Yukon Territory | Canada
Dalton Trail Lodge
Overview
For more than 30 years, Hardy Ruf has welcomed guests to his remote lodge on the shores of Dezadeash Lake. A Swiss ex-pat, Ruf spent years looking for the perfect place to launch his fishing and adventure lodge, and when he came to the Yukon, there was no doubt — this was it. The lodge complex is homey and comfortable with a touch of rustic, and guests can fish literally right out the back door, either on the lake or on a couple of streams on the property that are home to wonderfully accommodating Arctic grayling. But the adventure in the Yukon is almost as big as the largely unsettled Canadian territory. Each day, you’ll have the option to pursue trophy lake trout, toothy northern pike, rainbow trout and grayling in remote settings that often require a boat ride and a short hike or even a canoe trip down a fish-choked river. And at the end of the day, you can belly up to the best lodge bar in the Yukon and compare stories with your buddies.
The Fishing
From an angling perspective, the lodge offers a surprising array of diverse opportunities. Anglers who prefer moving water will love the dry-fly fishing in the nearby Kathleen River for grayling and rainbows. Surprisingly big grayling gather in the short river channels that connect the dozens of lakes within driving range of the lodge, and there are several small creeks, also within a short drive, where anglers can spend hours casting dry flies for these enthusiastic fish with outsized appetites. For anglers who want to tangle with trophy pike, a short drive will put them on timber-lined lakes teeming with one of the most underappreciated fly-rod-friendly fish in the world. But the lodge’s real trophy is the lake trout of the southern Yukon. These massive char, usually found in deep water elsewhere on the continent, are dependably caught in the shallows of the Yukon’s lakes, where they gather at river inlets to feast on grayling and whitefish all summer long and into fall. For fly rodders, this is an experience that’s not to be missed.
Each day, you and your guide will decide what you’d like to pursue, and off you’ll go into the wild. Often, a trip to chase lake trout or pike will include a few hours spent casting fluffy attractor dries over eager grayling or rainbows in the rivers between lakes, making it possible to catch multiple trophy fish over the course of a single day. For anglers who don’t mind a drive and can keep their passports handy, it’s totally doable to drive south on the Haines Highway through a small sliver of British Columbia, and over the mountains into Alaska, where pink and coho salmon run from July into September, and big Dolly Varden are available all summer long.
If you have a partner who’s not an angler, don’t fret – the lodge offers scenic day trips, sight-seeing flights and wildlife watching tours where nature lovers can take in one of the most dramatic landscapes anywhere on earth — nearby Kluane National Park.
Accomodations
LODGING: The lodge at Dalton Trail offers two double-occupancy rooms and eight single rooms in the main lodge building, and four well-appointed, double-occupancy rooms in a cabin complex right on the shores of the lake just a short walk from the main lodge. Rooms are warm and welcoming with full bathrooms, comfortable beds and some feature great outdoor gathering places where guests can enjoy the seemingly endless Yukon summer sun. Later in the season, when the sun finally does set, guests can take in the Northern Lights right from the lodge.
FOOD/DRINK: Robust, made-to-order breakfasts include traditional fare, fruit, muffins and the like, as well as bottomless coffee to help you get fired up for the day in the field. Sack lunches are prepared each morning according to your tastes, and dinner, as it is in most Canadian lodges, is an event, featuring everything from steak and fish to pasta and poultry expertly prepared and presented.
CONNECTIVITY: The lodge offers a strong internet signal in the main lodge buildings, but not in the cabin complex, which is a short walk from the lodge. There’s no cell service at the lodge, so catch up with family while you enjoy a beer at the bar after a day on the water or while you relax after dinner.
Sample Itinerary
It’s arrival day, and your shuttle driver will meet you at the airport for a beautiful drive on the Alaska Highway to the lodge. Keep your eyes peeled for wildlife — it's not uncommon to see elk, caribou, wood bison and even black and grizzly bears as you make your way to the lodge.
Upon arrival, you’ll get checked in and settled. You can either start the adventure with a drink at the bar, or, if you just can’t wait to get fishing, you can take a short hike to Beaver Creek on the lodge grounds and immediately start catching Arctic grayling. Just make sure you’re back at the lodge for dinner – it starts at 6 p.m. sharp, and you don’t want to miss it!
After breakfast, you and your guide will climb into the truck and drive into Kluane National Park en route to Mush Lake. It’s a short drive, but it’s on a dirt road, so it’ll take 45 minutes or so. Once you’re at the lake, you’ll board a small skiff and head to a nearby creek inlet, where you’ll hop out of the boat and wade on firm sand in thigh-deep water. Perched near a drop-off, you’ll cast into the deeper water. Don’t be surprised when the first fish you catch is a two-foot-long lake trout that grabbed your streamer just a few feet from you as you retrieve it from the depths and into the shallows. If things slow down, you’ll hop back into the boat and head to the lake outlet, where you’ll portage down a short river channel that’s absolutely loaded with Arctic grayling. After your arms tire from catching grayling that literally leap from the water to grab your dry fly, you’ll climb aboard a canoe and float down to Bates Lake, where another wadeable shoal holds more giant lake trout ready to take your fly.
It’s pike day, which means you're in for a treat, both in terms of the drive that will take you right by the scenic Otter Falls and the fishing on Giltana Lake. This modest, oval-shaped lake lies in a bowl in the mountains, so it’s largely sheltered from the summer wind. And, in the weed beds along the edges, giant northern pike over 40 inches long lie in wait, ready to ambush your streamer or popper. If you’ve never fly fished for pike before, this day will be life-changing.
You'll wake up at the lodge on Day 4, hop in in the truck with your guide and pull a lodge boat about 90 minutes to Aishihik Lake, a remote lake known for both trophy lake trout and giant pike. Once the boat's in the water of this incredibly clear mountain lake, you'll motor to the Aishihik Outpost — about a 30-minute cruise. You'll drop your overnight gear at the quaint little cabin and spend the next several hours on the prowl for lakers and pike. The pike convene in the shallows starting at ice-out in late May and are still there in early July. The lakers are wanderers, and often show up with the pike. Or your guide might put you on a sandy shoal and have you cast into deeper water to tempt these fish that can push 30 pounds and test the best 8-weight in your quiver.
Then you'll head back to the cabin and open a nice bottle of red wine while your guide grills a perfectly prepared New York strip over an open fire. Most of the summer, the sun doesn't really set, but even in June, it can make for some unbelievable colorful skies at it flirts with the western horizon. You'll fall asleep in a comfortable cot and wake up to hot coffee and a great camp breakfast. Then, you'll go back out looking for pike and lake trout until late afternoon, when you'll head back to the lodge in time for dinner.
Today, with the help of a guide and a jet boat, you'll motor into the Kathleen River backcountry in search of the southern Yukon's rare, native rainbows, pioneering lake trout and surprisingly big Arctic grayling. All call the Kathleen River home, and all can be caught all season long from the lodge. The Kathleen might be one of the most beautiful trout rivers in the world — the dramatic northern edges of the Rocky Mountains loom large over the crystal clear water, and in early summer, they still wear a snowy cloak. The rainbows aren't pushovers — they top out at about 22 inches, with most in the 15- to 17-inch range. The lake trout, particularly later in the year, can top 10 pounds as this unique subspecies of char pushes into the river on its annual migration.
A final bonus? The river is minutes from the lodge, which means you can stay a little later and still be back in time for one the lodge's signature dinners.
It’s your last day at the lodge, and the choices are endless. More shallow-water lake trout punctuated by a couple of hours spent chasing grayling in the connecting rivers? Maybe a trip up to Kathleen Lake in the national park to go after rainbows? An ATV ride around the Dezadeash Lake to find pike in the bays? It’s your adventure. Make the most of it. The week has flown by — before you know it'll you'll be on your way home, likely plotting your return trip to Dalton Trail Lodge.
Included
- Airport transfer Airport shuttle from Whitehorse to Dalton Trail Lodge
- Lodging Your room or cabin at Dalton Trail Lodge
- Guided Fishing 1 day guided fishing included; $400 each additional day (fully guided packages available)
- Meals Three delicious meals per day, plus snacks
- Beverages Non-alcoholic beverages are included.
- Boat rental Rental of a boat (with motor) and fuel is included
- Fishing equipment Use of fishing rods, reels, and tackle included
Getting There
The lodge is located about an hour or so by car from the territory’s largest community – Whitehorse. Daily air service from Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton and other Canadian hubs makes the trip surprisingly easy from all points in North America and beyond.
Thanks again for your help setting up the Dalton Trail Lodge trip. We are just back, and had a great time. Lots of laughs and great fishing. LOTS of grayling, some lakers on the fly, a couple 20-plus-inch rainbows, lots of other fish. Saw four grizzlies on the road about 5-10 minutes from the lodge. Food was great and it's a very comfortable lodge. We had a great time!!
It was a great trip. The accommodations were the best (Beaver Cabin—2 bedrooms with a view of the lake). Food was very good, far more than I could eat. The staff and guides were great. Caught innumerable grayling and caught a big laker on my 6-weight!
Hey Chris. Thought I’d let you know I thought Dalton Trail Lodge was outstanding. Guides were among the best I’ve ever had on my travels. Meals accommodations were top notch. Staff, guides and owners made us feel welcome.