial government agent’s office is now located a few buildings to the south.
9. St. Andrew’s and St. Mary’s Church
This lovely little church cel-ebrated its centennial in 1996. Constructed in 1896 as a Methodist Church and affiliated for decades with the United Church of Canada, its original sanctuary, mellowed with the patina of age, remains as part of the expanded church. Stained glass windows and the original organ are still in place, though today’s congregation sings with more modern accompaniment. Today’s church serves a combined United and Anglican congregation.
10. Hangman’s Tree (Begbie Park)
The remains of an historic old Ponderosa pine tree lie on the bench above Main Street. Turn left
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at the United Church and head up the hill. Turn right at the first road you come to, and there, on your left in the park above the road, is the tree. For safety reasons, Hangman’s Tree was cut down in 2003. Local lore says it was used as a gallows for the administration of justice more than 100 years ago, when the law here was Judge Matthew Baillie Begbie. There is a record that two thieves were hanged there and bur-ied underneath, but legend has it that in all eight lawbreakers swung from it. If you don’t think the walk is worthy of the story, it is certainly worthy of the view. Beautiful!
11. Camel Barn (Log Cabin Theatre) This was once the horse barn for the Lillooet News office. In Gold Rush days in the 1860s, Lillooet’s famous camels were kept in it from time to time until it was converted into a livery barn. It became a movie theatre dur-ing World War II and was writ-ten up in the New York Times and Variety as the smallest theatre in North America. The original hand-hewn shakes remain on the roof. The movie projector was locat-ed in the hayloft and the stuccoed structure was dubbed the Log Cabin Theatre.
12. Old Newspaper Office The old ‘salt box’ frame house was originally built as a rooming house for PGE construction crews working on the railway. It now accommodates private apartments., Once ringed with porches, it is the former home of the Bridge
River-Lillooet News. The newspaper was established in 1934 by MLA George Murray, who founded the paper as a campaign promise to the Lillooet residents of the day. It was made famous by his wife, Margaret, who gained fame as the inimitable “Ma” Murray. A firebrand editor famous for her courageous and sometimes outrageous commentary, Ma never let her lack of formal education hold her back. She was inducted into the Order of Canada in 1981.
13. Fishing Camps In August, the banks of the Fraser are dotted with fish drying camps. Pole racks are roofed with boughs for circulation of the dry solar heat, driven at this time of the year by searing river winds. Salmon was the foundation of the First
Nations diet in the Lillooet area for untold centuries. Historically, First Nations from all directions travelled to the conflu-ence of the Fraser River and Bridge River to barter fruit, cereals and wild vegetables for delectable dried salmon. Please respect the privacy of the people fishing.
14. The Old Bridge Since the construction of the Bridge of the 23 Camels, this old span is known as ‘The Old Bridge’ to local residents. It was built in 1911 and is a suspension bridge of steel cables and wood with ‘dead men’ embedded in the rock banks of the river. The middle of the bridge is held up by cables. This bridge replaced a truss bridge, which in turn replaced a reaction ferry that was powered by the river current and had been in use since 1860. Lillooet celebrated the 100th birthday of ‘The Old Bridge’ in October 2013 - a little late but bet-ter late than never! The bridge offers views of a nearby sturgeon fish-ing hole and is home to a colony of bats that live in specially con-structed houses on the underside of the structure. The Lillooet Naturalist Society has installed a web cam on the top of the bridge to observe the comings and goings of a family of ospreys who nest there every spring and summer.
30Photo Credit: Dr. Ian Routley
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Community Link BusServing Bridge River & Lillooet Areas
Operates Mon. to Sat., July 4 to Sept. 3/16 Schedule available at: www.xwisten.ca
Traditional Fishing & Archaeological
Village Tours
XwíSTen eXperienCe
TOurS
BOOk nOw250-256-7844
www.xwistentours.caemail: [email protected]
Available June to September
Photo Credit: www.coastphoto.com
Photo Credit: www.coastphoto.com
Shuttle Service Availablefor in-town pick-ups. Call for more details.
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9th Annual
Apricot TsaqwemFestivalJuly 22-24/16Fun for the Whole Family!
Don’t Miss Lillooet’s Biggest Event of the Year!
• Farmers Market• Quilt Show• Show & Shine• Family Activities• Live Music• Street Dance• Great Food• Tons of Fun!
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Faces of Lillooet Florence JackAs the finance manager for the Bridge River Indian Band (Xwisten), Florence Jack is also responsible for economic development, including community planning, managing Xwisten Experience Tours and orga-nizing the Community Links shuttle bus.Born and raised here, Florence has a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration with a specialty in Accounting. She frankly admits, “I don’t know if I could sit here seven hours a day, just punching in num-bers. The economic development side keeps me busy, too.”In her 12 years on the job, she’s helped Xwisten Experience Tours grow from a concession stand at the fishing rocks to a St’at’imc cultural experience that has earned acco-lades across B.C and employs six people during the summer.Over that same time, Bridge River has formed a successful partner-ship with a University of Montana archaeological team. Florence says the tours allow
Xwisten to share its history, while the archaeological excavations reinforce the timelines and stories handed down among generations of band members. What does she hope visitors will learn?“The biggest thing that stands out for me is: We’re still here. Our people are still alive and thriving. What most people think of as his-tory is still part of our living, day-to-day traditions and culture. There’s a reason why our archaeological site is where it is – it’s exactly where we built our subdivision. There were reasons our ancestors lived there and they are the same reasons we build where we build now.”She continues, “On the fishing tours, we teach people the differ-ent ways of drying, cutting, hang-ing and preserving salmon. Yes, we have modern tools and a few new ways of doing things, but it’s still the traditional way. And that’s really apparent when people come here in August when we actually are fishing and they see the hundreds of peo-ple down there, still doing that; it’s still a part of who we are. Basically, we’re still St’at’imc.”
Faces of Lillooet William Matthews“This is Shangri-La, it really is,” according to artist William Matthews. “My lifestyle is based on mountains, more mountains and hot weather. It was a no-brain-er when I came here one summer. It was August, baking hot and I turned to my best friend Michael and said, ‘Michael, this is where I’m retiring.’”He has lived here now for almost 17 years. While the weather and mountains brought him here, it’s his life as a painter that sustains him here. “The creativity of being a painter and portraying this region is my reason for being,” he says. William is captivated by what he calls the “intangible beauty of the area and the spirit of the place. I am blessed to be in such a mag-nificent area where you don’t get just the greens, you get the maple reds and yellows. It’s a challenge to paint those colours but it’s so satisfying.” While he’s dazzled by the quality
of the light and the intense local colours, he’s also intrigued by the “lack of intensity” in the more desert-like landscapes here. “That’s when you experiment, that’s when you play,” he says. “There’s almost an O’Keeffe quality to some of the landscape down by the Fraser, but for me, it’s more than that. There’s a sensual quality.” William works part-time at Creative Haven. Through his job, he’s met many creative residents working in textiles, fabric, can-vas, sculpture, pottery and bead-ing. “But it’s kept very private,” he observes. “I would have to say there are a lot of closet artists in the community. People don’t like to talk about their personal cre-ations unless they’re going to be selling them. They’re a bit shy and their work is so personal.”He hopes Creative Haven will nur-ture those artists and the classes he teaches at the local Thompson Rivers University centre will help painters connect with each other. That way, more people can share the vision of Lillooet as Shangri-La.
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Faces of Lillooet Rolf de Bruin and Heleen PannekoekFort Berens Estate Winery co-founder Rolf de Bruin remembers saying, “This is the Canada we came for,” as he and his wife/business partner Heleen Pannekoek first drove from Lytton to Lillooet. He continues: “The mountains have their own magnificence. As you drive up this way, you feel a sense of big-ness and space where there’s a nice rhythm of small farms, big farms, creeks, rivers and forest. That’s what really drew us here. I think people come to Canada with certain expec-tations and this was the expectation we had.” By May 2009, Lillooet’s first commer-cial vineyard was on its way. It was the end of their quest to find a small-town home for their family and a place to pursue their long-cherished dream of owning a vineyard. That dream first took shape when the young Dutch couple visited vineyards in France and saw the connection between the land, the wine it pro-duced and the people who created it. Heleen was working as a banker, Rolf as a management consultant. They looked at locations in France, Eastern Europe, the Niagara Peninsula and
the Okanagan before choosing Lillooet.Today, Fort Berens has 20 acres of grapes under cultivation. Last year, the winery sold 6,000 cases of wine. That will increase to 8,000 cases this year, with production expected to eventually rise to 12,000 to 13,000 cases. Heleen and Rolf happily acknowl-edge the support they’ve received from a group of investors who came
to their financial rescue in 2010, their “great” employees who work as a team, the Lillooet community and the winery’s early customers. “Initially, all we had was a shed and what to expect from a winery in a shed?” Rolf remembers. “But we had a lot of very loyal customers who were blown away by the wine that came out of that shed. They saw the courage and boldness of this venture and the pioneering aspects of it.”
Faces of Lillooet John RedanIf you want to see John Redan’s office at Split Rock Environmental, look around you. In one direction, there’s Marriage Mountain, where St’at’imc men traditionally went to ritually pre-pare themselves for their marriages. To the east, you’ll see the rugged escarpment of Fountain Ridge. Nearby are the clear, rushing waters of Cayoosh Creek. Born and raised in Lillooet, John had ideas of being a video game designer. That all changed when he was offered a job at Split Rock – his first day, he washed pots for the nursery’s plants. That was in 2010. Today, John is a trained environmental technician. His work involves everything from dyeing salmon smolts so they can be monitored and counted, to sur-veying endangered gopher snakes. It’s about as far as you can get from sitting at a computer designing video games.
John believes in the value of his work and the importance of restor-ing fish and wildlife habitat, saving endangered species and ridding the landscape of harmful invasive plants that upset the balance of Nature.Working outdoors, he’s had some memorable wildlife encounters. He vividly recalls the time he and a friend were surveying along the Downton Reservoir in the upper Bridge River Valley. They came upon four wolf pups, coloured a most unusual and beautiful beige. They would have liked to linger and watch the pups, but “we finished our survey and got out of there as soon as possible.” There was no sign of the cubs’ mother but she was likely nearby. One of John’s up-close-and-personal wildlife encoun-ters occurred when he and a buddy were checking out screech owl boxes. John reached into the box and out popped an angry squirrel, disturbed by his intrusion. “In the blink of an eye, he was gone.”Just another day on the job for John Redan.
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Faces of Lillooet Susan BellSusan Bell’s Lillooet roots run deep, going back to her great-grandfather Robert Carson, who came here with the 1860s Cariboo Gold Rush and then built a sprawling ranch at Pavilion. So it’s fitting that Bell is the long-time curator of the Lillooet Museum and the manager of the Lillooet Visitor Centre. “When my kids were little, I could never tell them the family stories enough times,” says Susan. “As soon as I see Chimney Rock (a limestone pillar near Pavilion), it feels like home. I definitely have a sense of my roots and my history here.”Susan has been fascinated by Lillooet history since she was a teenager. She recalls how archaeol-ogists from Simon Fraser University used the pool table in her family’s basement to store, document and photograph artifacts. Later, she worked as a summer student at the museum and a guide at the Visitor Centre.
She says some foreign visitors have pre-conceived notions about Canadians. Some assume everyone speaks French. On one occasion, a solicitous elderly American couple asked her, “How do you make it through the winter, dear?” Australian visitors, toting their parkas, sweaters and umbrellas, have been known to descend from their tour bus and ask if Lillooet is experiencing a very strange, very abnormal heat wave. (FYI: Lillooet shares the record for the hottest temperature ever recorded in B.C. – 44.4 degrees C, or 112 degrees F, in July1941. That’s also the second-highest temperature ever recorded in Canada).Susan says the best word to describe her job is “fun.” She explains, “When you consider these people are on holiday, 99.9 per cent are in a great mood and good spirits. They like to joke with you and they like to know what people are like here. The conclusion they come to just about every time is ‘People are the same around the world, aren’t they?’”
John believes in the value of his work and the importance of restor-ing fish and wildlife habitat, saving endangered species and ridding the landscape of harmful invasive plants that upset the balance of Nature.Working outdoors, he’s had some memorable wildlife encounters. He vividly recalls the time he and a friend were surveying along the Downton Reservoir in the upper Bridge River Valley. They came upon four wolf pups, coloured a most unusual and beautiful beige. They would have liked to linger and watch the pups, but “we finished our survey and got out of there as soon as possible.” There was no sign of the cubs’ mother but she was likely nearby. One of John’s up-close-and-personal wildlife encoun-ters occurred when he and a buddy were checking out screech owl boxes. John reached into the box and out popped an angry squirrel, disturbed by his intrusion. “In the blink of an eye, he was gone.”Just another day on the job for John Redan.
Faces of Lillooet Jae and Bonah HanTen years ago, Jae and Bonah Han decided it was time to leave Vancouver. They ran a grocery store, Jae was involved in a co-operative associa-tion for Korean grocers and he was vice-president of the 1,000-member Korean Business Association. Add in their family responsibilities and it was a busy life lived at a strenuous pace. Jae takes up the story: “My friends recommended that I should invest in Lillooet but at that time, I didn’t know where it was. They said it was about a three-hour drive from Vancouver. When I came here, it was August, September and I loved the hot climate and that it was a small town. When I walked around town, I felt comfortable. With that one visit, one time, we decided right away to move to Lillooet.”He adds, “When I like something, I just go!”The Hans haven’t looked back. They own the Hotel DeOro and the adjoining Café DeOro. Jae is active in the Chamber of Commerce, they are enthusiastic supporters of the historic Miyazaki House and they are
happy to open their café’s doors to showcase local performers. On occa-sion, Jae sits in on drums.The hotel welcomes guests from across North America, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, South America and Asia. There have been a few guests from the Hans’ South Korean homeland and they hope to welcome more. “It’s a great experience to meet all kinds of people from all over the world,” says Jae.
The Hans enjoy Lillooet’s climate, good neighbours, food fresh from the garden, the healthy environment, the fresh air and the pace of life. On Fridays, Bonah visits the Farmers Market to see what’s new. Jae encourages others to invest here: “Stay away from Vancouver. It costs too much when you invest your money in a big city. With less money you can go to a small town and start whatever business you like. And there’s less stress!”
36
STOP INVASIVE
SPECIES INYOUR TRACKS.
Help Prevent The SpreadOf Invasive Plants and Animals.• Arrive with clean gear.• Burn local or certified firewood.• Use local or weed-free hay.• Stay on the trails.• Before leaving, remove mud and seeds.• Clean, Drain, Dry your boat.
STOP INVASIVESPECIES IN
YOUR TRACKS.
Help Prevent The Spread Of Invasive Plants And Animals.• Arrive with clean gear.• Burn local or certified firewood.• Use local or weed-free hay.• Stay on the trails.• Before leaving, remove mud and seeds.
February 22-28, 2015National Invasive Species Awareness Week
STOP INVASIVE SPECIES IN YOUR TRACKS.
PlayCleanGo is currently sponsored by State of Minnesota and USDA Forest Service, equal opportunity employers.
STOP INVASIVESPECIES IN
YOUR TRACKS.
Help Prevent The Spread Of Invasive Plants And Animals.• Arrive with clean gear.• Burn local or certified firewood.• Use local or weed-free hay.• Stay on the trails.• Before leaving, remove mud and seeds.
February 22-28, 2015National Invasive Species Awareness Week
STOP INVASIVE SPECIES IN YOUR TRACKS.
PlayCleanGo is currently sponsored by State of Minnesota and USDA Forest Service, equal opportunity employers.
STOP INVASIVESPECIES IN
YOUR TRACKS.
Help Prevent The Spread Of Invasive Plants And Animals.• Arrive with clean gear.• Burn local or certified firewood.• Use local or weed-free hay.• Stay on the trails.• Before leaving, remove mud and seeds.
February 22-28, 2015National Invasive Species Awareness Week
STOP INVASIVE SPECIES IN YOUR TRACKS.
PlayCleanGo is currently sponsored by State of Minnesota and USDA Forest Service, equal opportunity employers.
For more information or to report sightings contact: Jacquie Rasmussen250-256-4292www.lriss.ca
“We acknowledge the financial assistance of the Province of British Columbia”
Photo Credit: Megan Menhinick
Campground - 10 Minutes from Town
• Showers/Laundry • Water/Sewer
• Hydro
www.willowscampground.comemail:
Ron Marks & Shelley Matheson
Willows at 6 Mile
7 km S of Lillooet - Hwy 12 S - 250-256-0429
From Household toHealth & Beauty,
Toys to Office Supplies,
WE HAVE IT ALL!
86 - 7th Ave. LillooetAcross from Esso
250-256-0066
Ta
ke your photo
with the bees!
Yourfacehere!
Yourfacehere!
• Superb Alfalfa/Sweet Clover Honey • Pure Natural Beeswax Candles • Beeswax Furniture Polish • Beeswax Hand Lotion & Honey Soap
Brand REG’D
Tours, Groups, & Buses Welcome!
250-256-7231
Come see
the 10 ft.
Bear!
Cariboo apiaries 4007 Moha Rd. LiLLooet, B.C.
4 km North on Hwy. 40 To Gold Bridge at the Bottom of the Hill.
37
Lillooet’s Heritage
Miyazaki House
Built in the 1880’s for the Phair family, the Miyazaki House is the heart of Lillooet’s gold rush history. Purchased by Dr. Masajiro Miyazaki after WWII, it tells the fascinating story of his life in Lillooet and his many contributions to the community over four decades.
643 Russell Lane, Lillooet, BC(Behind the Post Office)www.miyazakihouse.comOpen Seasonally Museum, local art, weekly music concerts and community events. Available for private tours and event rentals. 250-256-6808 FB.com/TheMiyazakiHouse/
Dr. Miyazaki’s original officeLike us on
561 Main St • Lillooet • 250-256-4111
& Lillooet Glass
on Main St. across from the fire hall
No Problem... Come visit us!
Got a Windshield Chip?A Flat Tire?
Restaurant
Specializing in Greek Cuisine, Pizzas & pastas
250-256-4264 690 Main St.
Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:30am - 2:30pm 4:30pm - 8:00pm
Friday 11:30am - 2:30pm 4:30pm - 9:00pmSaturday 11:30am - 9pm Closed Sundays & Holidays
Fully Licensed
Enjoy El Fresco diningon our patio
•PIZZA • PASTA • STEAKS
See our Website: www.dinasplacerestaurant.ca
DINAS PLACE,We’re having a party!
And you’re invited.Mark your calendar for these fun events:
• Elks May Day Parade and crowning of the May Queen - May 23 • Walking With Smolts – May 27• First Adventure Tourism Festival - May 28 • Lions 60th Anniversary Dinner/Dance - May 28• National Aboriginal Day - June 21. • Canada Day in the Park – July 1• Apricot Tsaqwem Festival – July 22 to 24• Winners Edge Sturgeon Derby – July 23• Harvest Festival – Sept. 17• Halloween Fireworks and Haunted House Tour – Oct. 31• Lions Club Christmas Tree Light-Up Ceremony and Santa’s Arrival – Dec. 3• Lillooet Naturalist Society Annual Christmas Bird Count – last week of December• Lions Club Ice Fishing Derby at Pavilion Lake – January-February, 2017 exact date depends on the thickness of the lake ice• Bridge River Valley WinterFest – Feb. 11-12, 2017• Lillooet Memorial Curling Club April Fool’s Bonspiel – weekend closest to April Fools• Federation of B.C. Naturalists AGM and field trips – May 4 – 7, 2017
38
Old Mill Plaza 250-256-7922
Top quality produce, fresh bakery, deli & meats and award
winning service.Our people make the difference!
Your Proud Community Supporter!
39
Take a Hike ...with Lillooet’s
Hiking Guide To enjoy the best of Lillooet’s spectacular scenery, climate flora and fauna, how about a refreshing and rewarding hike into the rugged mountains and wildflower meadows surrounding the town? Considered to be the “bible” for hikers in the area, the Lillooet Naturalist Society’s “Canyon to Alpine: Lillooet Hiking Guide” contains trail and access information, route maps and topographical information. Enjoy its spectacular colour photos as you plan your trek, from a leisurely stroll to a more challenging excursion. Enjoy your hike, enjoy your stay, enjoy Lillooet!
Available for sale at various local retailers in Lillooet www.lillooetnaturalistsociety.org
LillooetNaturalist Society
• Flexible, affordable, convenient• Customized training for organizations• Training can be delivered off-campus• University credit programming available
Located in the Old Mill Plaza, Lillooetp 250-256-4296 | e [email protected] tru.ca/regionalcentres/lillooet
YOUR LOCAL CONTRACT TRAINING EXPERT
TRU Continuing StudiesLILLOOET • LYTTON • ASHCROFT • CACHE CREEK
N
99
99
12
99
Lillooet Area Trail Map- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - brought to you by
MAP LEGEND Trail Heads Museum & Visitor Centre Hospital Campgrounds Police View Points Fire Department Provincial Highway 1 kilometre
Hangman’sPark Trail
Parking: N50° 40’ 61.9’’ W121° 56’ 09.8’’ Park at Miyazaki House. Distance: 0.3 Miles Time: 15-20 minutes. Difficulty: Easy to moderate loop walk. In the heart of Lillooet’s downtown, a brisk walk from the Miyazaki House to the scenic bench where, legend has it, frontier Judge Matthew Begbie hung murderers in the Gold Rush era.
Miyazaki House
Parking: 50°40’54.53”N 121°55’49.37”W Park in Cayoosh Campground close to the Bridge of the 23 Camels. Distance: 2.4 km (1.5 miles). Time: 45 min. one-way. Dif-ficulty: Easy to moderate. Built by the Lillooet Lions Club in the 1990s, the Lions Trail is a staple for local hikers, traversing the bank of the Fraser River through diverse habitat affording breathtaking views of the mighty river.
Thanks to Fort Berens Estate Winery, the District of Lillooet, the Lillooet Natural-ist Society, the Lillooet Historical Society and Sekw’el’was First Nation for their help with this project. For more trails and information, pick up a copy of ‘Canyon to Alpine, the Lillooet Hiking Guide.’
Fraser River Lions Trail
Parking: N50° 41’ 43.4’’ W121° 56’ 19.9’’ Park in lot behind REC Centre (access behind Museum). Distance: 8.7km (5.4 mi). Time: 1-hour jog, 2-hour walk. Difficulty: Moderate. Popular route with local runners, walkers and cyclists, crosses the Bridge of 23 Camels and the Old Suspension Bridge, offering gorgeous views of town and the famous river with fabulous mountain backdrops.
Bridges Walk
Parking: N50° 42’ 21.7’’ W121° 55’ 55.6’’ Park at Old Mill Plaza. Distance (Time): 2.4 km from mall to cemetery (30-45 minutes), 5.3 km for complete route (1 to 1.5 hours). Difficulty: Easy to moderate. This trail commemorates Lillooet’s history as the site of the first jade mine in BC. Stroll down Lillooet’s Main Street and enjoy over 30 unique pieces of jade, some weighing many tons. Pick up a brochure at KC Health & Gifts.
Jade Walk
Parking: N50° 40’ 97.9’’ W121° 55’ 89.1’’ Park at Bridge of the 23 Camels. Distance: 4.5 km (2.8 miles). Time: 1 to 1.5 hours one-way. Difficulty: Easy to moderate walk. This walk highlights the many sights the Lilllooet Historical Society recommends you en-joy in a town whose post-European contact history dates back to the Cariboo Gold Rush. Pick up a “Golden Mile” brochure at the Lillooet Museum and Visitor Info Centre.
Golden Mile of History
Parking: N50° 41’ 52.9’’ W121° 56’ 65.9’’ Park in gravel cul-de-sac at west end of Victoria Street. Distance: 3.4 km (2 mi.) Time: 2 to 3-hour hike Difficulty: Moderate to difficult, 500 metres elevation gain. This popular route takes hikers to the famous Red Rock outcropping 500 metres above town, offering an astounding panorama of the Fraser River valley. Local flora and fauna abound. Take water with you.
Red Rock Trail
Parking: N50° 40’ 51.2’’ W121° 55’ 49.7’’ Park in parking area just off Powerhouse Road. Distance: 190 m to 2 km Time: 30 min. to 1 hour. Difficulty: Easy (rocky shoreline). A chance to get up close to the mighty Fraser River. Enjoy a walk through an active ecological restoration site that showcases our beautiful grasslands and Black Cot-tonwood ecosystem at the confluence of the Seton and Fraser Rivers.
Sát’atqwa7 - The River
Parking: N50° 40’ 25.1’’ W121° 58’ 11.9’’ Park in beautiful, paved wayside park. Distance: 0.35 km (0.2 miles). Time: 10 minutes Difficulty: Easy. A short, easy walk along fast-moving Seton River offers the chance to see mountain goats on the cliffs above and other wildlife. Trails follow spawning channels full of salmon in season. Inter-pretive signage reveals local ecology and First Nations history.
Naxwit Park
Parking: N50° 40’ 37.1’’ W121° 56’ 39.7’’ Parking lot is off gravel road that is imme-diately west of Lightfoot Gas. Distance: 1.4 km (0.9 mi.) Time: 20 min. Difficulty: Easy. A pleasant loop around a man-made spawning stream complex built to assist the repro-duction of the many species of salmon. When the salmon are running these streams harbour thousands of spawning fish. Now managed by the Sekw’el‘was First Nation.
Seton Spawning Channels
Parking: N50° 40’ 06.2’’ W121° 58’ 67.3’’ Park at BC Hydro Campground entrance. Distance: 3.3 kms (2 mi.) Time: 60 minutes. Difficulty: Easy to moderate. Two pretty loop walks connected by a steep hill. The loops go through forest, along Cayoosh Creek and offer awesome mountain views. Across Highway 99 from the upper bench you can access the incredible Seton Lake lookout.
Campground Trails
Parking: N50° 40’ 14.1’’ W121° 58’ 40.6’’ Park on immediate south side of Canal Bridge on Highway 99. Distance: 3.2 kms (2 mi.) one-way Time: 40 minutes Difficulty: Easy. On this level roadway along the south side of the BC Hydro canal which connects Seton Lake with the powerhouse on the Fraser, you walk in the shadow of the majestic towering cliffs at the base Mt. Brew. Watch for waterfowl on the canal.
Canal Walk
This map is provided as a guide only. The Chamber of Commerce does not take responsibility for the accuracy or safety of the trails included here.
Main Street
Seton Lake
F
rase
r Ri
ver
40
N
99
99
12
99
Lillooet Area Trail Map- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - brought to you by
MAP LEGEND Trail Heads Museum & Visitor Centre Hospital Campgrounds Police View Points Fire Department Provincial Highway 1 kilometre
Hangman’sPark Trail
Parking: N50° 40’ 61.9’’ W121° 56’ 09.8’’ Park at Miyazaki House. Distance: 0.3 Miles Time: 15-20 minutes. Difficulty: Easy to moderate loop walk. In the heart of Lillooet’s downtown, a brisk walk from the Miyazaki House to the scenic bench where, legend has it, frontier Judge Matthew Begbie hung murderers in the Gold Rush era.
Miyazaki House
Parking: 50°40’54.53”N 121°55’49.37”W Park in Cayoosh Campground close to the Bridge of the 23 Camels. Distance: 2.4 km (1.5 miles). Time: 45 min. one-way. Dif-ficulty: Easy to moderate. Built by the Lillooet Lions Club in the 1990s, the Lions Trail is a staple for local hikers, traversing the bank of the Fraser River through diverse habitat affording breathtaking views of the mighty river.
Thanks to Fort Berens Estate Winery, the District of Lillooet, the Lillooet Natural-ist Society, the Lillooet Historical Society and Sekw’el’was First Nation for their help with this project. For more trails and information, pick up a copy of ‘Canyon to Alpine, the Lillooet Hiking Guide.’
Fraser River Lions Trail
Parking: N50° 41’ 43.4’’ W121° 56’ 19.9’’ Park in lot behind REC Centre (access behind Museum). Distance: 8.7km (5.4 mi). Time: 1-hour jog, 2-hour walk. Difficulty: Moderate. Popular route with local runners, walkers and cyclists, crosses the Bridge of 23 Camels and the Old Suspension Bridge, offering gorgeous views of town and the famous river with fabulous mountain backdrops.
Bridges Walk
Parking: N50° 42’ 21.7’’ W121° 55’ 55.6’’ Park at Old Mill Plaza. Distance (Time): 2.4 km from mall to cemetery (30-45 minutes), 5.3 km for complete route (1 to 1.5 hours). Difficulty: Easy to moderate. This trail commemorates Lillooet’s history as the site of the first jade mine in BC. Stroll down Lillooet’s Main Street and enjoy over 30 unique pieces of jade, some weighing many tons. Pick up a brochure at KC Health & Gifts.
Jade Walk
Parking: N50° 40’ 97.9’’ W121° 55’ 89.1’’ Park at Bridge of the 23 Camels. Distance: 4.5 km (2.8 miles). Time: 1 to 1.5 hours one-way. Difficulty: Easy to moderate walk. This walk highlights the many sights the Lilllooet Historical Society recommends you en-joy in a town whose post-European contact history dates back to the Cariboo Gold Rush. Pick up a “Golden Mile” brochure at the Lillooet Museum and Visitor Info Centre.
Golden Mile of History
Parking: N50° 41’ 52.9’’ W121° 56’ 65.9’’ Park in gravel cul-de-sac at west end of Victoria Street. Distance: 3.4 km (2 mi.) Time: 2 to 3-hour hike Difficulty: Moderate to difficult, 500 metres elevation gain. This popular route takes hikers to the famous Red Rock outcropping 500 metres above town, offering an astounding panorama of the Fraser River valley. Local flora and fauna abound. Take water with you.
Red Rock Trail
Parking: N50° 40’ 51.2’’ W121° 55’ 49.7’’ Park in parking area just off Powerhouse Road. Distance: 190 m to 2 km Time: 30 min. to 1 hour. Difficulty: Easy (rocky shoreline). A chance to get up close to the mighty Fraser River. Enjoy a walk through an active ecological restoration site that showcases our beautiful grasslands and Black Cot-tonwood ecosystem at the confluence of the Seton and Fraser Rivers.
Sát’atqwa7 - The River
Parking: N50° 40’ 25.1’’ W121° 58’ 11.9’’ Park in beautiful, paved wayside park. Distance: 0.35 km (0.2 miles). Time: 10 minutes Difficulty: Easy. A short, easy walk along fast-moving Seton River offers the chance to see mountain goats on the cliffs above and other wildlife. Trails follow spawning channels full of salmon in season. Inter-pretive signage reveals local ecology and First Nations history.
Naxwit Park
Parking: N50° 40’ 37.1’’ W121° 56’ 39.7’’ Parking lot is off gravel road that is imme-diately west of Lightfoot Gas. Distance: 1.4 km (0.9 mi.) Time: 20 min. Difficulty: Easy. A pleasant loop around a man-made spawning stream complex built to assist the repro-duction of the many species of salmon. When the salmon are running these streams harbour thousands of spawning fish. Now managed by the Sekw’el‘was First Nation.
Seton Spawning Channels
Parking: N50° 40’ 06.2’’ W121° 58’ 67.3’’ Park at BC Hydro Campground entrance. Distance: 3.3 kms (2 mi.) Time: 60 minutes. Difficulty: Easy to moderate. Two pretty loop walks connected by a steep hill. The loops go through forest, along Cayoosh Creek and offer awesome mountain views. Across Highway 99 from the upper bench you can access the incredible Seton Lake lookout.
Campground Trails
Parking: N50° 40’ 14.1’’ W121° 58’ 40.6’’ Park on immediate south side of Canal Bridge on Highway 99. Distance: 3.2 kms (2 mi.) one-way Time: 40 minutes Difficulty: Easy. On this level roadway along the south side of the BC Hydro canal which connects Seton Lake with the powerhouse on the Fraser, you walk in the shadow of the majestic towering cliffs at the base Mt. Brew. Watch for waterfowl on the canal.
Canal Walk
This map is provided as a guide only. The Chamber of Commerce does not take responsibility for the accuracy or safety of the trails included here.
Main Street
Seton Lake
F
rase
r Ri
ver
N
99
99
12
99
Lillooet Area Trail Map- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - brought to you by
MAP LEGEND Trail Heads Museum & Visitor Centre Hospital Campgrounds Police View Points Fire Department Provincial Highway 1 kilometre
Hangman’sPark Trail
Parking: N50° 40’ 61.9’’ W121° 56’ 09.8’’ Park at Miyazaki House. Distance: 0.3 Miles Time: 15-20 minutes. Difficulty: Easy to moderate loop walk. In the heart of Lillooet’s downtown, a brisk walk from the Miyazaki House to the scenic bench where, legend has it, frontier Judge Matthew Begbie hung murderers in the Gold Rush era.
Miyazaki House
Parking: 50°40’54.53”N 121°55’49.37”W Park in Cayoosh Campground close to the Bridge of the 23 Camels. Distance: 2.4 km (1.5 miles). Time: 45 min. one-way. Dif-ficulty: Easy to moderate. Built by the Lillooet Lions Club in the 1990s, the Lions Trail is a staple for local hikers, traversing the bank of the Fraser River through diverse habitat affording breathtaking views of the mighty river.
Thanks to Fort Berens Estate Winery, the District of Lillooet, the Lillooet Natural-ist Society, the Lillooet Historical Society and Sekw’el’was First Nation for their help with this project. For more trails and information, pick up a copy of ‘Canyon to Alpine, the Lillooet Hiking Guide.’
Fraser River Lions Trail
Parking: N50° 41’ 43.4’’ W121° 56’ 19.9’’ Park in lot behind REC Centre (access behind Museum). Distance: 8.7km (5.4 mi). Time: 1-hour jog, 2-hour walk. Difficulty: Moderate. Popular route with local runners, walkers and cyclists, crosses the Bridge of 23 Camels and the Old Suspension Bridge, offering gorgeous views of town and the famous river with fabulous mountain backdrops.
Bridges Walk
Parking: N50° 42’ 21.7’’ W121° 55’ 55.6’’ Park at Old Mill Plaza. Distance (Time): 2.4 km from mall to cemetery (30-45 minutes), 5.3 km for complete route (1 to 1.5 hours). Difficulty: Easy to moderate. This trail commemorates Lillooet’s history as the site of the first jade mine in BC. Stroll down Lillooet’s Main Street and enjoy over 30 unique pieces of jade, some weighing many tons. Pick up a brochure at KC Health & Gifts.
Jade Walk
Parking: N50° 40’ 97.9’’ W121° 55’ 89.1’’ Park at Bridge of the 23 Camels. Distance: 4.5 km (2.8 miles). Time: 1 to 1.5 hours one-way. Difficulty: Easy to moderate walk. This walk highlights the many sights the Lilllooet Historical Society recommends you en-joy in a town whose post-European contact history dates back to the Cariboo Gold Rush. Pick up a “Golden Mile” brochure at the Lillooet Museum and Visitor Info Centre.
Golden Mile of History
Parking: N50° 41’ 52.9’’ W121° 56’ 65.9’’ Park in gravel cul-de-sac at west end of Victoria Street. Distance: 3.4 km (2 mi.) Time: 2 to 3-hour hike Difficulty: Moderate to difficult, 500 metres elevation gain. This popular route takes hikers to the famous Red Rock outcropping 500 metres above town, offering an astounding panorama of the Fraser River valley. Local flora and fauna abound. Take water with you.
Red Rock Trail
Parking: N50° 40’ 51.2’’ W121° 55’ 49.7’’ Park in parking area just off Powerhouse Road. Distance: 190 m to 2 km Time: 30 min. to 1 hour. Difficulty: Easy (rocky shoreline). A chance to get up close to the mighty Fraser River. Enjoy a walk through an active ecological restoration site that showcases our beautiful grasslands and Black Cot-tonwood ecosystem at the confluence of the Seton and Fraser Rivers.
Sát’atqwa7 - The River
Parking: N50° 40’ 25.1’’ W121° 58’ 11.9’’ Park in beautiful, paved wayside park. Distance: 0.35 km (0.2 miles). Time: 10 minutes Difficulty: Easy. A short, easy walk along fast-moving Seton River offers the chance to see mountain goats on the cliffs above and other wildlife. Trails follow spawning channels full of salmon in season. Inter-pretive signage reveals local ecology and First Nations history.
Naxwit Park
Parking: N50° 40’ 37.1’’ W121° 56’ 39.7’’ Parking lot is off gravel road that is imme-diately west of Lightfoot Gas. Distance: 1.4 km (0.9 mi.) Time: 20 min. Difficulty: Easy. A pleasant loop around a man-made spawning stream complex built to assist the repro-duction of the many species of salmon. When the salmon are running these streams harbour thousands of spawning fish. Now managed by the Sekw’el‘was First Nation.
Seton Spawning Channels
Parking: N50° 40’ 06.2’’ W121° 58’ 67.3’’ Park at BC Hydro Campground entrance. Distance: 3.3 kms (2 mi.) Time: 60 minutes. Difficulty: Easy to moderate. Two pretty loop walks connected by a steep hill. The loops go through forest, along Cayoosh Creek and offer awesome mountain views. Across Highway 99 from the upper bench you can access the incredible Seton Lake lookout.
Campground Trails
Parking: N50° 40’ 14.1’’ W121° 58’ 40.6’’ Park on immediate south side of Canal Bridge on Highway 99. Distance: 3.2 kms (2 mi.) one-way Time: 40 minutes Difficulty: Easy. On this level roadway along the south side of the BC Hydro canal which connects Seton Lake with the powerhouse on the Fraser, you walk in the shadow of the majestic towering cliffs at the base Mt. Brew. Watch for waterfowl on the canal.
Canal Walk
This map is provided as a guide only. The Chamber of Commerce does not take responsibility for the accuracy or safety of the trails included here.
Main Street
Seton Lake
F
rase
r Ri
ver
41
Scenic Drives With four spectacular scenic drives reaching all corners of the Lillooet area, this is a circle-touring paradise. Explore one scenic drive or use Lillooet as your base and explore all of them.
Coast Mountain Circle Tour 691 kilometres (429 miles) Three to seven days.
The round-trip loop from Lillooet to Vancouver provides some of the most beautiful vistas in southern British Columbia. Starting in Lillooet, this route follows the spectacular Duffey Lake Road (Highway 99),
which winds through rugged wilderness, past snow-capped mountains and glacial lakes to Pemberton. It continues through the Coast Mountains and past the world-famous ski resort at Whistler on the newly upgraded Hwy. 99 to Squamish and the Pacific Ocean and then to Vancouver. East of Vancouver, the trip north along the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) provides a striking transformations in scenery as the metropolitan area gives way to the fertile agricultural heartland of B.C. - the Fraser Valley. Highway 1 follows the Fraser River and the old Cariboo Gold Rush Trail. With their pick-axes, gold pans and mules, prospectors in the 1850s and 1860s endured peril after peril to follow their dreams of gold to the Cariboo. Tunnels along the route are named for former Fraser River gold mining bars. The region around Lytton and Lillooet offer another change of landscape. This semi-arid area receives less than 25 centimetres of rainfall annually and there’s a friendly rivalry between the two towns over which community can claim the title as Canada’s real hot spot.
Duffey Lake - Hurley River Road Circle TourSome seasonal roads (June to October), 281 km (174 miles): one day
The trip to Gold Bridge-Bralorne from Lillooet follows Highway 40, a mostly gravel road, along the steep canyon of the Bridge River. Watch for wildlife and rocks. For a photo op, stop at the spectacular Horseshoe Bend, where the varied rocks and minerals in the hillside tell a fascinating geological story. The road hugs the shoreline of Carpenter
42
FraserRiver
FraserRiver
ThompsonRiver
Downton Lake
Gun Lake
Tyaughton Lake
Carpenter Lake
Bridge River
Anderson Lake
Seton Lake
Lillooet Lake
Harrison Lake
Kelly Lake
Pavilion Lake
Duffey Lake
CLINTON
PAVILION
CACHE CREEK
ASHCROFT
SPENCES BRIDGE
LYTTON
SETONPORTAGE
GOLD BRIDGE
BRALORNE
PEMBERTON
WHISTLER
SQUAMISH
BOSTON BAR
HOPE
HARRISONHOT SPRINGS
CHILLIWACKMISSION
VANCOUVERHORSESHOE BAY
TO MERRITT
TO PRINCETON
LILLOOET
99
71
5
3
1
1
8
97C
12
99
97
99
99
BRITISH COLUMBIA
WASHINGTON
LEGENDCircle Tour (paved)
Circle Tour (unpaved)Caution: Some roadsare seasonal
Highway Number 1
Grant a Wish
Gifts • Home Decor • JewelleryFashion & Accessories
600 Block Main StreetDowntown Lillooet
250-256-7310
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Pizza • Lasagna • SpaghettiTAKE OUT & DELIVERY
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Crust
Available
682 Main St.
250-256-0064
which winds through rugged wilderness, past snow-capped mountains and glacial lakes to Pemberton. It continues through the Coast Mountains and past the world-famous ski resort at Whistler on the newly upgraded Hwy. 99 to Squamish and the Pacific Ocean and then to Vancouver. East of Vancouver, the trip north along the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) provides a striking transformations in scenery as the metropolitan area gives way to the fertile agricultural heartland of B.C. - the Fraser Valley. Highway 1 follows the Fraser River and the old Cariboo Gold Rush Trail. With their pick-axes, gold pans and mules, prospectors in the 1850s and 1860s endured peril after peril to follow their dreams of gold to the Cariboo. Tunnels along the route are named for former Fraser River gold mining bars. The region around Lytton and Lillooet offer another change of landscape. This semi-arid area receives less than 25 centimetres of rainfall annually and there’s a friendly rivalry between the two towns over which community can claim the title as Canada’s real hot spot.
Duffey Lake - Hurley River Road Circle TourSome seasonal roads (June to October), 281 km (174 miles): one day
The trip to Gold Bridge-Bralorne from Lillooet follows Highway 40, a mostly gravel road, along the steep canyon of the Bridge River. Watch for wildlife and rocks. For a photo op, stop at the spectacular Horseshoe Bend, where the varied rocks and minerals in the hillside tell a fascinating geological story. The road hugs the shoreline of Carpenter
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Lake, formed by the construction of a hydroelectric dam on the Bridge River in 1948. Gold Bridge and Bralorne were home to the richest gold mine in Canada for 40 years, until the mine closed in 1971. The area is a hunting, fishing, snowmobiling and rockhounding paradise. The route continues over the Hurley Pass and down into the Pemberton Valley. The final leg of the journey returns to Lillooet via Highway 99 (Duffey Lake Road).
Fountain ValleyYear-round gravel road, 68 kilometres (42 miles) 2 ½ hours
Follow Highway 99 from Lillooet towards Cache Creek to start this tour. Ten minutes out of Lillooet, to the left and across the Fraser River, are the Xwisten (Bridge River First Nation) fishing grounds. Local Aboriginal people fish for salmon here with dip nets, then cut the fish and hang it on racks to dry in the wind. A right turn at the village at (Xaxli’p) Fountain Flats begins the ascent into Fountain Valley, with its beautiful mountain meadows and deciduous forests. Camping and picnicking spots are available at Fountain Lake. Another right turn onto Highway 12 affords a panoramic view of Fountainview Farms, B.C.’s largest grower of organic carrots. Not far north of the Fountain Valley Road intersection is the “Big Slide” ... so massive that the cost of
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BRALORNE
GOLDBRIDGE
SETONPORTAGE
D'ARCY
MOUNT CURRIEPEMBERTON
LILLOOET
Downton Lake
Bridge River
Gun Lake
Tyaughton Lake
Carpenter Lake
Lillooet River
Duffey Lake
Ande
rson L
akeSe
ason
al Road
(Seas
onal
)
Gravel Road Bridge River
Seton Lake
Fraser River
Lillooet Lake
Hur l
ey
Roa
d
To Gold Bridge
To Lytton
To Whistler
ToCacheCreek
FOUNTAINVILLAGE
LILLOOET
Fraser River
Fountain Lake
Foun
tain
Valle
yR
oad
99
99
12
OUR SPECIALTY IS SPORTS
Winner’s Edge • Fishing • Hunting • Camping
• Clothing & Footwear• Bikes & Accessories
Book your Sturgeon Trips here!Contact: Steve AlainSturgeon Season runs July - October 31
14th AnnuAl
Sturgeon Derby
July 23rd, 2016 644 Main St. 250-256-4848 [email protected]
Local news, weather, music and
community events
100.5 FMwww.radiolillooet.ca250-999-2086DEANO’S
PIZZAPizza • Lasagna • Spaghetti
TAKE OUT & DELIVERY
Gluten Free
Crust
Available
682 Main St.
250-256-0064
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widening the road through it is prohibitive. As a result, for a distance of 400 metres the road becomes one lane carved out of the cliff side. Imagine navigating this by wagon or mule!
Pavilion Mountain 245 kilometres (152 mile) one day This Scenic Drive follows part of the original Cariboo Wagon Road/Gold Rush Trail. Follow Highway 99 north from Lillooet to the aboriginal community of Ts’kw’axylaw (Pavilion). Turn left
and begin the climb to the plateau atop Pavilion Mountain (elevation 1520 metres). The trip offers an exciting drive through the heart of the Diamond S Cattle Ranch, a producer of prime beef for more than a century that’s now raising organic beef. After descending from Pavilion Mountain, the route follows the shoreline of Kelly Lake. A picnic at inviting Downing Provincial Park allows time to enjoy the beauty of this tranquil valley. The road from Kelly Lake leads to Clinton, with its copper-colored mountains and many historic ranches. On the return trip to Lillooet, drop in at historic Hat Creek Ranch, at the junction of Highways 97 and 99, for an old-fashioned western welcome. Be sure to ask about the ghost lurking in the ranch house. Further along Highway 99, the unique limestone pillar of Chimney Rock can be seen to the left. Camping is available at Marble Canyon Provincial Park, and Pavilion and Crown Lakes are lovely places to swim or picnic.
LILLOOET
CLINTON
PAVILION
TO LYTTON
TO CACHE CREEK
TO PRINCE GEORGE
Kelly Lake
Pavilion Lake
Fraser River
Bridge River
97
99
24 Hour Tire Service
• Tires• Brakes
• Batteries• Front Ends• Oil Changes
Ph: 250-256-4131 • 249 Main St. Lillooet www.kaltire.com
Hours: Mon–Fri 7:30am–6pm
Saturday 8am–5pmAfter Hours Call Out Service
FREE• WIFI • Pool Tables
• Shuffleboard • Darts
MEAT DRAWSFRIDAY - 5:30 pm SUNDAY - 3:30 pm
Mon - Thurs, Sat & Sun
3pm to 7pm Friday - 3pm to ?
737 Main Street 250-256-7332
THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Br. 66
Thanks to our community for your continued support!
All welcome at our Apricotfest BBQ
Come see what we are about!
EGIONILLOOETL
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and begin the climb to the plateau atop Pavilion Mountain (elevation 1520 metres). The trip offers an exciting drive through the heart of the Diamond S Cattle Ranch, a producer of prime beef for more than a century that’s now raising organic beef. After descending from Pavilion Mountain, the route follows the shoreline of Kelly Lake. A picnic at inviting Downing Provincial Park allows time to enjoy the beauty of this tranquil valley. The road from Kelly Lake leads to Clinton, with its copper-colored mountains and many historic ranches. On the return trip to Lillooet, drop in at historic Hat Creek Ranch, at the junction of Highways 97 and 99, for an old-fashioned western welcome. Be sure to ask about the ghost lurking in the ranch house. Further along Highway 99, the unique limestone pillar of Chimney Rock can be seen to the left. Camping is available at Marble Canyon Provincial Park, and Pavilion and Crown Lakes are lovely places to swim or picnic.
For more information, please contact:www.lillooetchamberofcommerce.com 250-256-3578
Proudly Sponsored in part by:
Lillooet Museum & Visitor Centre
Lillooet NewsBridge River
www.lillooetnews.net
Come join us for
Canada Day
Celebration in the Park
Friday, July 1st, 201611:00 am
in Downton Park
• Family Activities• Live Music
• Face painting
• Free Balloons• Great Food
and Much More
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Ben Klick
Saturday, July 23rd6:00 pm to midnight
Lillooet REC Centre Lawn
Come join us at the
Apricot FestLawn Dance
The Wild Onions
Twin Kennedy
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For more info, visit us online exploregoldcountry.com
Starting in LillooetSeptember 2
September 3 Loon Lake September 4 Clinton
September 5 Cache Creek
PHO
TO: G
UY
LUN
DST
RO
M
GeoTour Geocaches in Lillooet
Fishing Rocks at Xwisten GC1TQF9
Old Bridge GC1TTXQ
Lower Seton Spawning Channel GC1TTRH
Kaoham Shuttle GC1VKHP
Red Rock GC1V1V4
Burkholder Lake Trail GC3QN6R
Camelsfoot Peak Trail GC3QN8Q
Horseshoe Bend Trail GC3QN7Z
Mission Ridge Trail GC3QN60
Pavilion Lake GC3P2XW
Seton Ridge Trail GC3QN9X
GoldCountryBC Explore Gold Country
Geocaching Event Gold CountrySeptember 2-5 2016
4th Annual
LILLOOETLOVELILLOOET.COM
While you explore our rugged landscape, discover our unique, local indie businesses!
Photo: Squamish-Lillooet Regional District