Canada's top hikes from strolls to epic adventures
There are literally thousands of incredible hikes in Canada, a country blessed with superlative natural beauty and vast tracts of wilderness.
There are literally thousands of incredible hikes in Canada, a country blessed with superlative natural beauty and vast tracts of wilderness.
A big part of the fun in travel is finding your own path to explore, of course, but here are some of our favourites. Pull on some comfortable hiking boots and get started!
When you explore a place on foot, you really see it — every nuance and detail. I remember being astonished at the beauty of the tiny details in the Northwest Territories, where extreme weather keeps everything miniature — but exquisite.
And I remember the way the curtain of mist suddenly parted on a hike in Newfoundland and Labrador’s Bonavista Peninsula. We suddenly realized we were at the edge of a precipice, with the turquoise water churning hundreds of feet straight down, just in time to see a puffin dive-bomb over the edge.
Columbia Icefield Glacier Adventure and SkyWalk
Alberta’s Columbia Icefield drive through the Rockies is rated one of the best in the world. But you’ll want to see the colossal peaks wrapped in prehistoric ice up-close. A giant, all-terrain vehicle takes you to the top of the six kilometre long, one kilometre wide tongue of a 10,000-year-old sheet of ice. Be sure to bring a water bottle so you can taste the glacial water destined for three oceans.
Algonquin Provincial Park
Algonquin Provincial Park is the ultimate wilderness getaway, and only a short distance from Toronto. Hike, paddle and portage through Ontario’s 7,000-square-metre of maple forest and little islands with residents such as blue heron, moose and beaver. Voyageur Quest supplies expert guides and 26-foot voyageur canoes.
Tour and Hike in Quebec
Road trip through Quebec’s charming Eastern Townships, then choose side-trip hikes to get to know the area on foot. Bonus: you can mix in vineyards and tastings on the 13- kilometre (8- mile) wine route and seven of the province’s most beautiful villages. Trek past the highest peaks in southern Quebec.
Iceberg Alley
In Newfoundland and Labrador, enormous icebergs are a common sight, as are spouting whales, from the hiking trail. Both are something to see — and hear. Favourite hiking areas: Gros Morne National Park and Torngat Mountains National Park.
Yukon Wilderness
Add river rafting to your hiking, if you like. This is the world’s largest UNESCO-protected wilderness area, designated for its 100-kilometre-long (62-mile) ice fields, tall peaks and sweeping river valleys. Cover three wilderness parks: Kluane National Park (Yukon), Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park (British Columbia) and Alaska’s Glacier Bay National Park.
B.C. Heli-Ventures
With a luxe base camp at Nimmo Bay Wilderness Resort, you can hike into British Columbia’s 9,000-square-kilometre Great Bear Rainforest with the advantage of a private helicopter to shuttle you around. Also on offer: kayaking, flight-seeing, fly fishing, and some rest and relaxation.
Athabasca Sand Dunes
Hike, and canoe, along the shore’s of one of Canada’s largest lakes — Saskatchewan’s Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Wilderness Park. The dunes are 30 metres high and stretch over 100 kilometres (62 miles). Churchill River Canoe Outfitters flies you in on a float plane and can also take you paddling along the subarctic desert-like terrain of the William River.
Follow the Voyageurs
With a base at float plane-access Aikens Lake Wilderness Lodge, Manitoba, you can hike along a historic portage where fur traders once walked. Expect to see ancient pictographs, black bear, moose, caribou, beaver and muskrat. Bonus: French-Canadian and Métis cuisine, storytelling and music.