Canada · Yukon

Itsi Range Road — Ross River to Itsi Lakes Wilderness

Deep Yukon wilderness, no bailout plan.

Expert

South of Ross River, where the Pelly River bends and the pavement ends, the Itsi Range Road claws into one of the least-visited mountain chains in the Yukon. The route follows old mining exploration tracks through boreal spruce, crosses several unnamed creek drainages that swell dangerously in June, and eventually climbs into open tundra where the Itsi Lakes sit silent in a glacially carved bowl. The turnoff is unmarked — you need a topo map and the confidence to commit before you find out if your rig can handle the ruts. Mid-route there’s a washed-out bridge crossing over a tributary of the Itsi River that demands careful line selection or a wet winch-out.

This is expert territory. A capable 4×4 with a snorkel, at minimum 33-inch tires, recovery gear, and satellite communication is non-negotiable. Zero cell service. No fuel between Ross River and the route’s end — top off in Ross River and carry a full auxiliary tank. Best window is late July through August when creek levels drop. No maintained camping; dispersed sites on open tundra above treeline. The reward is absolute isolation, massive sky, and the kind of Yukon that hasn’t changed since the last prospector walked out broke.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type,
Surface, ,
Features, , , ,
Length (miles)48 mi / 77.2 km
Duration2-3 days
Max elevation (ft)5400 ft
Best seasonLate July-August
Minimum vehicleExpedition-built 4WD with snorkel
Nearest townRoss River, Yukon
Land managerYukon Department of Environment
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsYes
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Official: Expert

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