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Great escape comes with great deal: The new-look
Cathedral lodge offers bargain rates
By Laura Robin
There's a new place where you can get away from
it all in the Rocky Mountains. And if you can
make your escape in the next month or so, you
can even do it at bargain rates.
Cathedral Mountain Lodge opened
for the season Sunday-- with 10 new guest
cabins, bringing the total to 29, and a stunning
new centrepiece lodge, which includes a sitting
area and restaurant.
It's actually incorrect to say that Cathedral
Mountain is new. There have been buildings on
the spectacular site near Lake Louise, Alta.,
since bunker cabins were built for miners there
in the 1930s. But it's never looked like this
before.
Nancy Stibbard, the dynamo businesswoman who
owns Vancouver's Capilano Suspension Bridge and
Moraine Lake Lodge, bought the former Cathedral
Mountain Cabins in 2002. Since, she's been
patiently wading through the red tape involved
in making any changes to a property that's on
Parks Canada land. Cathedral Mountain is in Yoho
National Park, which along with adjoining Banff,
Jasper and Kootenay national parks, forms part
of the Canadian Rocky Mountains UNESCO site.
There are only a handful lodges like this tucked
away in the Rocky Mountains, and many have
fallen into disrepair since the owners can't
afford the huge expense, and hours and years of
environmental assessments and other hurdles that
must be cleared before changes are made.
"It's been a long process," Stibbard
acknowledges. "But it's turned out beyond my
vision, which is pretty amazing."
She hired Vancouver architect Brad Lamoureux to
design the new lodge, which houses the Riverside
Dining Room and what they call the Great Room,
where guests can read, look at the view or
attend daily 5 p.m. interpretive talks,
accompanied by wine and cheese. The lodge was
built with reclaimed Douglas fir posts and
beams, has seven-metre vaulted ceilings, a deck
overlooking the Kicking Horse River, a huge
indoor/outdoor river rock fireplace and
51/2-metre-high windows offering views of
mountains all around.
"Old ore carts have been made into the bar,"
says Stibbard, who obviously takes delight in
weaving local history into her properties, from
interpretive signs telling the history of
Capilano Suspension Bridge to authentic antiques
in Moraine Lake Lodge.
Replacing the former restaurant, which was built
in 1933, was a calculated gamble. The old one
was a funky little place reminiscent of a
miner's cafe, and was beloved and written up in
Where to Eat in Canada five years running.
The new one is more grand -- and able to serve
more guests a more ambitious menu. Appetizers
include dishes such as warm wild B.C. mushroom
tart with pancetta crisps or Saltspring Island
goat cheese & walnut terrine. Main courses cover
the country, from Alberta lamb loin to Quebec
duck. If you also opt for the warm whiskey bread
pudding, with honey creme anglaise and bruelled
figs for dessert, you may have difficulty
waddling back through the woods to your cabin.
Almost invisible among the towering spruce and
fir trees, the cabins sleep two to four and all
have private decks. You won't have a phone or
TV, but you will have down duvets, deep soaker
tubs and logs and kindling delivered daily for
your fireplace.
Cathedral Mountain Lodge is
nestled in the midst of 500 kilometers of some
of Canada's greatest hiking trails, from nearby
Takakkaw Falls, the second highest in Canada, to
the Iceline and Larch Valley trails and the
beautiful ones that take you up to rustic
teahouses near Lake Louise.
You can also take a guided hike to the Burgess
Shale UNESCO World Heritage Site, go whitewater
rafting, flyfishing or horseback riding.
"I think this lodge will attract the more
hard-core outdoors person," says Stibbard.
"I actually have to say that I like this one
even better [than Moraine Lake] -- it's more
away-from-it-all, more remote. I think it will
attract the more serious hiker, who still enjoys
the fine wines and the fine foods and a soak in
the tub at the end of the day."
IF YOU GO
If you are planning to visit
Cathedral Mountain Lodge, here
are some tips:
- Where: About a three-hour drive from Calgary
- Cost: $380 to $475 a night per cabin.
- Opening specials: About half price until May
31: $190 to $270 per cabin. Grand Opening
Package, available until June 30, starts at $470
per night per couple and includes champagne upon
arrival, picnic basket breakfast, hiking book
and three-course dinner for two.
- Contact: 1-250-343-6442 or
cathedralmountain.com.
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