British Columbia · Canada

Dease Lake to Iskut River High Road (British Columbia)

Shale ridges above the Iskut — bring lockers.

Difficult

Northwest of Dease Lake on the Cassiar Highway corridor, this seldom-traveled high road climbs out of the Stikine plateau and runs along the ridges above the Iskut River drainage — Tahltan ancestral country where the land is bigger than anything you’ve seen and the road is honest about what it is: a rough mining access track that doesn’t care about your comfort. The first serious pinch point comes about 18 km in where a shale slide has narrowed the road to one vehicle width on a 40-degree sidehill slope. There are no guardrails. There is nothing between you and the valley floor. Pay attention.

This is a serious high-clearance run — a lifted, skid-plated truck or capable SUV is mandatory. Lockers front and rear are strongly advised after any rain, when the shale surface turns greasy. Cell service is zero. The nearest fuel is Dease Lake to the north or Bob Quinn Lake south on the Cassiar — plan accordingly and carry at minimum 20 liters extra. Best window is late June through September before early snowfall closes the upper sections. Dispersed camping along the ridge gives you one of the most spectacular stargazing spots in the province. This is deep BC wilderness — few people come up here, and the ones who do tend to come back.

Be the first to save this trail

Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type,
Surface, ,
Features, , ,
Length (miles)47 mi / 75.6 km
Duration1-2 days
Max elevation (ft)5400 ft
Best seasonJune-September
Minimum vehicleLifted high-clearance 4WD with lockers
Nearest townDease Lake, BC
Land managerBC Ministry of Forests / Tahltan Nation
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: Difficult

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Your email address will not be published.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 *