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Sikanni Chief Canyon ParkPlan Sikanni Chief Canyon Park east of the Alaska Highway with canyon viewpoints, canoeing, kayaking, fishing, wildlife viewing, hunting, and ORV limits./british-columbia/parks/sikanni-chief-canyon-park/british-columbia/parks/sikanni-chief-canyon-parkpark

Plan Sikanni Chief Canyon Park east of the Alaska Highway with canyon viewpoints, canoeing, kayaking, fishing, wildlife viewing, hunting, and ORV limits.

Sikanni Chief Canyon Park is 40 kilometres east of the Alaska Highway near the confluence of the Sikanni Chief and Buckinghorse rivers. BC Parks describes views from the canyon rim over swirling water and steep canyon walls.

The park protects a distinct section of two river canyons within the Sikanni Chief and Buckinghorse drainage of the Muskwa Plateau ecosection.

Why Visit Sikanni Chief Canyon Park

Sikanni Chief Canyon is a remote northern canyon-viewing park with boreal forest above and river corridors below. BC Parks notes boreal white and black spruce forests across the landscape above the canyon, plus alluvial white spruce stands along the Sikanni Chief River.

Wildlife viewing is part of the draw. The official page mentions mountain goats along steep canyon slopes, as well as moose, black bear, and wolves throughout the river corridor. The cultural heritage note identifies Halfway River First Nation.

Things To Do

View the canyon from safe rim locations, canoe or kayak if river skills and conditions allow, fish with the correct licence, watch wildlife from a distance, keep pets leashed and controlled, and hunt during open seasons where regulations allow.

Planning Notes

Off-road vehicles are prohibited, including ATVs, off-road motorcycles, snowmobiles, and side-by-sides. Treat the canyon rim and river corridor as remote terrain with limited services. Confirm road, weather, river, hunting, and fishing conditions before travelling, and keep dogs controlled to avoid wildlife conflict. Stay back from steep rim edges, choose viewing points carefully, and plan communication options before entering the area. River users should match the trip to current water levels, boat-handling skills, and rescue options.