The cabin offers easy access and a wide range of hiking, skiing and climbing opportunities. In 2019, BC Parks created a competitive bidding process for operating the cabin.
History
The cabin was built in 1992 to house BC Parks rangers. In 2003, BC Parks issued a request for proposals to convert the cabin to public use. The Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) was selected to expand its extensive alpine hut system, and began operating it in the summer of 2004.
Facilities
Heating
Wood stove
Lighting
Propane
Cooking
Propane oven, range, cookware, dishes and utensils
Sleeping
Dormitory style on foam mattresses
Capacity
14
Drinking water
Creek/snow
Human Waste
Outhouse
Dishwater
Ground sump
Garbage
Pack it out
Heat
Wood stove
The kitchen area and living room offer tables and a wood-burning stove. The sleeping quarters are in a loft. Sleepers occupy two long bunks and one shorter one.
The hut offers water buckets, axes, saws and shovels.
A tributary of Elkan Creek runs nearby. In winter, water is there and from snowmelt. Water must be purified before drinking.[1]
Sinks are connected to the sump. It occasionally freezes, in which case grey water (strained of food particles) should be dumped within a three-metre radius of the outhouse.
The outhouse is located 10 m east of the cabin. All paper garbage and food scraps should be burned, and all other garbage and unused food carried out.
Necessary supplies
Sleeping bag
Toilet paper
Newspaper for lighting the fire
Matches
First aid kit
9 volt battery for the smoke detector
Activities
Located within the western ranges of the southern Rocky Mountains, Elk Lakes Provincial Park is an easily accessible wilderness park characterized by subalpine landscapes, remnant glaciers, peaks and lakes.
The area has many hiking options.[2] Options for hikers of all abilities and interests are available,[citation needed] including family friendly backcountry hiking.[citation needed] Other trails are longer, more exposed and involve some route-finding.
Several mountaineering objectives and scrambles are available. Mounts Fox, Aosta, Petain, Nivelle and Castelnau can all be summited in a moderate to long day from the cabin. Mount Joffre is accessible from the Elk Lakes side, although a high camp is recommended for climbers.[3]
Elk Lakes Provincial Park is a BC park. Access from the Alberta side is through Peter Lougheed Provincial Park. Parks have rules about dogs, fishing, bicycles and other things. Dogs are not allowed on ski trails, nor inside the cabin. Bikes are allowed on the trail to Elk Pass (in Peter Lougheed Park) and along the power line to the cabin, but not elsewhere in Elk Lakes Park.
Campgrounds are available in both parks, including one a kilometer from the cabin.[5][6]
^"Hiking". Elk Lakes Provincial Park. BC Parks. 2007. Archived from the original on 2008-06-18. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
^Boles, Glen W.; Kruszyna, Robert; Putnam, William L. (1979). Rocky Mountains of Canada: South (7th ed.). The American Alpine Club/The Alpine Club of Canada. ISBN0-930410-08-4.
Kananaskis Lakes (Map). 1:50,000. Guides for Hiking and Recreation in the Canadian Rockies. Gem Trek Publishing. ISBN978-1-895526-74-5. Shows access to cabin, but not the cabin itself