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Research and Statisics
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Cariboo Chilcotin Coast Quick Facts
- Located in the central interior
one-third of the way up the province of British Columbia, the Cariboo Chilcotin
Coast covers approximately 117,500 sq km (45,415 sq mi) which is over 12 per
cent of BC's land mass, similar to the US state of Pennsylvania (117,412 sq km)
and a bit smaller than the European country of Greece (131,940 sq km).
- With a population of about
73,000 the entire region has the same population range as the BC cities of Kamloops, Prince George and
Nanaimo. In
comparison, the state of Pennsylvania has over
12.3 million people; Greece
has a population of 10.6 million.
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The vast region includes 15,000 km (9315 mi) of coastline, 8,000 lakes and
17,000 km (11,000 mi) of rivers and streams.
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The climate features warm, dry summers, crisp, cool winters and a rainy season
on the coast that lasts from October through February. The hot spots in the
region have reached 41.5 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) with a summer
average between 21 and 28 degrees Celsius (72 and 86 degrees Fahrenheit). The
Northern portions have summer weather in the mid to late teens, while the Coast
is mild year round with a summer day averaging 16 degrees Celsius (62 degrees
Fahrenheit).
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Gold drew Europeans here, while ranching enticed them to stay. Today, ranching,
forestry, tourism and mining are the major industries.
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The world's largest pair of cross-country skis (11-metres high) graces the
entrance to the 100 Mile House Visitor Info Centre. The region offers more than
200 km (125 mi) of groomed and track-set trails as well as endless backcountry
to explore.
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The largest log house in North America - over 100,000 square feet - was built
in Williams Lake
and shipped to the US.
One of the log lodges for the downhill ski venue at the Salt Lake City Olympics
was built in 100 Mile House.
- Mt. Waddington, BC's
highest peak, is located in the Coast Mountain Range, south of Kleena Kleene.
Its ice and granite steeple at 4,016 meters (13,176 ft) is esteemed by intrepid
climbers and has been compared to Mont Blanc
in the French/Italian Alps.
- Quesnel Lake,
with depths of nearly 610 meters (2000 feet) is believed to be the world's
deepest fjord lake.
- It takes six to ten days to
paddle the world famous 116-km (72 mi) Bowron Lake
Circuit. Comprised of pristine lakes, rivers and creeks, it is, for canoeists
and kayakers, the wilderness trip of a lifetime.
- Hunlen Falls
in Tweedsmuir Provincial
Park is Canada's third highest waterfall at
260 meters (855 ft); reached and
accessed by an ambitious nine-hour hike.
- Gold Bridge,
an isolated community west of Lillooet, is noted as being the richest
gold-producing region in the province. Gold spurred the area in the 1920s and
the Bralorne Mine, which opened in the 1930s, produced over $145 million in
gold and employed some 5,000 miners before closing in 1970. The Bralorne Pioneer
Museum in Gold
Bridge preserves the history of the Bridge River
Valley.
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BC's first rodeo was held in Williams
Lake in 1919. Ranches,
originally spawned by the Gold Rush (those who didn't find nuggets, stayed to
work the land), were home to cowboys from as near as Washington
State and as far as Europe.
They held a small rodeo as a social event. Today the Williams Lake Stampede is
an international event and one of the largest in the province.
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The unique spelling of Cariboo most likely dates back to April 1861 when it was
reported in the British Colonist newspaper that an "animal of the reindeer
species known as the Cariboo" was shot. The word is believed to be of Algonquin
origin and was spelled ‘caribou' or ‘cariboeuf'. The word ‘Cariboo' is simply a
variant of Caribou and both spellings are in the Oxford and Funk & Wagnall dictionaries.
Today Cariboo has become the geographical name describing the region while
‘caribou' remains the spelling used for
the animal.
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The names of many towns in the Cariboo are connected to the Gold Rush. For
example, 100 Mile House and 150 Mile House, to name two, were named for the distance
from Lillooet along the Cariboo
Waggon Road.
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With a history dating back to 1863, the Gang Ranch was once the world's largest
ranch at one million acres.
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Alkali Ranch, believed to be the province's oldest ranch dating from 1861, was
established by Otto Bowe, a German who arrived in California in 1854 and was lured north in
1858 in hopes of finding gold.
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The first white man to arrive at the Bella Coola coast by land was Alexander
Mackenzie. In 1793 he followed the ‘grease trail' used by Nuxalk and Carrier
First Nations as a trading route to the coast. Mackenzie Rock on the shores
west of Bella Coola commemorates the explorer's arrival at the ocean with his
inscription "from Canada by land,
22 July 1793."
- In
1864 Barkverville was thought to be the largest town north of San Francisco.
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The white Kermode Bear, known as the "Spirit Bear" by First Nations people, may
be sighted on Princess
Royal Island
north of Bella Coola. Startlingly beautiful, it is a sub species of a Black
bear and found only in the Great Bear Rainforest.
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The St. George
Hotel and the Kelly/King House B&B
are the only places to lay your head within a Canadian heritage site. The
seven-room St. George Hotel
has been restored to its 1890's elegance and one room boasts a ghost - a blond
woman who is only seen by men. The Kelly/King House B&B was the home of the
Kelly family, owners of one of Barkerville's first hotels.
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The smallest community in the region is Stuie with a population of five. The
tiny hamlet lies in South
Tweedsmuir Park
and is home to the Tweedsmuir Lodge.
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Bella Coola is the only central coast community with a highway link to the rest
of Canada.
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