A
packaged vacation waiting for a visitor to happen!
|
The Nitinat
Triangle is situated in an area of old-growth forest in the Hobiton-Tsusiat
watershed, west of Nitinat Lake in Vancouver Island's Pacific
Rim National Park. This is one of the most scenic and remote
canoe routes on Vancouver Island, and has also become one of the
most popular paddling trips.
The gruelling
38-km circuit through the Nitinat, Hobiton and Tsusiat Lakes takes
4 to 5 days to complete, although the route contains less than 17
km of paddling water.
Extensive difficult portaging is required over the rough and often
muddy portage trails that connect the Nitinat and Hobiton Lakes
and link Hobiton to Tsusiat Lake. Paddlers must carry their canoe
and gear over massive fallen trees under slippery conditions.
The Nitinat
Lakes trip is a genuine wilderness expedition that presents a challenging
excursion for experienced canoeists. Paddlers are required to be
totally self-reliant and well prepared for backcountry travel and
camping. Strength and endurance are necessary for the portage sections
and for the tough battle against the strong thermal winds encountered
on Nitinat Lake - there is good reason why the Nitinat is the best
windsurfing lake on the island!
Nitinat
Lake: The best launching point to start the trip is the boat
launch at Knob Point Recreation Site on the northwestern shore of
Nitinat Lake - camping facilities are provided.
Nitinat Lake
to Hobiton Lake: This section of the trip requires overland portage,
as the Hobiton River is a salmon spawning stream that is permanently
closed to navigation by the Department of Fisheries. Handlining
of canoes through this spawning channel is not permitted.
Hobiton Lake
to Tsusiat Lake: This 1.6-km portage leg includes a 40 metre section
through the bog midway along the trail. Portage your canoe to the
bog, return for your gear and then continue across the bog toward
Tsusiat Lake.
Tsusiat Falls
to Nitinat Narrows: This section can either be paddled on the ocean
under calm conditions, or portaged along the 7-km trail. The Nitinat
Narrows must be navigated during the brief slack tide, or at the
very beginning of the flood tide. Consult your tide tables for Tofino
carefully, as the tidal Nitinat produces treacherous whirlpools
in the Narrows that have previously claimed paddler's lives.
Before paddling
the Nitinat Triangle, canoeists must obtain a Park Use Permit from
any of the three Registration Offices of the West Coast Trail, or
by calling Pacific Rim National Park. The Nitinat Lake Visitor Centre,
situated at the head of Nitinat Lake and operated by the Ditidaht
First Nation, is the most convenient location for acquiring this
permit. Those wishing to camp at Tsusiat Falls at the mouth of the
Tsusiat River also require the permit, as the falls are part of
the West Coast Trail.
Access to the
region is via gravel logging road leading from the western end of
Lake Cowichan. This point is reached by turning off Highway 1 north
of Duncan and following either the north or south shore of Lake
Cowichan. Follow the Nitinat Main logging road to the head of Nitinat
Lake.
|