Canada · Yukon

Canol Road North — Johnson’s Crossing to Ross River High Country

WWII pipeline road. No maintenance. No mercy.

Extreme

Built in 1942 to haul oil from Norman Wells to Whitehorse during WWII, the North Canol Road is a 355-kilometre scar through the Selwyn Mountains that the Yukon government doesn’t maintain and openly warns drivers about. You leave pavement at Johnson’s Crossing on the Alaska Highway and push northeast through muskeg flats, river gravel bars, and alpine passes — the Macmillan Pass crossing at roughly 1,500 metres is the high point, and the Itsi Range will test your nerve. Expect multiple unbridged river fords including the Nahanni and Macmillan tributaries, washed-out sections, and stretches where the track simply disappears into bog.

This route demands a serious, heavily modified rig — high-clearance 4WD with a locker front and rear, aggressive mud tires, a winch, and recovery gear for every scenario. Carry fuel for at least 400 km each way; there is nothing between Johnson’s Crossing and Ross River. Cell service is zero. Best attempted July through mid-August when water levels are lower. This is a two- to four-day one-way run minimum, and it earns its reputation every single kilometre.

Be the first to save this trail

Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type, ,
Surface, ,
Features, , , ,
Length (miles)221 mi / 355 km
Duration2-4 days
Max elevation (ft)4921 ft
Best seasonJuly-August
Minimum vehicleModified 4WD with lockers and winch
Nearest townRoss River, YT
Land managerYukon Department of Highways and Public Works
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsYes
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
Copy both for Google Maps directionsClick to copy the directions URL · or open it directly in a new tab
Find on GoogleSearch on Google →

Location

Ratings & Reviews

Quality
0 ratings
Difficulty
Official: Extreme

Trail Conditions

No recent condition reports. Be the first to post one.

Photos

No community photos yet.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *