Home Attributes Access Photos Contact Info Canada's Kinaskan Lake Attributes
All of the usable buildings are of substantial log construction, but at least one is in need of extensive repair. The original lodge, however, which has a view from the main window of the south half of the lake, about as beautiful as it can be, is unusable in it's present condition, but the potential is there.
There are three log cabins in good repair and a larger family house all livable, but consideration should be given that this is in fact a wilderness environment and few of the conveniences of town life are available. Electricity, LP gas, water and sewage disposal are the responsibility of the owner.
The value of this property is not so much in improvements, but, rather in the attributes of the forty-four plus acres of land itself.
The area is rich in history of the Hudson Bay Company days, The Gold Rush Days of '98, and the French-Canadian Days and only for the past 20 or so years has been accessible by Highway 37. The Historical Telegraph Trail still passes within five miles or so south of the property and is still used to this day by dedicated History Buffs and serious prospectors, and rises to 6000 feet elevation through Raspberry Pass and the slopes of the Edziza Volcano, incidentally now a Canadian Park. To drop into the Stikine River canyon and the town of Telegraph Creek where one of the initial Hudson Bay Company posts was located. The original Telegraph Trail Cabin below is one of the artifacts and being cared for now, I believe by the provincial government, and about 100 years ancient. Raspberry Pass is the second view below.
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Telegraph Trail Cabin ![]()
Raspberry Pass
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