Issue:
May/June 2007

Text:
Robert Smith

Photography:
Robert Smith

Geographic Region:
BC, Canada, North America

Pages:
96 - 100

Highway 97, the Gold Rush Trail, climbs north into the Cariboo region.

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Canada: British Columbia, Coast to Cariboo

"Ho-hum," a friend of mine remarked, tongue-in-cheek, as we stood looking across British Columbia's vast Shuswap Lake, "just more mountains, forests, rivers and lakes." Well, for once, he was right. Southern BC is mostly forests, rivers, lakes and mountains. And as motorcyclists know, these geographical features usually indicate something other than the breathtaking vistas – great riding roads!

I love ferries. If I'm on one, it means I'm on a road trip of some sort. And there's always room for a motorcycle. So I'm a happy guy as I idle the Commando past the long line of caged commuters to the Fort Langley Ferry's loading ramp, just in time to roll aboard. My river crossing means I'll ride rambling Highway 7 east through the Fraser Valley from Vancouver instead of the bustling Trans-Canada.

The Fraser River's fertile delta spreads across a 50-mile gap in the Coast Range on the Pacific, and the mountains squeeze closer together on each side as I roll inland across flat fields of corn and berry bushes. To the south, Mt. Baker's 10,000-foot gleaming white hulk is unusually free of cloud – a good omen for this tour.

I'm following the Gold Rush Trail. As in many other parts of North America, prospectors opened up the interior of British Columbia, though fur traders of the Hudson Bay Company had already established a number of fortress outposts. Early gold diggers followed the Fraser River north on a trail "utterly impassable for any animal but a man, a goat, or a dog," according to a contemporary report, to the goldfields 300-odd miles north. ...


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