Wapta Traverse - April 19-25, 2026

claurel

Member
I just returned from the Wapta Traverse, a beautiful hut-to-hut ski tour in the Canadian Rockies that lies within the Banff (Alberta) and Yoho (BC) National Parks. This was a guided tour with Sawback Adventures, the same outfit that operated the Svalbard Ski and Sail trip I took April/May 2025.

The Alpine Club of Canada operates a number of huts in the Canadian Rockies that can be reserved for overnight shelter during multi-day ski tours. The Wapta Traverse is a north-south route across the Wapta Ice Field, while the Bow-Yoho Traverse runs east-west. Sawback took care of the logistics (hut reservations, food) and supplied two excellent guides (plus another person doing a guiding practicum, effectively a third guide.) We had nine clients on the trip, all but one of them a fellow skier/snowboard from Seattle.

Our trip ran six days and five nights. It's not necessary to spend this much time on the traverse. If we’d stayed just a single night at each of three hurts, we could have finished very comfortably in four days. However, the extra days give a chance to do some hut based day tours without the need to carry heavy overnight packs. I would definitely recommend taking more time to anyone doing the traverse—the Canadian Rockies are a stunning background, and, well, more skiing is always good! The traverse is mostly over glaciers with gentle grades. The extra days gave us more time to seek out some steeper objectives, though none of the terrain we toured was extreme. Our traverse route started took us across the frozen Bow Lake, up to Bow Hut, then to Balfour Hut, with a final night at Scott Duncan hut. The traverse proper runs about 40 km / 25 miles from Bow Lake to the exit; with the added objectives, I'd guess we traveled around 80 km total.

I had been a little concerned about taking the trip in late April, but winters are long in the Canadian Rockies, and there were no problems with rain or low snow coverage. The first few days, we enjoyed relatively warm and sunny weather, with temps around 0°C / 32°F. The snow was wind-buffed powder up high, spring-like lower down. We hit some areas of breakable crust on day 4 as well as some harder sun and temperature crust. It was no powder paradise, but overall the skiing was quite good.

On the afternoon of day 4, the temperatures dropped a *lot*. We woke up to temperatures of -15°C / 5°F and wind, with temperatures dropping further as we ascended to the Balfour High Col to reach the final hut. Several small convective systems swept across the glaciers on day 4 bringing strong winds, around 10 centimeters / 4 inches of fresh snow, and whiteout conditions. One of systems was intense enough that we dug a snow trench for shelter. Fortunately, we only huddled in place for about 15 minutes before the sun returned. I was reminded how lucky we were to have clear weather most of the time—skiing down a glacier in a whiteout would have been no fun at all.

The most challenging part of the trip was the very last two miles. We exited from Sherbrooke Lake via a winding summer trail covered in snow. I was on a splitboard, carrying a heavy multiday pack, winding through the trees, trying to maintain enough speed to make it through the flat sections. Skiers had a better time of it, but no one had fun. Still, it was a small price to pay for an extraordinary ski tour. This was my first hut-to-hut ski tour. I've done lodge, yurt, and sail-based touring before; I expected more of a mountaineering focus than on a typical tour, and that’s exactly what we got.

A few notes:

  • We drove about 10 hours from Seattle to Field, BC to start the trip. It would have been faster to fly to Calgary, but the extra hassle of flying didn’t seem worth it. Our calculation would have been different in mid-winter, where the risk of running into dicey road conditions would have tipped us toward flying.
  • The town of Field is only 30 minutes from the Lake Louise Ski Area; we took advantage of that to do a bonus day of resort skiing before beginning the tour.
  • One of the skiers on the trip didn’t have a lot of touring experience, but still did well (excepting a few boot fit struggles.) But, I wouldn’t advise a novice split boarder to try it—there are too many flat-ish areas where you need to be comfortable holding speed until the next downhill section. And the final section through trees would be brutal.
  • Only the Bow hut was heated (a couple of wood stoves). Nevertheless, we were vastly more comfortable in huts than if we were winter camping.
  • There's no cell service on the Wapta Icefield, and we didn't see any other people after we left Bow Hut. I think that's lovely, but bring a deck of cards and something to read.
St. Nicholas Peak was one of the most dramatic sights on the tour.
StNickDramatic.jpg

Touring near Mount Balfour on our way back to the hut for the night
BalfourView.jpeg


Boot packing to a minor summit (this was the only boot packing during the whole tour.)
BootPacking.jpg


Snowstorm on the Balfour High Col. This was where we dug a snow trench to shelter from the wind and wait out the bad visibility.
Snowstorm.jpg


Balfour Hut. All that snow, so few people to ski it!
BalfourHut.jpeg


—Chris
 
A bit closer to your neck-of-the-woods, @claurel have you done the Neve Traverse? The Spearhead?
Nope, I haven't done either of those. I really should get out and do the Spearhead. One of our Wapta guides mentioned that there's a new hut going in this summer, which makes it even more appealing. Thanks for the tip on the Neve—that one is new to me!

—Chris
 
I just returned from the Wapta Traverse, a beautiful hut-to-hut ski tour in the Canadian Rockies that lies within the Banff (Alberta) and Yoho (BC) National Parks. This was a guided tour with Sawback Adventures, the same outfit that operated the Svalbard Ski and Sail trip I took April/May 2025.

Amazing Tour!

I am aware of the excellent touring in the Canadian mountains, but have never seriously considered any. I also read some reports of groups renting a cabin in BC (Rogers Pass or Revelstoke areas), and skiing for a week, mostly on day tours.

Previously, I was gung-ho on completing the Haute Route from Chamonix-Verbier-Zermatt. Mid/late March to April seems to be the sweet spot. It's easier since you are staying at a 'Refuge', so food/drink/beds are provided at night. Although now many guides say it's overrun/overcrowded/too popular, and similar 'haute routes' in either the 1. Jungfrau Region, or 2. Andermatt-to-Engelberg are better, more mindful. In Zermatt, April 2018, I met and skied with an American from Boise, Idaho, who had only added Zermatt as a warm-up for a few days before a tour in the Jungfrau region. I became interested in other European touring routes, especially because an American would actively skip the more famous Haute Route Zermatt-to-Verbier/Chamonix. Even James's Madrisa day tours on the Austrian/Swiss border (Davos) look very interesting.

The 2 guiding outfits in Val d'Isere seem incredibly disappointed with my limited interest in ski touring. Its location means it's only 10-45 minutes to 1000m+ powder descents almost any time of year. The only real ski touring I have done was in the Arlberg, and a couple of days in Japan - and they were all lift-assisted.

And I have, for decades, somewhat actively avoided a San Juan CO hut tour. (Why bother when Telluride's in-bounds and sidecountry can offer great conditions with very limited commitment?)


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I was up that way in late March to ski at Banff and Jasper areas. Drove Icefields Parkway both directions. Magnificently deep snowpack, white, white white in that area.

I read/saw a headline that the Icefields Parkway was closed for a significant stretch due to an avalanche. You were lucky to experience it!


In March 2026, the Icefields Parkway (Highway 93N) experienced a prolonged closure following a size 4 avalanche that buried a significant section of the roadway under massive debris.
March 2026 Avalanche Event
On March 21, 2026, Parks Canada conducted controlled avalanche mitigation near Mount Hector that triggered a massive slide. The event was part of a historic avalanche cycle, with conditions rated as "Extreme" across the region.
Impact: The slide covered a 250-metre section of the highway with snow depths reaching 6 to 12 metres.
Duration: The highway remained fully closed for five days while crews used loaders, dozers, and excavators to clear the debris.
Reopening: The road officially reopened on Thursday, March 26, 2026, at 2:00 PM, initially with single-lane alternating traffic through the impacted zone.
 
Yes, drove north on the Icefields Parkway on March 28, just two days after it reopened. When we arrived at the single lane section the avi debris was mostly removed from the road, fortunately. That same day a bit further north we had some white knuckle driving in a snow squall for an hour+ to get to Jasper. 4wd and snow tires were quite useful.
 
Thanks for the trip report and great photos! Truly stunning and beautiful. I've linked below a video that someone did about his trip on the Wapta Traverse.

 
Thanks for the trip report and great photos! Truly stunning and beautiful. I've linked below a video that someone did about his trip on the Wapta Traverse.

Glad you enjoyed the report, and thanks for sharing the video link! I'm curious where exactly those ice caves shown in the video were. I saw plenty of seracs (and stayed well clear of them), but I wonder if a lot of the ice was still covered by this year's deep snowpack.
 
Amazing Tour!

I am aware of the excellent touring in the Canadian mountains, but have never seriously considered any. I also read some reports of groups renting a cabin in BC (Rogers Pass or Revelstoke areas), and skiing for a week, mostly on day tours.

Previously, I was gung-ho on completing the Haute Route from Chamonix-Verbier-Zermatt. Mid/late March to April seems to be the sweet spot. It's easier since you are staying at a 'Refuge', so food/drink/beds are provided at night. Although now many guides say it's overrun/overcrowded/too popular, and similar 'haute routes' in either the 1. Jungfrau Region, or 2. Andermatt-to-Engelberg are better, more mindful. In Zermatt, April 2018, I met and skied with an American from Boise, Idaho, who had only added Zermatt as a warm-up for a few days before a tour in the Jungfrau region. I became interested in other European touring routes, especially because an American would actively skip the more famous Haute Route Zermatt-to-Verbier/Chamonix. Even James's Madrisa day tours on the Austrian/Swiss border (Davos) look very interesting.

The 2 guiding outfits in Val d'Isere seem incredibly disappointed with my limited interest in ski touring. Its location means it's only 10-45 minutes to 1000m+ powder descents almost any time of year. The only real ski touring I have done was in the Arlberg, and a couple of days in Japan - and they were all lift-assisted.

And I have, for decades, somewhat actively avoided a San Juan CO hut tour. (Why bother when Telluride's in-bounds and sidecountry can offer great conditions with very limited commitment?)
I'd say that the main reason to do a hut-to-hut traverse is because you specifically want the experience of the traverse... There's just something about being out in the middle of nowhere that is magnetic to me. You're certainly right that you don't have to work that hard to get fresh tracks in great snow. There are lots of day tours where you can still get a hot shower at the end of the day. I look forward to doing another traverse at some point, but my next big touring trip will be lodge-based.

—Chris
 
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