
Itcha Ilgachuz Park protects almost 112,000 hectares in the West Chilcotin Uplands, east of the Rainbow Range of South Tweedsmuir Park. BC Parks describes volcanic landforms, alpine environments, forest sites, wetlands, and the isolated shield volcanoes of the Itcha and Ilgachuz ranges.
The park is extremely remote and unroaded. It became a Class A park in 1995 after Cariboo-Chilcotin planning recommendations. It is a wilderness park.
Itcha Ilgachuz Park is for experienced wilderness travellers who want a large, remote volcanic landscape with major wildlife values. The Itcha and Ilgachuz ranges rise to about 2,400 metres in the rain shadow of the Coast Mountains, supporting diverse plant and animal communities.
The park protects alpine grasslands, wetlands, wildlife habitat, and the largest remaining woodland caribou herd in southern British Columbia. BC Parks notes that lichen communities are important to caribou and are very sensitive to trampling.
Visitor activities include unmaintained hiking, fishing, one cycling trail, horseback riding on unmaintained horse trails, hunting during open seasons, and winter snowmobiling only on designated trails and play areas that avoid caribou habitat.
Plan around remote hiking, fishing, horseback travel, wildlife viewing from a distance, volcanic landscape photography, cultural heritage awareness, designated winter snowmobiling, and careful travel through alpine grasslands and wetlands.
This is a remote park near Anahim Lake, Alexis Creek, Nimpo Lake, Redstone, and Nazko, with Quesnel about 200 kilometres east. Do not damage artifacts, stay on durable surfaces, and carry winter emergency gear if snowmobiling.