CANADIAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY   |    CANADIAN ATLAS ONLINE   |    CANADIAN ENVIRONMENT AWARDS   |    GEOCHALLENGE   |    GEOGRAPHIC EDUCATION
Canadian Geographic magazine Canadian Geographic Travel magazine
WHAT'S NEW20 July 2008
Check out CG's online travel features!
more »
RSS Feed WHAT IS RSS?
 PRINT   EMAIL  AA
SUBSCRIBE RENEW GIVE A GIFT NEWSLETTER
travel / adventure / guides / summer 2004

Travel & Adventure Guides
high tea

BY MARION HARRISON

I find the idea of stopping for tea midway through a Rocky Mountain hike irresistible. Tea never tastes so refreshing as when you drink it on high. Mountain air sharpens your senses and stimulates your appetite, which means your hard-working body also appreciates fresh-baked sugary treats in a whole new way. I can also get dreamy about the past, transporting myself back 100 years to the company of the early Swiss guides. How I wish I'd been part of those pioneer forays, cutting trails that hikers enjoy today or perhaps bagging a first ascent.


Advertisement


Five historic teahouses offer hikers a taste of the past in the mountain national parks of Alberta and British Columbia. Each of today's Rocky Mountain teahouses began as a Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) facility, encouraged by trail surveyors and mountain guides. Their motives were to provide creature comforts at the staging grounds for climbing adventures.

mountain goat
While 19th-century gentility may have inspired the teahouses, you can set aside any preconceived notion of a stuffy atmosphere, fine china, silverware and table linens. Rocky Mountain teahouses are for hikers and climbers visiting the surrounding area. You'll be travelling in some of the most spectacular landscape in the country. At the end of an afternoon of exploring, your steaming brew will taste just as delicious sipped from an earthenware mug set out on a rustic log table.

Sensibilities and gear may have changed over the 150 years since the Rockies were first pioneered, but these historic teahouses offer a delightful pause for adventurers today.

Lake Agnes | Plain of Six Glaciers | Shadow Lake Lodge |
Twin Falls Chalet | Lake O'Hara Lodge

Lake Agnes
Lake Agnes, near Lake Louise in Banff National Park, is home to the earliest teahouse, built around 1900. Named after two Agneses - a mountaineering client and Sir John A. Macdonald's wife - Lake Agnes is a picturesque tarn formed by glacier melt and surrounded on three sides by towering peaks. Starting from Chateau Lake Louise, hikers follow a wide, well-travelled trail to the teahouse. The 90-minute hike is not strenuous, but it's relentlessly uphill as you'll gain about 400 metres of elevation. Along the route, there are some magnificent views of the Chateau and the emerald waters of Lake Louise.

At the teahouse, you have a choice of 50 varieties of loose tea served in "Brown Betty" pots. Owner Cynthia Magee rebuilt the teahouse after purchasing it from the CPR in 1981. The menu includes soup, sandwiches, tea biscuits, cookies, apple crisp, banana bread and apricot nut loaf. After your repast, you may be tempted to snooze by the lake, but continue along the lakeshore trail away from the busy teahouse area. You can join the company of marmots and pikas sunning themselves on jumbled rocks, watch golden eagles float high on thermals and see mountain goats pose on the rocky ledges of Mount Niblock. You can retrace your route to Lake Louise and cover about seven kilometres. Alternatively, continue around Lake Agnes to the lookout on the Beehive, and descend to the Plain of Six Glaciers Teahouse.
Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily from June to Thanksgiving.
Distance: 7 kilometres return. Check trail conditions.
Duration: 3 hours
Information: (403) 522-3833
Web site: www.travelalberta.com

top

Plain of Six Glaciers
The usual route to the Plain of Six Glaciers begins at the Chateau Lake Louise, follows the lakeshore and continues down the valley. This is a 12-kilometre hike, including the return trek, and gains approximately 365 metres. Plan on two hours each way.

The CPR completed the Plain of Six Glaciers in 1927 with help from Swiss guides Edward and Ernest Feuz, who led climbing trips into the mountains. Solidly constructed of local stone and logs, the lodge has a kitchen on the main floor and a tea room upstairs.

On a hot summer day, the balcony is crammed with hikers, savouring their tea and scones plus views of Mounts Victoria and Lefroy and the glaciers that serve as the spectacular Lake Louise backdrop.

Proprietor Joy Kimball bought the teahouse from the CPR in 1960. Not so long ago, Joy and neighbouring teahouse owner Cynthia Magee had to haul supplies in on their backs. These days, staples are flown in by helicopter at the beginning of the season, then pack horses bring in fresh supplies throughout the summer. The menu includes homemade soups, sandwiches, pies, scones and a rich chocolate cake, plus hot and cold drinks.
Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily from June to Thanksgiving.
Distance: 12 kilometres return. Check trail conditions.
Duration: 4 hours
Information: (403) 522-3833
Web site: www.travelalberta.com

top

Shadow Lake Lodge
The CPR built the original Shadow Lake cabin in 1928 as a rest stop between Storm Mountain and today's Sunshine Village Ski Resort. Since the 1930s, Shadow Lake Lodge has belonged to the Brewster family. Strictly speaking, it isn't a teahouse, but Shadow Lake Lodge offers afternoon refreshment to hikers during the summer. To reach the lodge, set out from the Red Earth Creek parking lot, some 20 kilometres west of Banff. You can hike or mountain bike 11 kilometres up an old fire road, then continue along a trail three kilometres through the pine and spruce forest to the lodge. The original cabin is now the lounge, where overnight guests relax after dinner. Tea is served next door in the dining room/kitchen building, where hikers can munch on cookies, squares, bread, cheese and crackers and dips.
Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Distance: 28 kilometres return
Duration: 8 hours
Information: 1-866-762-0114; (403) 762-0116
Web site: www.shadowlakelodge.com

top

Twin Falls Chalet Located near Field, B.C., in Yoho National Park, Twin Falls Chalet is nestled in a deep valley and offers views of the falls cascading over a sheer cliff. Departing the parking lot, you reach the chalet by way of a 10-kilometre hike, boasting fabulous waterfall views.

The two-storey chalet, constructed by the CPR between 1908 and 1923, started out as a surveyor's cabin during the time the hiking trails were being built. Made from local spruce, the chalet has a main-floor kitchen and eating area with bedrooms on the second floor. Fran Drummond has run the chalet for 42 years. The menu includes a full selection of soups, sandwiches and desserts, which are served daily between July 12 and August 20 in 2004.
Hours: 12 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Distance: 20 kilometres return
Duration: 6 to 8 hours
Information (offseason): (403) 228-7079

top

Lake O'Hara Lodge
Lake O'Hara Lodge is also located in Yoho National Park and is open late in the afternoon for gourmet snacks. Built in 1926 by the CPR, Lake O'Hara Lodge is situated in one of the most beautiful areas of the Rockies. The region is so popular with hikers and climbers, in fact, that the national park uses a reservation system and bus shuttle to limit the number of visitors and hence the impact on the wildlife and environment. (Book well in advance.) The bus drops guests off at the lodge and nearby campgrounds, which means you can save your energy for hiking the grand terrain. If you have only a day, the one-hour hike around the lake is suitable for all ages. You could, however, easily spend a week hiking in the area, following a network of 80 kilometres of trails. Back at the lodge, tuck into the Hiker's Tea, which includes home-baked cookies, loaves, linzer tortes, hot drinks and mango juice.
Lake O'Hara Bus Reservations: (250) 343-6433
Web site: www.lakeohara.com

top

For all these excursions, you'll need sturdy walking shoes or hiking boots, warm clothing and rain gear. Bring some drinking water too. Always check trail conditions, but most important, bring cash!


Lemon poppy-seed cake served alongside a cup of Earl Grey tea, with a touch of cream, keeps Marion Harrison hiking Rocky Mountain trails.





Search our site: Adventure, Hikiing, National Parks, British Columbia, Alberta
ADVERTISEMENT
Subscribe to Canadian Geographic Magazine and Save
Province 
Privacy Policy  


Meet our client partners
CG Contests
Featured Destinations
Smooth Operators
ADventures
Classifieds
Advertiser Directory

© 2008 Canadian Geographic Enterprises ADVERTISE WITH US   |    PRODUCTS & SERVICES   |    PRESS DESK   |    PRIVACY POLICY   |    CONTACT US   |    SITEMAP