Skip to main content

Site Banner Ads

Site Search

Search

Home Up Here Publishing

Mobile Toggle

Social Links

Facebook Instagram

Search Toggle

Search

Main navigation

  • Magazines
    • Latest Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Up Here Business
    • Visitor Guides
    • Move Up Here
  • Sections
    • People & Places
    • Arts & Lifestyle
    • History & Culture
    • Travel & Tourism
    • Nature & Science
    • Northern Jobs
  • Newsletter
  • Community Map
  • Merch
  • Visitor Guides
  • Our Team
  • Subscribe/Renew

Disappear Here: Black Bear Wilderness Adventure

"You get there, you look after yourself"

By Samia Madwar

A photo op at Pine Lake, a 20-minute drive north of the log cabin - Black Bear Wilderness Lodge. Photo by Linda Harrison

 A photo op at Pine Lake, a 20-minute drive north of the log cabin - Black Bear Wilderness Lodge. Photo by Linda Harrison

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Disappear Here: Black Bear Wilderness Adventure

In one day, you can dip your toes in Emerald Lake at the foot of the Rockies, trek through the North’s smallest desert, trace part of the infamous trail to the Klondike, and, thanks to Black Bear Wilderness Adventures’ conscientious owner and guide, break for smoked salmon sandwiches and salted moose sausage in between.

“It’s soul food,” Elisabeth Weigand laughs. Born and raised in Germany, she came to the Yukon just over 20 years ago in search of pristine nature. “I used to have a trapline, and we went out for several months in winter. Coming back to the cabin cold and exhausted, and having it warmed up—it’s way rougher than what my clients experience—but I know the feeling of getting something nice.” 

 

Room With A View: Accommodations at Black Bear Wilderness Lodge

 

Black Bear Wilderness Adventures offers day trips in and around Whitehorse, and the newly introduced Yukon Quest tour brings visitors to the frontlines of the iconic dogsledding race. 

But for those who, like Weigand, crave a full-on wilderness experience, there’s the sparse log cabin at the edge of Kluane National Park. “It’s an authentic trapper cabin made into a comfortable place,” she says. “You can see and feel what the old world was, but you don’t have to rough it to the extent that you have to sleep on the ground or it’s drafty.” It’s still self-contained: guests bring their own water and food, and for entertainment, you’re a short walk away from several trailheads.

“There’s no internet. We can totally forget about that,” she says. “You get there, you look after yourself.”

 

Emerald Lake is one of the stops on the Southern Lakes and White Pass Excursion.

 


Related Articles

Tear Sheet

Photos by Yvette Cardozo

Safari at the Edge of the World

Trekking in frozen Labrador, a land where mystery lingers

October 23rd, 2025 October 23rd, 2025

UP HERE - JUL/AUG 2025

Photo by Mark Kelly

Let's Go Crazy

Don’t hold back this summer. We have adventures for every level of madness

October 23rd, 2025 October 23rd, 2025

Tear Sheet

Photos by Pat Kane

Rocking the Folks

“For Yellowknifers, it’s the best weekend of the year.”

October 23rd, 2025 October 23rd, 2025

UP HERE - MAY/JUN 2025

Photo by Rhiannon Russell

I’ll (Probably) Never Do This Again

You can't prove you're not getting old by riding a bike up a mountain

October 23rd, 2025 October 23rd, 2025

Tear Sheet

Up Here Magazine May/June 1990

To The Heart of Nahanni

October 23rd, 2025 October 23rd, 2025

UP HERE - SEP/OCT 2024

SherryBoat

Adventure on the Doorstep

WHY GREAT SLAVE LAKE IS THE BEST BACKYARD YOU COULD ASK FOR.

October 23rd, 2025 October 23rd, 2025
Newsletter sign-up promo image.

Stay in Touch.

Our weekly newsletter brings all the best circumpolar stories right to your inbox.

Up Here magazine cover

Subscribe Now

Our magazine showcases award-winning writing and spectacular northern photos.

Subscribe

Footer Navigation

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimers & Legal

Contact Information

Up Here Publishing
P.O Box 1343
Yellowknife, NT
X1A 2N9  Canada
Email: info@uphere.ca

Social Links

Facebook Instagram
Funded by the Government of Canada