

Want to get indoors in the outdoors? Northern British Columbia boasts some of the deepest caves in the world to put a cap on an already unique wilderness experience. For the more timid explorer looking for a stroll off the beaten path, there are many easily accessible caves to enjoy, right across the region.
Located in George Evanoff Provincial Park situated in the Hart Ranges of the Canadian Rockies, Fang Cave is the ninth longest cave in Canada and part of a diverse limestone complex including other caves such as Tooth Decave and Window on the West.
Fang Trail: 6 km hiking trail crossing multiple creeks with limited parking. The caves are accessible by a fork which continues along the ridge above the bowl.
Many caves have formed in the park’s limestone, often along contact lines with quartzite. Several of these caves are unexplored and others are likely to be found.
Cave resurgences, or places where underground streams reappear at the surface, are common features of the Mount Sir Alexander and Mount Ida areas.
The caves of Kakwa Provincial Park Park are only partially explored, or unexplored, or yet to be discovered. Extreme hazards exist in these recently glaciated cave systems, and they are best entered only in the company of an experienced caving group.
Bocock Peak Provincial Park is located in the Hart Ranges ecosection. It contains three significant limestone cave systems, the deepest of which at 253 m is the ninth deepest cave system in Canada. There are no trail systems into these caves so access is limited.
Speleologists are in for a treat on the 4-km (2.5-mi) Stone Corral Trail in Monkman Provincial Park. This three-hour, roundtrip route leads hikers to amazing cave formations and vertical limestone cliffs. Bring a flashlight to explore the caves. Many other sinkholes can be found in the high alpine areas of the park but nothing of any length or depth has yet been discovered.