Chilkoot

An Adventure in Ecotourism

By Allan Ingelson, Mike Mahoney, and Robert Scace
Series: Parks and Heritage
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781552380307, 264 pages, October 2001
Hardcover : 9781552380550, 264 pages, October 2001
Ebook (PDF) : 9781552383094, 264 pages, October 2001

Table of contents

 

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Unveiling a Triptych
Hiking the Trail Today: An Overview

Part One: The Chilkoot and Ecotourism

Getting a Fix on Ecotourism
The Chilkoot Trail
Recreational Visitors on the Chilkoot Trail
Summer Use
Winter Use
Ecotourism Challenges

Part Two: The Trail in History

First Nations and the Chilkoot
Early Eighteenth? and NineteenthCentury Trade Alliances
The Tinglit Trade Network and the Chilkoot Trail
A Change of Economy
Klondike Diversity: An International Stampede
Dangers of the Chilkoot Pass
The Tidewater Communities
Whose Trail Anyway?
Tourism as History
Heritage Interationa

Part Three: Along the Chilkoot Trail

A Diverse Landscape: From Salt Water to Barren Scree
Trailhead to Finnegan?s Point
Finnegan?s Point to Canyon City
Canyon City to Pleasant Camp
Pleasant Camp to Sheep Camp
Sheep Camp to Chilkoot Summit
Chilkoot Summet to Happy Camp
Happy Camp to Lindeman City
Lindeman City to Bennett
Bennett: The End of the Trail
Leaving the Trail: Bennett to Skagway\Whitehorse

Appendix: Planning to Visit, Planning to Hike?
Bibliography
Index
About the Authors

Description

A trail book unlike any other, Chilkoot: An Adventure in Ecotourism is a richly woven insight into the Chilkoot Trail and the region straddling the American-Canadian border in the Alaska and British Columbia. The authors present the trail in three interrelated parts. They begin by describing the trail as a classic example of modern ecotourism with reference to management practices and user expectations, responses, and satisfaction. Then they show the amazing history of the trail. They conclude with an illustrated presentation of their own experiences.

The Chilkoot has a long and varied history: it was an important trade route of the coastal Tlingit people; it attracted worldwide notoriety during the frantic Klondike Gold Rush days; and now it has an international reputation among recreational hikers.

Today, Chilkoot is an icon. It is thirty-three miles (53 km) of dense forest, rugged mountain, golden sand dune, rushing river, and sylvan lake settings stretching from Alaskan salt tidewater to freshwater Lake Bennett at the headwaters of the Yukon River in British Columbia. Rich in natural and cultural history and protected entirely as parkland, the Chilkoot forms a major portion of the extensive Klondike Gold Rush International Historical Park.

Reviews

 

Chilkoot is a delightful book . . . Not only is it a fine trail guide, but it also works very well in showing how good ecotourism opportunities and practices can be successfully created and managed to the benefit of today?s visitors.

?Robert King, Alaskan Anthropology

 

Chilkoot is successful as a simple trail guide, and as a work with higher goals of displaying how good ecotourism practices are carried out. The authors hold up the Chilkoot Trail as a shining example of ecotourism, a strong collaboration of state and national governments and the local community in protecting, promoting and managing a historically and environmentally significant area.

?Fred Manson, Electronic Green Journal