Hear about travel to the Yukon Territory in Canada as the Amateur Traveler talks to Stephen Reynolds from Tourism Yukon about a recent trip that I did to his home.
Stephen says of a Summer visit, “The north in vernal is fascinating in general for a Summer visit, mainly because of the midnight sun. A lot of people who live down in the lower 48, southern Canada, and other places that we call south, you still have darkness and night and skies with stars and moons and things like that all throughout July and August and June. We don’t. Starting around the end of May, our sky goes light during the night and it stays bright throughout the entire night until early in August. Most of our visitors from the south find that that phenomenon alone is worth the energy and the effort it takes to come up here in the summer because it is something most humans don’t get to experience. I can guarantee you’re going to see midnight sun whenever you come up to the Yukon in June, July, or August.”
The Yukon is just a little larger than the state of California with only 38,000 people living there. There are 5 times as many caribou as people and twice as many moose. There is a lot of space and there are beautiful vistas.
The highlight of my trip to the Yukon was a flight seeing tour to the ice fields in Kluane National Park, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site. This amazing trip was capped with landing in a plane with skis on the Hubbard glacier.
We talk with Stephen about other activities in the outdoors in the Yukon including a number of hikes, canoeing and fly-in trips. If you want to guarantee you will see wildlife we also talk about a visit to the Yukon Wildlife Preserve where you can see moose, elk, caribou, deer, arctic foxes, eagles and musk oxen.
My visit coincided with the Adäka Cultural Festival which celebrates the culture and art of the First Nations. Stephen also tells us of other festivals that take place in the Yukon.
Since I did not get to Dawson City, which was the site of the Yukon Gold Rush, Stephen tells me what I missed and why you should not miss this former capital of the territory.
We learn some about the Klondike Gold Rush which had such a big impact on the Yukon and where you can still see its history, including the White Pass & Yukon Route Railroad.
I was surprised by the quality and variety of restaurants in and around Whitehorse and we make some suggestions where you can find good salmon and BBQ, but also where you can find flaming Greek cheese and authentic Mexican food.
Whether you come in the cold winter or the warm summer, whether you fly in or drive the Alaska Highway, learn why you should come to this beautiful corner of Canada.
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Show Notes
The Yukon is Cool, Even in the Summer (Video #91)
Tourism Yukon
Whitehorse, Yukon
Chris’s Yukon Photos
Fish Lake Hikes
Grey Mountain Hikes
Nares Mountain Hikes
Caribou Mountain Hikes
Kluane National Park
Cottonwood Trail Hikes
King’s Throne Hikes
Auriol Trail Hikes
Chilkoot Trail
Bennett Lake
Major General Sir Samuel Benfield Steele
Yukon Wildlife Preserve
Who What Where Tours
Yukon River Quest
Adäka Cultural Festival
Video of Northern Cree at 59th GRAMMYs
Twin Flames
Haa K?usteeyi? Celebration in Teslin
Moosehide Gathering – Dawson City
Atlin Arts and Music Festival
White Pass & Yukon Route Railroad
Keith Wolfe Smarch
Dawson City
Klondike Gold Rush
Tombstone Territorial Park
Dempster Highway
Top of the World Highway
Diamond Tooth Gerties Gambling Hall
Dredge 4 – Dawson City
Northern Lights
Winter activities
Yukon Quest
Southern Lakes Resort
Southern Lakes Resort (reviews)
Klondike Rib & Salmon
Giorgio’s Cucina
Sanchez Cantina
Miner’s Daughter
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One Response to “Travel to the Yukon Territory – Episode 573”
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Tags: audio travel podcast, podcast, whitehorse, yukon territory
Jeff Whyte
Says:September 12th, 2017 at 3:00 pm
The white water rafting in the Yukon is amazing. I did a trip on the Yukon River and a couple of smaller and more fast flowing streams. And there is no one around! Great stuff.