1967 + 50 = 150

Canada 150 Logo

“Look at the cute guy in the siwash sweater,” said my friend Chon. “Hey, he’s coming over here. And I bet he’s going to ask you to dance,” she said.

Given “he” was Magellan, you can see why we patriotically and romantically celebrate July 1. Especially this year on Canada’s 150th anniversary. In honour of the occasion, Parks Canada has created the Discovery Pass 2017, giving everyone in the world free access to our 47 National Parks all year long. So today, on the country’s and our anniversary, let’s go to two of the best.

Banff, it’s the National Park we’ve enjoyed most over the years. The first place we holidayed together (dancing under black lights at the Grizzly House). The first place we vacationed as a family with Lynn (the May long weekend when she was only a few months old). It was an easy drive from Calgary where we lived for almost three decades.

In 1990, the town of Banff became a self-governing entity within the National Park, commercialism and conservation butting heads in what’s sometimes referred to as a “stressed marriage.” I remember laughing at a sign on the door of a shop in Banff in the early 90s: “We’re closed. Leave all your money under the door.” But I wasn’t laughing when the Book and Art Den closed and McDonald’s opened. Still, good memories hold fast. Skiing at Lake Louise, hiking Larch Valley and biking from Banff to Jasper National Park with Lynn thirty summers ago.

If Banff is a ruby, Jasper is a diamond. After a niece’s wedding in Jasper, we realized how much its Rocky Mountain small-town atmosphere reminded us of bygone days in Banff. Jasper’s elongated main street of harmonious A-frame mountain architecture, historically rustic in stone and wood, parallels the tracks of the Canadian National Railway, reminiscent of the days when time was measured by the sound of the train’s whistle.

Jasper still has the timeless feel of a Swiss alpine village, but our favourite hotel is more remote, just outside the Park. The Overlander Mountain Lodge is named for the surveyors and settlers who travelled on foot and horseback before the days of the “iron horse.” Hallways lined with black-and-white photographs pay tribute to both those hardy souls and early travellers who vacationed in the log-cabin style rooms. There’s another reason we like the Overlander. You guessed didn’t you? Venture Magazine voted its Stone Peak Restaurant Alberta’s best patio last year and that alone would make it worth stopping for a leisurely drink. But the food is what draws us back. Genevieve’s Borscht, House-Smoked Organic Sturgeon, Pickerel with Navy Beans and Seasonal Vegetables, Butter Chicken…

Mostly alpine wilderness, Jasper is Canada’s largest mountain National Park and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Like some of the national parks we visited in the US (Big Bend in Texas for example), Jasper is a Dark Sky Preserve. Jasper, with its 11,000 square kilometres of space, is three times bigger than Big Bend, and has the world’s largest Dark Sky Preserve, which is celebrated with a festival every October.

Last summer on our drive back from Saskatchewan through Jasper, we decided to slow down, stay two nights and hike one of Jasper’s many trails, most of them wildly mint-fresh to us.

Consulting a local hiking guide, Don’t Waste Your Time® in the Canadian Rockies, we found this:

Hike to Wilcox Pass and you’ll be disappointed—in subsequent hikes. This will become the benchmark. Few trails anywhere in the world are so instantly and extravagantly gratifying.

The Columbia Icefield. Creeklets. Meadows. Bighorn sheep. Let’s go!

Remember I mentioned that we had bicycled from Banff to Jasper in the summer of 1987? When we read that you could hike through the barren tundra with its majestic mountain views to the top of Wilcox Pass and, instead of retracing your steps, descend through the forest and end up on the Icefields Parkway 10 kilometres away from the trailhead, we decided to turn it into a hike-and-bike trip. We hid our bikes in the evergreens alongside the Icefields Parkway across from Tangle Creek, not that anyone would want to steal mine.

“The problem with Wilcox Pass,” Kathy and Craig Copeland say in their guidebook, “is people. Too many of them.” Well-warned, we got an early start. Only two vehicles were parked at the trailhead when we arrived and we saw only three other hikers, two of them from Europe. But by the time we bicycled back, cars were spilling over both sides of the road.

Jasper’s best hike is named after Walter Wilcox who first travelled to the Canadian Rockies in the late 19th century. Walter explored much of the area between Lake Louise and Jasper, beginning when he was only 19 and a student at Yale. A mountaineer, photographer and philosopher, his book, The Rockies of Canada, published in 1909, became a bestseller across North America. But he never did see his namesake pass.

After all the mountain climbing Walter did, the steep ascent through a 400-year-old forest of fir and spruce at the beginning of this hike would be easy for him. In two kilometres that’s over and you’re in treeless meadows of sheep grass (but no sheep) and moss campion with amazing views of the Snow Dome, Sunwapta Pass, Mount Athabasca and its glacial cirques—a panoramic vista that overlooks tourists in buses inching their way up to the Columbia Icefields, tourists who don’t know what they’re missing.

It was shocking to see how much the Athabasca Glacier has retreated since Lynn, Magellan and I relaxed beside it for most of the day thirty years ago. On that trip, cycling up Sunwapta Pass was easier than we expected and we had pre-paid the night’s accommodation at the Columbia Icefield Chalet. The hotel didn’t take credit cards and we were down to $40 in cash. I remember carefully searching the menu for the highest-calorie count meal to fuel the 100 kilometre cycle to Jasper the next day. Chow Mein and a G&T was my successful combination.

Back to the Wilcox Pass trail. The views continue as you ascend toward the crest of the Pass, the fragile trail cushiony-soft, braided by hikers trying to avoid small pools of water. From there, we hiked down to Wilcox Lake, so small and shrunken that I hoped it wouldn’t minimize Walter’s achievements in the eyes of hikers when they saw it. A good place for lunch.

Small can be beautiful. In Jasper the previous day, we joined a little group of townspeople to watch a highly skilled team of workers lower and perfectly line up the second half of a pre-built home, clapping when the jigsaw piece was inserted. Setting up house is different in a town of 5,000 people. We wondered if it was pride-of-place or if Jasper is vying for Prettiest Town in Canada with all of the flowers, bouquets of colour hanging from baskets on Main Street, gardens of florae in the front yards of people’s homes.

For the last 16 years, Chon, the friend I mentioned earlier, has called Jasper home. “It’s so authentic. Everybody’s so kind and considerate. They rally around whoever needs help. I don’t know where else you’d find that other than in a small town in Saskatchewan.”

(You’re digressing,” I hear Magellan saying, so back to the hike.)

The trail past Wilcox Lake wanders through tundra meadows brightened with wildflowers before descending into the forested Tangle Creek valley and ending up on the Icefields Parkway where we’d hidden our bikes.

And then we saw them.

The climax of the hike.

A herd of mountain goats, including a baby kid—right alongside the road.

Because he cycles quite a lot, returning to the Wilcox Pass trailhead was easy for Magellan. On the steep uphill climbs during our trip in 1987, he had to give my bike a push to get me started. But it didn’t work this time.

There’s another thing that makes it harder today for a jubilado. Every fifteen minutes Brewster buses travel back and forth from the Columbia Icefields Discovery Centre to the Glacier Skywalk, Jasper’s newest attraction—and an in a few spots, the Icefields Parkway has no shoulders to move onto.

In J.B. Harkin, a passionate activist for wilderness preservation that led to the 1930 National Parks Act, wrote words that are still true for the experience you can have in Jasper:

National Parks exist in order that every citizen of Canada may satisfy a craving for Nature and Nature’s beauty: that we may absorb the poise and restfulness of the forests; that we may steep our souls in the brilliance of the wild flowers and the sublimity of the mountain peaks; that we may develop in ourselves the joy and activity we see in the wild animals…

Navigation

Here’s what the Calgary Herald had to say about the town of Banff’s 25th anniversary.

Copeland, Kathy and Craig. Don’t Waste Your Time® in the Canadian Rockies. Canmore: hikingcamping.com, 2004. Our favourite hiking companions give Wilcox Pass their prime rating: a “Premier Dayhike.”

Jasper’s Dark Sky Festival has become a major tourist draw.

The Overland Mountain Lodge and its Stone Peak Restaurant we recommend.

Two images courtesy of the Overland Lodge

Travel and Leisure magazine gives its 150 reasons to visit Canada. And guess what?

Number 1: The Canadian Rockies
You can see a different side of the Rocky Mountains. Alberta, British Columbia is home to the northernmost area of the notable mountain range, complete with crisp lakes and snow-capped peaks.

Number 45: Glaciers
Not only can you paddle by icebergs, you can also walk on the world’s most accessible glacier. The Icefields Parkway, a stunning 232 kilometer (about 144 miles) route of icy glacier that cuts through the Rockies between Banff and Jasper is accessible by off-road vehicle from mid-May until mid-September.

Wilcox, Walter. The Rockies of Canada. Canada: Rocky Mountain Books, 2008. This edition is the 1909 version, the final one for Wilcox. Hailed as “an exceptionally thrilling piece of creative non-fiction,” the book became a best seller for travellers worldwide interested in the “vast solitude” (Walter’s words) of the Canadian Rockies.

You can find out more about Walter Wilcox here.

Total distance: 12338 m
Total climbing: 788 m

16 Responses

  1. What adventures you have had. Loved learning about your hikes in Jasper area and the town. Happy Anniversary !

  2. Great post, you two continue to amaze me with your travels, sense of adventure and genuine love for one another! The pictures were definitely a blast from the past, I totally forgot you biked Banff to Jasper that many years ago. And yes love Jasper, it’s serenity and all it has to offer. Have to check out that hike one day!

    1. Thanks Joan. You gave me a chance to use a quote I’ve been saving to share: “And if travel is like love, it is, in the end, mostly because it’s a heightened state of awareness, in which we are mindful, receptive, undimmed by familiarity and ready to be transformed. That is why the best trips, like the best love affairs, never really end.” Pico Iyer. Or Magellan might choose this one: “What I cannot love I overlook.”

  3. Still one of my favorite parts of the world. Sonia was 6 months the first time she was in Banff. (I think I secretly must of ‘willed’ her to be with someone from Calgary!) On a later trip when the kids were young teens, we ‘lost’ Daniel who was too cool to be seen hiking with his parents and was not at the end-of-day rendezvous. (We were late.) We did find him hours later holed up in the Book and Art Den. Relieved parents – scowling proprietor.

    Great post. Thanks for this.

    1. If our blog was titled “Latitude20” and went back to the days of our 20s, every second post might be about the Rockies. Blue Rodeo and Susan Sontag at the Banff Centre, backpacking into Assiniboine with a Frenchman and his espresso maker, riding the old school bus up to Sunshine to ski…It’s a magical place, worthy of T&L’s #1 rating in Canada.

  4. Thanks for the rundown of the Banff and Jasper…I have always been more portal to Jasper, I guess the proximity for me…Yes and Hppy Anniversary of your meeting…I remember Scotland July 1 and you two love birds ditched us to have your day! Awesome to be sure. I just love living my life thru your blogs! Photos are cute and amazing. Keep up the good work! Love one of the cousins! Heather

    1. Scotland, 1992—that would have been our 25th anniversary of meeting. But neither of us can remember leaving the clan or what we did that day! It’s going to require your young memory or a trip to the box of my diaries squirrelled away somewhere…

  5. I loved reading this. I was trying to visualize the trails you were on. Did you see any bears on your hikes

    1. Not in Jasper but we have seen grizzlies while hiking in Waterton NP in the early 90s and lots of them in Glacier NP back in the 1980s. With Lynn, Ward and Clare at Helen Lake in Yoho NP in 2009 we saw a black bear. We carry bear spray nowadays; in Big Bend, Texas, for example this spring for Mexican brown bears.

  6. Happy Anniversary….you still have the energy and good looks of a couple of teenagers!
    xoxo
    Bonnie

  7. Beautiful pictures and a blast from the past.

    The parks at one time, might enlighten your spirit and free your mind, today the crowds have removed that aspect and the overall experience is more like a mall, in any major city, on Boxing Day, my opinion only, my friends.

    1. Many would agree that we are “loving our national parks to death.” This year, with NPs being free in “the True North strong and free,” that may very well happen. What to do? Jubilados have an advantage. We get up early (don’t we?). Travel off season, and on weekdays. Change our preferences: Jasper over Banff. The solitude of wilderness still resides but it’s not easy to find like it was in 1967.

  8. Happy Anniversary! We enjoyed reading this post especially, remembering some of our own Rocky Mountain experiences.

    1. Ah yes, the days when Canadian Pacific Airlines flew over the Rockies. In the words of Greg Keelor and Jim Cuddy, “Oh how I miss those western skies..”

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