This summer Larry Dolecki, an internationally certified guide, built a hut on the Lyell Icefield of the Canadian Rockies. Sitting on a nunatak, an exposed chunk of rock amid the ice, it's a lonely spot within reach of some of the longest ski lines in British Columbia.
The new hut is an outlier to the main lodges of Icefall Lodge, a backcountry ski touring operation north of Golden, B.C. and a member of the Backcountry Lodges of BC. I visited Icefall last year and the skiing was unreal. (This is a picture from the main lodge.) There's tons of variety and the alpine terrain is limitless. The tenure covers 200 square kilometres; it would take a couple days to traverse the entire tenure.
It's a demanding day trip to access the hut from Icefall Lodge. The hut sits at 2860m (9400'), making it one of the highest huts in B.C. and as far as we know the highest privately owned hut. But once you're there the five, 11,000 foot peaks of the Lyell's can be skied in a day. Dolecki, the lodge owner, says there are over a dozen glacier runs right out the door and monster 7000 foot runs that descend from the summits of the Lyells into Lyell Creek are possible. Now that's a leg burner. I can't wait to give it a go.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
The highest hut in Canada
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