Motorcycle Mojo – September 2019

(C. Jardin) #1
48 MOTORCYCLE MOJO SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2019

Lose the Traffic


As you pass the Cottonwood Recreation


Site, you’re getting close to Joffre Lakes


Provincial Park, which is coming up on


the right. There are three lakes and a


glacier in this park. It’s a very popular


spot, so if you’re behind some cars at


this point, it’s a safe bet a few will turn


off here.


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your left is Duffey Lake. From here,


the road is very winding with lots of


switchbacks. Watch for gravel in the


corners from people pulling trailers


who don’t watch their off-track, so their


trailer wheels hit the shoulders and


drag gravel onto the road. Many good


riders have gone down on this stretch of


road due to gravel.


You’ll notice that there are as many


crossings of Cayoosh Creek as there are


switchbacks on your way up toward


Cayoosh Summit, where the mountain


views continue.


Coming into Lillooet is a winding


and narrow road along the side of the


mountain with steep drop-offs and very


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in Pemberton because getting stuck out


here is not something you want to do.


Lillooet is a must stop for fuel, with


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another Chevron that offers 94 octane


gas. Coming into Lillooet, you’ll notice


that the temps rise and the landscape


becomes very arid – almost desertlike


in places – compared with what you’ve


been riding through to this point.


A Change of Route?


Here you have a choice to make:


you can do the original Duffey Loop


by continuing on through Fountain


Valley, Marble Canyon and on toward


Cache Creek or you can turn south on


Hwy. 12 and do the shorter version


of the loop to Lytton. The difference


is 581 km, as the full Duffey Loop is a


691-km ride.


For the sake of our ride, we’ll stick


to the original loop and continue on to


Fountain Valley, a small First Nations


community that straddles a short bit of


road through the Fountain Slide, a hill






side that never stops moving. The road


is a short dirt section that always has a


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construction. After that stretch, you’re


back on pavement heading toward


Pavilion, Marble Canyon and the


historic Hat Creek Ranch, where


Hwy. 99 ends and meets Hwy. 97. A


right turn takes you onto the Cariboo


Highway and into Cache Creek.


Cache Creek is another gas stop,


with a Chevron offering 94 octane.


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yourself back on the Hwy. 1 and


heading toward the Fraser Canyon,


which takes you all the way back to


Hope. You’ll ride across Spences Bridge,


which spans theThompson River, and


follow along the side of the canyon all


the way into Lytton. Remember Lytton?


This is where the riders who took the


shorter loop return to Hwy. 1.


Lytton is also where the Thompson


River meets the Fraser River. If you


stop at the bridge in Lytton, you can see


where the clear waters of the Thompson


run into the very muddy Fraser River –


an interesting sight, for sure.


Travelling south in the canyon,


you pass by Kanaka Bar, North Bend,


Boston Bar, the climb over Jackass


Mountain to Hell’s Gate, cross over the


Fraser River and toward Alexandra


Provincial Park. You will pass through


a number of tunnels that take you


through to Spuzzum, Saddle Rock, Yale


and Hope, the last of which is a must


stop for gas with two Chevron gas


stations to choose from.


Wrapping up the Ride


Two good places to eat in Hope are


Home Restaurant or Rolly’s Restaurant.


Rolly’s is right behind the Chevron


on Water Avenue, which is the road


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is about a three-minute ride on Old


Hope Princeton Way on the road out of


town heading east. Both restaurants are


equally good and can be busy, but the


wait is worth it and you can chat with


other riders that are sure to be there


about the awesome bit of road you’ve


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From Hope back to Vancouver, you


have two options: Hwy. 1 (a.k.a. the


“slab”) or take the scenic Hwy. 7


through Agassiz, Harrison Mills, Lake


Errock and Deroche (where you can


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through Dewdney, Hatzic and into


Mission. This stretch of road is a nice


two-lane ride through farmland and


mountain views.


At Mission, you have the option of


taking Hwy. 11 down to Abbotsford


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pick your way through Maple Ridge, as


many riders do.


No matter how you ride the Duffey


Loop, it will leave a lasting impression


on you. Without a doubt, the loop is one


of B.C.’s great rides.


For additional photos of

The Duffey Loop, B.C. visit:

motorcyclemojo.com

TRAVEL THE DUFFEY LOOP, B.C.


The Sea to Sky Highway just south

of Porteau Cove Provincial Park.
Free download pdf