Trail

Trail is a small city of 7,700 people (2016) in the West Kootenays region of interior southeast British Columbia. The city is about 10 km north of the USA border at Waneta and about 25 km from Castlegar, a town also on the Columbia River. Another neighbouring community is Rossland. The main employer in Trail and the most prominent feature on the city's skyline is the smelter operated by Teck Cominco.

Understand

The city was named after the Dewdney Trail, which passed through the area.

Employing approximately 1,800 people, Teck Resources (formerly Cominco) is the region’s largest employer.

The City of Trail is also home to the largest hospital in the West Kootenay region.

  • 🌍 Trail & District Visitor Centre, #200, 1199 Bay Ave, (second floor above TD Bank), ☏ +1 250-368-3144. Winter: M-F 9AM-5PM; summer: daily 9AM-5PM. Travel and local information. Anwide range of visitor services, including visitor information, local travel information, brochures, visitor guides, and maps.

Climate

Summer climate in Trail is generally hot and dry with moderately cool nights. Temperatures often exceed 35 Β°C during summer afternoons, average 29 Β°C. Thunderstorms are common during the late-Spring and Summer season, often moving into the valley from the south. The fall months bring dense river fog, especially overnight and in the morning, as a cold air inversion lingers above the relatively warm river surface. Winters are mild to cold with periods of moderate snowfall. Nearby villages such as Warfield and Fruitvale often receive greater amounts of snow due to higher elevation.

Get in

By car

Trail is on Hwy 3B, the main route through southern BC, and extends out on both sides of the Columbia River. A private vehicle is the most common and most convenient way to reach Trail, but there are a few other options:

By bus

By plane

Get around

Although the downtown is reasonably compact and easily walkable, some outlying areas of the city are at some distance and require a car or a bike.

By public transit

  • BC Transit (West Kootenay Transit System), toll-free: +1-855-993-3100. Offers bus routes in the region, including Monday to Saturday service connecting Balfour, Castlegar, Fruitvale, Nelson, Rossland, Slocan City, and Trail.
    • Route 43 operates between Trail and Fruitvale (55-60 minutes) from Monday to Saturday.
    • Route 46 operates between Trail and Rossland (24-27 minutes) from Monday to Saturday.
    • Route 98 operates between Trail and Rossland (25-30 minutes) from Monday to Saturday.

By taxi

See

  • Silver City Days, ☏ +1 250-364-0834. Began in 1962 and are held early in May each year. Includes a parade, entertainment, eating options, and a midway.
  • 🌍 Teck Cominco Interpretive Centre, 201 - 1199 Bay Ave, ☏ +1 250-368-3144. The largest non-ferrous lead and zinc smelter in the world. A 2Β½-hour industrial tour of the Teck (Cominco) smelter can be arranged in the Interpretive Centre through the Trail & District Chamber of Commerce office above the Toronto-Dominion Bank, in downtown Trail. This centre is the starting point for the free tours beginning M-F at 10 AM during the summer; by appointment from September to May. Learn about the plants' operations in the mini-science centre featuring hands-on exhibits for the whole family. View video presentations and displays which exhibit sophisticated environmental monitoring systems installed in the Trail area by Teck. Other presentations illustrate the history of Cominco's Trail smelting operations. As of May 2023, its website continues to identify this attraction as closed due to Covid-19.
  • 🌍 Downtown Trail. Downtown Trail is a quaint small town commercial and retail area. What makes it unique is the industrial infrastructure of the Teck Cominco plant that looms over downtown at the top of a cliff immediately north of downtown, forming a very significant contrast to the commercial and retail area beneath it.
  • 🌍 Columbia River Skywalk. Located at the south end of downtown Trail, this is an architecturally beautiful bridge open only to pedestrians and bicyclists that crosses the Columbia River.

Do

Hike

Besides producing hockey and baseball talent, the area around Trail offers many excellent hiking biking and nature walk trails within 5 to 20 minutes from downtown Trail, such as the following:

  • 🌍 Violin Lake (From the intersection with Highway 22, head west on Highway 3B for 1.4 km and turn left at Wellington Ave (at Rae Lyn Motel), turn left at French St, and turn right at Haig St (immediately after train tracks). The start of the trail to Violin Lake is about 900 m from intersection of French St and Haig St.). Visit the many popular hiking and biking trails around the lake. It is a 3.9 km hike each way to access Violin Lake.
  • 🌍 Champion Lakes Provincial Park (from the intersection with Highway 22, follow Highway 3B east for 22 km, then take Champion Park Road for 10 km). Has 6 km of trails to do day hikes.
  • Hike up to any of the four Canadian flags that have been placed on various mountain peaks around the Trail area by members of the 44th Field Engineering Squadron.

Reaching Canadian viewpoints flags around Trail

Each hike offers excellent 1-hour to 2½-hour hikes up to the flag viewpoints, and the trails can be accessed by novice to avid hiking enthusiasts. You can hike to the 🌍 East Trail Canadian flag viewpoint via the McQuarrie Creek trail route. The one-hour hike to the top sees hikers viewing across the Columbia River towards West Trail, Warfield, and Rossland. The flag can be seen waving in the wind above the regional hospital near the viewpoint. Park in the 🌍 J.L. Crowe High School parking area and follow the McQuarrie Creek hiking trail up alongside the creek that comes down to meet the road where it intersects to the J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School or the Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital. The McQuarrie Creek hiking is a fairly easy trial if you take your time. Parts of the trail can be steep.

An alternative route to the East Trail Flag viewpoint above the hospital is to take the easier trail leading from the upper Miral Heights area of Trail. At the Shavers Bench/Miral Heights traffic lights turn up to Miral heights sub-division and follow McBride Street. to Albert Drive. The trailhead is at the end of Albert Dr. and it is equally enjoyable and scenic route to the flag viewpoint.

Another good hike is the Upper Sunningdale Sandhill viewpoint hiking trail. The trail-head can be reached by driving to the Upper Sunningdale Park on Marianna Crescent where you can safely park your car at the park entrance. Walk west down Marianna Crescent until you reach the Sandspit Road. Walk up past the chain link fence, and look for the trail-head on the right just past the granite rocks which can be seen in the water runoff ditch. This 40 minute, easy level rating hiking trail is clearly marked, and the steepest part of the trail heads up past the pine trees at the start of the trail, and then you follow the trail along the sandhill ridge until you reach the viewpoint just below the Sandhill plateau above the Upper Sunningdale Park.

Another Canadian flag waves above Sunningdale, and can be viewed from most areas of Upper and Lower Sunningdale. If you want to take a longer hike than the Upper Sunningdale Sandhill viewpoint, you can hike further, by taking the trail that heads from the Sandhill viewpoint, towards the rock cliffs. Take the clearly marked trail up past a number of rock cliffs to the Sunningdale Canadian Flag viewpoint to reach the Canadian Flag.

The hike rating for the Sunningdale Canadian Flag viewpoint on Mount Heinze is an intermediate level, and you can make it up to the viewpoint in approximately 2Β½ hours, as most of the hiking trail is clearly marked, but sections of the trail up near the swamps below the flag viewpoint on Mount Heinze can be thick with brush. Leave enough time to hike back down, so the best time to make this hike is in the early morning. Be bear and wild animal aware, and make lots of noise if you startle a bear. Always pack enough water, or 1 to 2 litres of your favourite hiking drink, and pack a lunch and your digital camera for this hike, as the views of the local area are spectacular from this viewpoint.

From each of the Sunningdale hiking trail vantage points, you'll get a beautiful view of the sub-division of Sunningdale, Bingay Bay (Sandy Island), the Columbia River as it flows towards Gyro and past downtown Trail, Teck Cominco's lead and zinc smelter property (which is relatively green and clean looking), Tadanac, Rivervale, and up towards Warfield, Rossland, and Red and Granite Mountain ski hills.

Learn

Buy

About 6 km east of downtown on Hwy 3B you can also find a few 🌍 chain retail stores, such as No Frills, Canadian Tire, and Walmart.

Eat

Drink

Sleep

Campgrounds

  • 🌍 The City of Trail RV Park, 7500 Hwy 3B (close to the junction of Hwy 22A and 3B), ☏ +1 250-368-3144. Has 31 partially-serviced sites at the east end of Trail near the Walmart and the Canadian Tire. Operates from May through September.

Hotels and motels

Cope

Go next

Visit nearby Rossland, 6 km west on Highway 3B. Rossland is well-known for its mountain biking during summer and skiing during winter.

Routes through Trail
ENDS at ← Rossland ←  W  E  β†’ Salmo β†’ END
END ← Castlegar ←   N  S  β†’ Rossland β†’ β†’ Spokane via



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