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Babine River Expedition

Whitewater Rafting in Canada with Skeena Valley Expeditions

Highlights

  • Visit the area with the most dense population of grizzly bears in British Columbia
  • Enjoy some of the best fun whitewater in a spectacular canyon that goes on for 4 days
  • Photograph grizzly bears, black bears, bald eagles, moose, and wolf
  • Enjoy luxury, all inclusive camping with all equipment supplied, decadent food and vintage wines

Full Description

This 6 day, fully-catered, all-inclusive river rafting expedition features certified guides, great wilderness meals, vintage wines, wildlife, lots of big, splashy class 3 and 4 waters, and a journey through British Columbia's best kept secret.

The Babine River—aka "River of Grizzlies"—plays host to a steelhead and Pacific salmon spawning season every year between July and late September. These magnificent fish run so thick in places that you might think it's possible to walk across the river on their backs. And no one could be more pleased than the migratory population of over 100 grizzlies, often in plain view while fishing at ‘Grizzly Drop'. We'll observe them while cruising past in a raft—at a reasonable distance. Please note: We cannot guarantee grizzly sightings—we are working on getting the bears under contract, but as yet we haven't reached a deal. The Babine and Skeena Rivers, however, are about more than just grizzlies. They also offer access to pristine and remarkably diverse Canadian wilderness. It is also home to the Gitxsan people whose villages and towering cedar totems we see while traveling the Babine & Skeena. In 1999 the Babine River corridor was designated a ‘Class A' Provincial Park to protect the wildlife and wilderness experience within the park. SVE is one of very few companies allowed to run trips through this very special wilderness area.

Includes:

  • Expert, certified river guides
  • State-of-the-art camping equipment including: All-season tent (shared between 2 guests), sleeping bag, and Thermarest air mattress
  • All necessary river clothing such as a wetsuit, wetsuit booties, and splash jacket, rubber boots and rubber rain gear (just like the guides use)
  • Waterproof bags for your personal belongings
  • All on-trip meals and beverages, including a selection of vintage wines, spirits, local and imported beers, non alcoholic drinks and fresh water
  • A nice dinner out in Smithers on the final night upon returning to civilization
  • All necessary park permits and entrance fees
  • Detailed maps, field scope, and a library of regional books
  • All transfers between Smithers, BC and the river

Excludes:

  • Pre- and post-trip accommodation in the staging city
  • Flights to and from the staging city
  • Breakfast on the first morning prior to being picked up at the "meeting location" which is always at the hotel where the pre-trip meeting was the night before

Day by Day Itinerary

Arrival Day

Your trip begins the evening before we start rafting. Upon arrival at the Smithers airport your hotel can arrange a shuttle to bring you to the hotel. Later in the evening we will have a pre-trip meeting where you will meet the guides and all the other travelers. Waiv-ers will be signed and any lingering paperwork will be completed. You will receive your special dry bags for packing your personal belongings into. We will also have a briefing on gear, clothing, and the river itself.

Day 1: 8 Miles of Rafting

This morning we meet after breakfast in the hotel lobby to prepare for our departure. There‟s time to do any last minute shopping, grab a latté and board the van for our transfer to Rainbow Alley and the headwaters of the Babine River. Here we meet the rest of the guides, enjoy a deli-style lunch at the river‟s edge. Before we launch there will be a river orientation and safety talk, and by early afternoon, we‟ll be on the river. A couple of hours later, we‟ll arrive at our first camp where we‟ll enjoy cocktails and hors d‟oeuvres as we set camp and settle in. The first of many sumptuous dinners follows before we collect around the campfire under a star-filled sky.

Days 2, 3, 4, and 5: 62 Miles of Rafting

We typically begin each day with coffee and tea, followed by a hot breakfast that may fea-ture fluffy blueberry pancakes, breakfast burritos or perhaps West Coast eggs benny. Fresh fruit salad, granola, and yoghurt are always available. In short, you will not go hun-gry! Once camp has been broken and the boats are packed we‟ll head downstream, usu-ally between 9:30 and 10am.
Our journey continues on Day Two through deep canyons passing several Class III rapids. The backdrop is thick Northern forest, with the mountains and glaciers of the Sicintine Range to the north. By Day Three the pace of the river picks up and we‟ll travel a sustained stretch of class III rapids highlighted by the exciting „Pinball Alley‟. Tonight‟s camp is deep in the Babine Canyon with the adjacent waterfall providing a refreshing shower for the hardy.

Day Four begins with a visit to the famous Class IV „Grizzly Drop‟ where it is quite common to see Grizzly Bears fishing! Later in the day there is an opportunity to hike to the aban-doned Native village of Kisgegas and the remnants of the turn-of-the-century Jesuit Mis-sion, now overgrown with wildflowers. After leaving Kisgegas, the river valley opens provid-ing vistas of Mount Thomlinson and the Babine pours its contents into the much larger Skeena River.

Day Five begins with large splashy rapids-the sinuous waters and rock-lined canyons bordered by coastal cedars provide a mysterious ambience. Our final campsite on the Skeena River provides a perfect setting for our final night in the wilderness together.

Day 6: 10 Miles of Rafting and Back to Civilization

On our final day of rafting we begin to see the signs of civilization along the shores. We pass the confluence of the Kispiox and Skeena rivers, next to the functioning native village of Kispiox, where giant totem poles pay silent tribute to generations past. We take out at Hazelton BC, the historic terminus of the steam powered river boats travelling the Lower Skeena at the turn of the century. Our evening is spent back in the relative luxury of Smith-ers where, after well-deserved hot showers, we‟ll get together for a final dinner. Stories can be practiced and embellished with your new friends before taking them home to family and friends.

Departure Day: Homeward Bound

Flights from Smithers to Vancouver leave Smithers at approximately 10:00am and 6:00pm—there is a hotel shuttle to the airport to get you to whichever flight you‟ve booked. If you‟re on the earlier flight, you‟ll be back in Vancouver before noon, so connections home can be made that afternoon.

About The Operator:

Skeena Valley Expeditions

Headquarters:

Terrace, British Columbia

Established:

January 2006

Skeena Valley Expeditions was started by Hatha Callis. In 2005 he moved to Terrace BC for a winter job guiding heli-skiing. A quick look around the region and a winter of both market and local business climate investigation showed an obvious opportunity; Terrace needed a rafting company.

So the summer of 2006 was spent exploring the rivers in the Skeena Valley near Terrace and obtaining the appropriate permits and tenures to operate successfully in the area. That summer, significant thought was given to the nature of business and its vision. A quick snapshot of the vision that was created shows "Skeena Valley Expeditions is committed to grow and prosper by providing a healthy, fun and adventurous addition to recreation in the Terrace and greater area. Skeena Valley Expeditions will also create meaningful work for Northern BC residents and promote a healthy, outdoor lifestyle to both staff and guests alike. Skeena Valley Expeditions will provide nothing less than excellence."

And that is exactly what has happened... since that initial summer of dreaming and scheming SVE has had 2 summers of very successful business. Hatha convinced his high school friend and long time co-guide, Jupiter MacDonald to move up and help grow the vision. Jupiter moved up, made Terrace home semi-permanently, and has been a key part in ensuring the operations of SVE have grown in a safe, high quality and efficient manner.

In 2007 they ran a float trip for the Port of Prince Rupert's cruise ship guests with 30 guests 3 times a week, and offered both whitewater and family float day trips based from Terrace. As no other commercial rafting company had ever operated in the Skeena Valley there was a huge amount of ongoing river exploratory, access point, and local market education work to do. The process of developing a new product in a region so rich with resources was a pleasure to Hatha and his key staff that first year since everything they did was uncharted territory. They had over 1100 client days that first year many of whom had the excitement of being along for inaugural trips on a new and changing tourism product.

In 2008 the cruise ship program grew significantly, local day trips almost doubled, and they began running multi-day expeditions. They have 2 annual permits for the Tatshenshini River in the Yukon, BC, and Alaska which is a 10 day trip through the planet's largest protected area and SVE operated both trips. They also hold permits on the Babine River which is BC's best hidden gem and has been dubbed as "the river of grizzlies," a fitting name as they encountered 9 grizzlies at one point on the trip that summer. They were also approached by the Nisga'a First Nation and asked to develop a tourism program in the Nass River valley so a multi-day exploratory trip was run on the Nass River which has not been run commercially before. That summer SVE had over 2200 client days, won the business excellence award for tourism from the local chamber of commerce, and employed 18 staff.