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Adventurous, natural, wild: 3 more iconic British Columbia journeys for 2026 itineraries

From the Pacific to the peaks, Destination British Columbia has six new iconic place brands designed to inspire your travels in 2026. Each distinct journey highlights the Canadian province’s innate appeal, making it easy to map out your ideal itinerary and follow your naturally wild and adventurous heart in BC.

From the Pacific to the peaks, Destination British Columbia has six new iconic place brands designed to inspire your travels in 2026. Each distinct journey highlights the Canadian province’s innate appeal, making it easy to map out your ideal itinerary and follow your naturally wild and adventurous heart in BC.

We’ve shared the highlights of the first three iconic destination brands, from the classic Canadian Rainforest to Rockies route to epic quests along The Infinite Coast and savouring Valleys & Vineyards’ smorgasbord of cultural and culinary discovery.

Now it’s time to explore BC’s even wild(er) side through three more iconic destination brands: Birthplace of Adventure, Nature’s Heartland, and The Great Wilderness.

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Each curated journey plots a path through BC’s key natural, cultural and adventurous attributes, allowing travellers to choose the experience that calls to them.

Horseriding at Bracewell's Alpine Wilderness Adventures at Tatyaloko Lake in the Chilcotin area. Image: Kari Medig/Destination BC
Giddy up for Bracewell’s Alpine Wilderness Adventures at Tatyaloko Lake in the Chilcotin area. Image: Kari Medig/Destination BC

For travel advisors, the lead experiences provide a narrative guide to BC’s lesser-known regions, shaping the place-making storytelling and compelling imagery into inspired itineraries and navigating clients from bucket-list dreams to holiday action.

1. If you like peak thrills and alpine culture, try Birthplace of Adventure

Adaptive Trails at Mt Abreil in Nakusp, Kootenay Rockies. Image: Mitch Winton
Adventure for everyone – adaptive mountain biking trails at Mt Abreil in the Kootenay Rockies, Canada’s MTB capital. Image: Mitch Winton

Birthplace of Adventure is for outdoor explorers who want more – bigger scenery, epic road trips, peak ski resorts and endless activities in the great unknown.

This itinerary is the pinnacle of challenging outdoor adventures, literally, encompassing four mountain ranges – the Canadian Rockies, Purcells, Selkirks and Monashee –  and four national parks on the Powder Highway in the southeast corner of BC.

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Lead experiences highlight on- and off-piste activities at the birthplace of heliskiing and Canada’s mountain biking capital, showcasing the year-round appeal, as well as awe-inspiring scenery that’s best explored on road trips.

Rafting in Yoho National Park in the Kootenay Rockies. Image: Ryan Creary/Destination BC
Going for Golden – feel the rush of whitewater rafting in Yoho National Park in the Kootenay Rockies. Image: Ryan Creary/Destination BC

Your clients will be steeped in mountain culture on an eight-day Small Towns & Big Mountains round-trip itinerary from Calgary in Alberta, crossing the Continental Divide and following the Columbia River Valley in BC’s Kootenay Rockies region.

This epic road trip is packed with mountain scenery and outdoor adventure with some seriously eye-popping vistas like jagged peaks, alpine lakes and hot springs that are prime terrain for hiking, biking and rafting alongside stays in stunning mountain towns, such as Fernie, Panorama Mountain Resort and Golden.

2. If you like historic quests and traditional ways, try Nature’s Heartland

Canoeists at Nuk Tessli Wilderness Experience with view of the Coast Mountains (Monarch Range), Whitton Lake, BC. Image: Destination BC
Soak up the serenity with the Nuk Tessli Wilderness Experience on Whitton Lake along the Cariboo Chilcotin Coast. Image: Destination BC

Nature’s Heartland cuts to the central core of British Columbia, contrasting the adrenaline rush of the Birthplace of Adventure with a soul-stirring landscape that invites slow travel layered with cultural storytelling and living history.

It’s a region that offers the lot, from mighty waterways and canyons to grasslands and ranges, including the Fraser River, Kamloops, Chilcotin area and the Cariboo Mountains.

Experiential highlights include flightseeing over glaciers, canoeing in dramatic canyons,  riding the Rocky Mountaineer, all-season adventures at Sun Peaks and immersive Indigenous and cowboy culture.

Cultural experience at Nemiah Lodge, Chilco Lake in Tsʼilʔos Provincial Park. Image: Kari Medig/Destination BC
Find your rhythm in Nature’s Heartland at Nemiah Lodge, Chilco Lake in Tsʼilʔos Provincial Park. Image: Kari Medig/Destination BC

Inspire your clients to experience BC’s heartland on the Canyons to the Cariboo itinerary, spending eight days following the historic Gold Rush Route from Vancouver via the Trans-Canada and Cariboo highways to the heritage town of Bakersville and back.

Along the way, peel back the layers of Indigenous, cowboy and Chinese pioneering history on scenic routes, tiny trading posts, First Nations cultural villages and hands-on ranches. Keep an eye out for wildlife, such as caribou, bears, eagles and wild horses.

3. If you like ancient lands and abundant wildlife, try The Great Wilderness

Salmon Glacier, one of North America's most accessible glaciers on the Stewart-Cassiar Highway. Image: Destination BC
Feel small at Salmon Glacier, one of North America’s most accessible glaciers on the Stewart-Cassiar Highway. Image: Destination BC

Tucked into BC’s expansive northwest, The Great Wilderness covers remote areas characterised by ancient lands and lore, towering mountains and roaming wildlife. Shaped by spirits and storytelling, traverse fire and ice from lava beds to glacier valleys, including the world’s most vehicle-accessible, Salmon Glacier.

Here, you can travel past peaks by road or rail, experience northern Indigenous cultural traditions, encounter local wildlife, including grizzly bear viewing off Prince Rupert, and chase waterfalls or the Northern Lights.

Witness the Northern Lights near the Alaska Highway in northwestern British Columbia. Image: Andrew Strain/Destination BC
Witness the Northern Lights near the Alaska Highway in BC’s northwest. Image: Andrew Strain/Destination BC

An 11-day road trip through untouched wilderness on the Great Northern Circle Route from Prince George in Northwestern BC will showcase everything from the Peace River Country prairies to the Northern Rockies with azure lakes and dense forests in between.

The 1,800km-plus circuit features outdoor adventure, rich cultural traditions and wildlife sightings at every turn, including driving the Alaska Highway from Fort Nelson to Watson Lake, stopping at the Northern Lights Centre in the Yukon, then back on the scenic Stewart-Cassiar (Highway 37) through ghost towns, characterful inns and more.

Be iconic in BC

Moose in Bowron Lake Provincial Park in the Cariboo Mountains. Image: Robin O'Neill/Destination BC
Meet local icons – like moose in Bowron Lake Provincial Park in the Cariboo Mountains. Image: Robin O’Neill/Destination BC

Birthplace of Adventure, Nature’s Heartland and The Great Wilderness are three of the six new iconic destination brands that have been thoughtfully designed with today’s travellers in mind.

Travel advisors can use these distinct journeys to inspire their clients to experience more of BC beyond the gateways with a clear framework leading the way.

Where the bison roam – road trip the Alaska Highway between Muncho Lake and Liard River. Image:  Destination BC
Where the bison roam – road trip the Alaska Highway between Muncho Lake and Liard River. Image: Destination BC

Visit Destination BC’s travel trade website to access all the storytelling inspo, marketing resources, sales tips and local contacts you need to create extraordinary itineraries for your clients.

For more info and inspo, visit supernaturalbc.com

This article is brought to you by Destination British Columbia:

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