November 18th, 2022: Way up in the Callaghan Valley on the back side of Mount Sproatt is an abandoned gold mine.  Old cement foundations and two unexpectedly beautiful lakes mark the location of Northair Mine, abandoned in 1982.  For about five years it was a fairly productive gold mine that extracted five tons of gold.  Largely forgotten for years, in the last decade it has come to life in stunning colour by graffiti artists and professional muralists.

Whistler & Garibaldi Hiking

Easy Hiking Trail WhistlerAlexander Falls  Moderate Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyAncient Cedars  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerBlack Tusk  Pay Use Hiking Trail WhistlerBlackcomb Mountain  Easy Hiking Trail WhistlerBrandywine Falls  Moderate/Hard Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyBrandywine Meadows  Moderate/Hard Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyBrew Lake  Easy Hiking Trail WhistlerCallaghan Lake  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerCheakamus Lake  Whistler Hiking Trail EasyCheakamus River  Whistler Hiking Trail HardCirque Lake  Whistler Hiking Trail EasyFlank Trail  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerGaribaldi Lake  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerGaribaldi Park  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerHelm Creek  Moderate Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyJane Lakes  Joffre Lakes Hike in Whistler in SeptemberJoffre Lakes  Moderate Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyKeyhole Hot Springs  Hiking Trail Hard Dog FriendlyLogger’s Lake  Whistler Hiking Trail EasyMadeley Lake  Moderate/Hard Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyMeager Hot Springs Easy Hiking Trail WhistlerNairn Falls  Whistler Hiking Trail HardNewt Lake  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerPanorama Ridge  Whistler Hiking Trail EasyParkhurst Ghost Town  Hiking Trail Hard Dog FriendlyRainbow Falls  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerRainbow Lake  Moderate/Hard Hiking Trail Whistler Dog FriendlyRing Lake  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerRusset Lake  Whistler Hiking Trail EasySea to Sky Trail  Easy Hiking Trail WhistlerSkookumchuck Hot Springs  Easy Hiking Trail WhistlerSloquet Hot Springs  Sproatt East  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerSproatt West  Moderate Hiking Trail WhistlerTaylor Meadows  Whistler Hiking Trail EasyTrain Wreck  Hiking Trail Hard - Whistler TrailsWedgemount Lake  Pay Use Hiking Trail WhistlerWhistler Mountain

  Winter Hiking WhistlerJanuary  Winter Hiking WhistlerFebruary  Spring Hiking WhistlerMarch  Spring Hiking WhistlerApril  Spring Hiking WhistlerMay  Summer Hiking WhistlerJune  Summer Hiking WhistlerJuly  Summer Hiking WhistlerAugust  Fall Hiking WhistlerSeptember  Fall Hiking WhistlerOctober  Fall Hiking WhistlerNovember  Winter Hiking WhistlerDecember

Alexander Falls  Brandywine Falls  Cirque Falls  Best Whistler Waterfalls - Holloway FallsHolloway Falls  Keyhole Falls  Nairn Falls  Rainbow Falls  Shannon Falls  Train Wreck Falls  Wedgemount Falls

In the late 1960’s when the Callaghan Valley was a mostly untouched mountain wilderness an amateur prospector found high gold content in samples from the Brandywine area.  Dr. Mike Warshawski, a Vancouver dentist and budding prospector had recently taken courses in geology and basic prospecting.  Doing silt sampling from rivers and creeks, he traced the source higher and higher into Callaghan Valley to the site of what would eventually be the Northair Mine.  The source he found came from a small, unnamed stream, which he named Anomaly Creek, because he found anomalous levels of minerals from it.  Warshawski then contacted the head of geology at BCIT, A.H.Manifold for help.  In 1970 the pair partnered up and took extensive soil samples until they zeroed in on the more precise location of the source, or more technically, the “mineralized float”.  They staked claims over the entire area and began trenching and sampling systematically.  They found very promising gold and silver in an outcropping quartz vein that extended deep underground.  These promising results attracted a mining company, McIntyre Mines to option the property in 1971.  They investigated the potential find and decided the following year that it was not worth mining and dropped the option.  That same summer, a Vancouver mining company, Northair Mines investigated with 28 exploratory holes into the vein.  The results were so promising that Northair Mines picked up the option on the property in May of 1973 and plans were quickly underway for the new Northair Mine.  Production from Northair Mine began on April 26th, 1976 and just a few weeks later the first gold/silver brick was produced.  This picture on the left is of Northair's president, D.A McLeod holding a $60,000 bar of silver and gold, with Northair Mine in the background.  It appeared in a article on Northair Mine in the Vancouver Province newspaper on June 8th. 1977.  The picture on the right was taken in 2022 at a similar angle.

Northair Mine in 1977 and Northair Mine in 2022

Northair Mine 1977 and 2022

Northair Mine Tunnels and Portals

Northair Mine produced what are called mill concentrates.  These concentrates are then refined off site to extract the gold and silver.  Northair Mine was extracting these materials from tunnels bored into the solid rock of the west side of Mount Sproatt.  There were, and still are, three tunnels, or adits into the mountain that connect deep underground and add up to over a kilometre.  This tunnel network connects the two zones that run along the quartz vein and then connects down to the mill site.  Effectively two offset tunnels at different levels, the highest one on the mountain, the Manifold Zone, and the Warman Zone lower down.  These two then intersect with a third tunnel that descends down through the mountain to emerge at what was the Northair Mine mill site. Today, if you are checking out the beautiful murals at Northair Mine, you are only about 150 metres from the mill site tunnel entrance.  In fact, you may have parked your car right across from the mostly buried entrance.  Never completely buried, you will know you have found it as quite a powerful, cold wind emerges from the opening.  Of the three tunnel entrances, or portals as they were called when created and used by Northair Mine, only two are still visible today.  The Manifold Portal and the Warman Portal are both pretty buried by rock slides, though the Manifold Portal is at least visible and the Mill Portal is very easy to find just steps from the murals.

Northair Mine's Mill Portal 

Northair Mine Mill Portal

The Manifold Portal 400 Metres Up the Mountain!

Northair Mine Manifold Portal

Getting to Northair Mine

Northair Mine continued production until 1982 when declining production yields and gold prices reduced profitability.  It was abandoned, and all but the cement foundations were removed, the three portals were blocked by metal gates and largely forgotten.  In the 1980’s Whistler as a ski resort was exploding and the Callaghan Valley Road was still a bumpy logging road.  Forestry companies moved in and cut massive tracts of the forest around the abandoned mine.  Canadian Wilderness Adventures set up shop in the area and continue running Snowmobile and ATV tours past, and in recent years, through Northair Mine.  Just before the 2010 Winter Olympics came to Whistler and Vancouver, the Callaghan Valley Road was paved to the newly built Whistler Olympic Park just up the road from the turnoff to Northair Mine.

Northair Mine Murals 2022

In 2022 the old foundation walls of Northair Mine brought to life in spectacular fashion by professional muralist Kups

Northair Mine Kups Murals

Corner Witch by Kups 2022

Northair Mine Murals 2019

In 2019 Northair Mine has become pretty beautiful with a staggering collection of murals and graffiti art.  With uneven collection of foundation walls you find yourself wandering around as if looking at an art exhibit.. which it sort of is.  Especially when you consider Kups is a much in demand and award winning professional muralist.  His Ravens mural has definitely given the place a surreal and beautiful aspect to it that it never had before.  Northair Mine has always been a pretty surreal place, hidden up in the wilderness and the addition of beautiful and colourful murals makes it even more special.

Northair Mine Ravens Mural by Kups in 2019

Northair Mine Ravens by Kups in 2019

Smurfs Mural by ADBRT and/or Buds in 2019

Northair Mine 2019 Smurfs Mural

Northair Mine in 2018

Colourful graffiti covered some of the foundation walls in 2018.  The very first mural painted in 2013 by PETKO can be seen here in the far right.

Northair Mine 2018 Graffiti

Northair Mine 2018 Graffiti

Northair Mine Murals 2014

In 2014 PETKO painted this large robot snake mural on the south facing wall.  Another large one, GET TO HIGH GROUND! was painted on the inside, south facing wall as well at that time.  The original PETKO mural from 2013 is facing the other direction on the pillar in the middle, opposite the blue tarp.

2014 Northair Mine Murals by PETKO

Northair Mine's First Mural in 2013

In the summer of 2013, the first mural appeared on the blank foundation walls of Northair Mine.  A creation of a professional Whistler artist PETKO.  Painted on one of the inside, pillar walls, the mural is about 8 feet tall and five feet wide of what looks like a robot snake in front of a cube background.  When first painted, with its green, blue, black and white interconnecting squares, it stood out in striking contrast to the bland grey walls in the background. 

Northair Mine in 2013 First Mural

In July 2013, the PETKO mural was the only one in the otherwise blank canvas ruins of Northair Mine.

Northair Mine July 2013

The Creation of Northair Mine's First Mural

Northair Mine Before the Murals

A decade ago Northair Mine was a blank canvas and a bit bland compared to the ever-changing collection of beautiful murals we see today.  This is a photo of the Northair Mine in the summer of 2013.  You can just make out a sliver of green and purple that is the PETKO mural in the otherwise completely blank canvas.

Northair Mine in 2013

Callaghan Valley Map v10

Northair Mine continued here...

More Whistler Updates!

February 1st, 2023: The beautiful murals that make Whistler Train Wreck the magical place it is today began appearing in 2011 when this hidden place was ...
Read More
September 5th, 2022: Madeley Lake is a stunning wilderness lake high up in the Callaghan Valley that is easily accessible by a decades old logging road.  ...
Read More
Sept 25th, 2022: Newt Lake is a fantastic, emerald coloured and very hidden lake up on the far side of Cougar Mountain.  In the busy summer months you are not ...
Read More
Sept 11th, 2022: The notoriously difficult biking trail in the wilderness between Emerald Forest and Rainbow Park is a pretty fun place to wander around.  It ...
Read More

Amazing Hiking Trails in Whistler

Whistler & Garibaldi Park Hiking Glossary A to Z

Scree: from the Norse “skridha”, landslide.  The small, loose stones covering a slope. Also called talus, the French word for slope. Scree is mainly formed ...
Read more
Green Lake is the marvellously vivid, green coloured lake just north of Whistler Village.  Driving north on the Sea to Sky Highway, Green Lake appears ...
Read more
Hoary Marmots are the cute, pudgy, twenty plus pound ground squirrels that have evolved to live quite happily in the hostile alpine areas around Whistler.  ...
Read more
The Roundhouse Lodge is the centre of activity on much of Whistler Mountain.  It is where the Whistler Gondola drops off and next to where the Peak 2 Peak ...
Read more
Charles Townsend (1900-1997) moved from London, England to Vancouver in the early 1920's where he met Neal Carter while studying Agriculture at UBC. Townsend was ...
Read more
Waterbar and Cross-Ditch: the purpose of a waterbar or cross-ditch is to capture and redirect surface water from the road and channel it across the road ...
Read more
Overlord Mountain is the highest peak in the Fitzsimmons Range.  Overlord is surrounded by several mountains that collectively are named the Overlord ...
Read more
Adjacent to the huge Caterpillar tractor in Parkhurst is a large disintegrating wooden dock that is a great place to take in the wonderful view of Green ...
Read more

Whistler & Garibaldi Park Best Hiking by Month!

December hiking in Whistler is mainly done on snowshoes, though not always. If it hasn't snowed much recently then trails such as Whistler Train Wreck and ...
Read more
There are plenty of beautiful and free snowshoe trails in Whistler and Garibaldi Provincial Park.  From the surreal paintings of Whistler Train Wreck to ...
Read more
February is a great month for snowshoeing in Whistler and Garibaldi Park. The days slowly get longer, but the temperatures stay consistently cold.  Expect ...
Read more
March is usually a snowy month in Whistler, though in 2024 not a whole lot of snow has fallen. Snowshoes are already not necessary for lots of trails in and ...
Read more

Free Camping Gear Delivery to Garibaldi Park

Explore BC Hiking Destinations!

Whistler Hiking Trails

Hiking in Whistler is spectacular and wonderfully varied. Looking at a map of Whistler you see an extraordinary spider web of hiking trails that are unbelievably numerous. Easy trails, moderate trails and challenging hiking trails are all available. Another marvellous ...
Read more

Squamish Hiking Trails

Squamish is located in the midst of a staggering array of amazing hiking trails. Garibaldi Provincial Park sprawls alongside Squamish and up and beyond Whistler. Tantalus Provincial Park lays across the valley to the west and the wonderfully remote Callaghan Valley ...
Read more

Vancouver Hiking Trails

Vancouver is surrounded by seemingly endless hiking trails and mountains to explore.  Massive parks line up one after another.  Mount Seymour Provincial Park, Lynn Canyon Park, Grouse Mountain, Cypress Park and the enormous Garibaldi Park all contribute to Vancouver ...
Read more

Clayoquot Hiking Trails

Clayoquot Sound has a staggering array of hiking trails within it.  Between Tofino and Ucluelet, Pacific Rim Park has several wilderness and beach trails, each one radically different from the last.  The islands in the area are often Provincial parks on their own with ...
Read more

Victoria Hiking Trails

Victoria has a seemingly endless number of amazing hiking trails.  Most take you to wild and beautiful Pacific Ocean views and others take you to tranquil lakes in beautiful BC Coastal Rainforest wilderness.  Regional Parks and Provincial Parks are everywhere you turn in ...
Read more

The West Coast Trail

The West Coast Trail was created after decades of brutal and costly shipwrecks occurred along the West Coast of Vancouver Island.  One shipwreck in particular was so horrific, tragic and unbelievable that it forced the creation of a trail along the coast, which ...
Read more