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Banff Hiking Trails

Article Description:
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>From trekking into classic teahouses and charming backcountry
lodges to around-town strolls, Banff's hiking trails are one of
the most extensive hiking networks on earth.


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984 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2006-12-11 22:12:00

Written By:     Travel Alberta
Copyright:      2006, All Rights Reserved
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Banff Hiking Trails
Copyright (c) 2006 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved
Written by: Travel Alberta
http://www.travelalberta.com




>From trekking into classic teahouses and charming backcountry
lodges to around-town strolls, Banff's hiking trails are one of
the most extensive hiking networks on earth.

Pretend the Canadian Rockies are a pair of tall, stiff hiking
boots. Lacing up those boots are Banff's hiking trails that
zigzag, or switchback, over meadows of delicate alpine flowers
and rugged passes – ending at the top of the boot, or, in some
cases 10,000 foot summits. With more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km)
of trails, Canada's oldest national park, Banff, is simply a
byword for scenic splendor – and nowhere do you get a finer sense
of its storied past and current pristine beauty than on Banff's
hiking trails.


The birth of Banff National Park

Banff's network of hiking trails is linked to the very founding
of Canada's first national park – and the world's third. The
tale goes that in 1883 three Canadian Pacific Railway workers
spotted a plume of steam rising from a crack in a rock. Stumbling
upon a cave, bubbling with hot springs – Banff National Park was
born, two years later. Spanning 2,564 square miles (6,641 sq.
km), the town of Banff in the late 1800s became a world-class
resort featuring an ultra-luxe CPR hotel (the Banff Springs, now
a Fairmont property), the Upper Hot Springs (which now feeds
several swank spas) and base camps where horsepacking trips and
intrepid hikers ventured – and still do! In fact, in Banff
National Park's many museums you'll find archival photos of
women, such as American Mary Schaffer, in petticoats – gallantly
trudging up mountain passes to view spectacular cirques and high
alpine lakes.


Banff Rocky Mountain Hiking

Today, those hikers are more likely outfitted in fleece and
Gore-Tex, but their pursuit is the same – to leave the pavement
for a sense of adventure. The two main hubs for hikers in Banff
National Park fan out from the park's two mountain resorts –
Banff and Lake Louise. From short interpretive ambles, often
organized by local Alberta hiking guides or Parks Canada staff .
. .  to day hikes, even two-week-long epics – there's also a
myriad of overnight backcountry opportunities, besides camping.
Before attempting any of Banff's hiking trails, however, you
should visit the Banff Visitor Centre (224 Banff Ave.) or the
Lake Louise Visitor Centre (beside Samson Mall in the tiny
townsite of Lake Louise) where staff can advise you on the
condition of trails and deliver hiking maps, Alberta hiking tour
information and backcountry permits, if necessary.

Some of the easy hikes that cradle the town of Banff, (pop.
5,000) are as short as the 1.2 mile-long Fenland Trail (great
spot to see beavers and elk), Tunnel Mountain (990 ft. elevation
gain over 1.4 miles/ best view of this pretty town) and the
three-mile Bow River/Hoodoo stomp. Just a five-minute drive away
whisks you to several other trailheads such as the Cascade
Amphitheatre (a 2,000 ft. gain up to fantastic subalpine meadows,
full of wildflowers in July), Cory Pass (a relentless climb of
3,020 ft. but that leads into a stunning echo chamber, Gargoyle
Valley) and Rock Isle Lake (a 1.6 mi jaunt from Sunshine Village
ski resort through an alpine meadow where more than 300 species
of flowers have been recorded).


Enormous system of Banff hiking trails

Although it's impossible to name all of Banff's hiking trails
we'd be remiss not to mention those around Lake Louise (the most
photographed lake in the world). Three major valleys  – Louise,
Paradise and Moraine – are laced with popular hikes, two of which
lead to historic backcountry teahouses (Lake Agnes and Plain of
Six Glaciers) and others that take you over scenic jaw-droppers
such as Larch Valley's Sentinel Pass and Eiffel Lake. However,
for an overnight adventure, lace up those boots and trek eight
miles into Lake Louise's Skoki Lodge (one of National Geographic
Traveler's top 10 backcountry getaways in 2004) or take the
slightly longer Banff hiking trail to Shadow Lake Lodge or
Sundance Lodge (both in Banff National Park). Budget travelers or
those comfortable with very basic digs should explore the network
of backcountry huts that Parks Canada, the Alpine Club and the
Hostelling Association operate – all within Banff and Jasper
National Parks and often right alongside a Banff hiking trail.

Those intent on an epic, long-distance trek or technical climb
can hire a qualified mountain guide (through the Association of
Canadian Mountain Guides), join an organized hiking tour through
numerous companies or embark independently on the rugged
85-mile-long Great Divide Trail, the 33-mile-long Jonas Pass
Trail, the 44-mile long Castleguard Meadows Trail, and so forth.
However, what most hikers do is choose an area such as Molar
Pass, Skoki Valley or Egypt Lake, where numerous trails tumble in
to, and then use one or two campsites as basecamps and explore
from there.

Alberta hiking season : Dependent on the snow line, many of
Banff's hiking trails don't open until July (but stay open
until October) but the front ranges can open as early as late
May.

Long distance hiking tours : Many of the classics, such as the
Great Divide Trail or the Rockwall, cross into other Rocky
Mountain parks such as Jasper, Kootenay or Yoho.

One-stop hiking : If you want to stay at a property that offers
guided services and heritage hikes, consider ultra-luxe Fairmont
properties such as the Banff Springs, Chateau Lake Louise and
Jasper Park Lodge or the Relais & Chateaux property, the Post
Hotel.

Golfing anyone: If one member loves to hike but the other wants
to golf, discover the Canadian Rocky's signature courses.

Scenic Drives: One of the world's most spectacular drives is the
Icefields Parkway . . . 138 miles of glacier-studded peaks,
viewpoints, hikes that stretch from Lake Louise to Jasper.

The pride behind our parks: Discover the goods on Canada's Rocky
Mountain parks and why Canadians so fiercely protect them.





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Copyright (c) 2006 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved

Travel Alberta (http://www.travelalberta.com) is the destination 
marketing organization for the Province of Alberta. Guided by the 
Strategic Tourism Marketing Council, Travel Alberta is the steward 
for the effective delivery of tourism marketing programs. For 
information about our organization, please visit our Travel 
Alberta industry web site at http://industry.travelalberta.com


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