Rail makes getting to B.C.'s remote Seton Portage an epic adventure - Action News
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British Columbia

Rail makes getting to B.C.'s remote Seton Portage an epic adventure

A train shuttle serving residents of tiny Shalalth and Seton Portage in B.C.'s southern Interior is under threat, yet it's also a popular tourist attraction.

A train shuttle from nearby Lillooet is indispensable to the community and a hot tourist attraction

Seton Portage, B.C., lies on a massive, ancient landslide between the Anderson Lake to the west and Seton Lake to the east. (Matthew McFarlane/CBC)

As the crow flies, the twin communities of Seton Portage and Shalalthin B.C.'s southern Interior aren't particularly remote. But birds cantravel over astraight trajectory. For humans, the trip is much more painstaking.

One route takes you beside Anderson Lake, up and down a white-knuckle gravel road that clings to cliffs high above the water. The other takes you up and over a mountain pass, an hour-long journey of hairpin turns from Lillooet.

Until 2002, BCRail ran a passengerservice from North Vancouver thatsnakedthrough the Coast Mountains to Seton and Shalalth, onwards to Lillooet and further north to the city of Prince George.

When passenger service was cut, the Tsal'alh First Nation was given a reprieve becauserail service was deemed essential for the community. The Kaoham Shuttle was born now run by CN trundling the roughly 22 kilometres from Seton toShalalth to Lillooet and back again.

Wild apple trees envelope an abandoned church in Seton Portage. (Matthew McFarlane/CBC)

The rail line is as unique and quirky as the histories of the twin communities itserves.

The land around Seton Portage is actually amassive landslide that came crashing down the mountain some 10,000 years ago. Itcut a singlelake into two:the upper Anderson Lakeand the lower Seton Lake.

It's a community with a micro-climate residents claim it's the hottest place in Canada and also a place that has seen boom after bustafter boom.

A train shuttle serving residents of tiny Shalalth and Seton Portage in B.C.'s southern Interior has become less reliable, but remains a popular tourist attraction (CBC)

Seton Portage turned into a busy place once the CaribooGold Rush kicked into high gear in the early 1860s. Boats sailed upAnderson Lake, stopping to pick up people and gear as they hightailed it over the three-kilometre portage to Seton Lake and onward north.

So many people passedthrough that Seton Lake became the site of B.C.'s first railroad, the Pacific Great Eastern Railway, later named BC Rail.Soon, Europeans arrived, plantingorchards. During the Second World War, it was the site of a Japanese internment camp. AndBC Hydro created itsBridge River complex,a series of nearby damsthat provideabout eight per cent of the province's power today.

Seton Portage lies between Anderson Lake (pictured) and Seton Lake. (Matthew McFarlane/CBC)

The one constantamidst the changewas passenger rail service. But now there's a fear that the Kaoham Shuttle is living on a knife's edge. Ever since CN Railway took over BC Rail,the shuttle has become less reliable, said William Alexander,a councillor with the Tsal'alh First Nation.

"The shuttle agreement is that there would always be a train, except on Christmas Day," Alexander said."CN has been really hard to deal with. They don't talk to us very much."

And that unreliability has the community worried for its future. There's just one conductor left, and service has been cut back to eightdays on, fourdays off as a result.

The Koaham Shuttle gets set to leave Seton Portage on its daily trip to Lillooet. (Matthew McFarlane/CBC)

The Tsal'alh government has proposed new conductors, but the band says CN hasn't responded.

The community's elders are the hardest hit by the lack of a consistent schedule. Vanessa Blake, whoworks as the town's librarian drives people to appointments outside town when the train doesn't run.

"If the shuttle's not running they have no way of getting out of town to doctor's appointments or whatever. There was an elder that I drove to several doctor's appointments because he couldn't get out. So I would take time off work."

CN, for its part issued a statement, saying it "understands the importance of this shuttle for the community." It suggestedit will meet with community leaders to look for solutions, something the band says it'seager to see happen.

The irony of the situation is that despite its uncertainty, the Kaoham Shuttle is a big tourist draw. The BBC described it as "Canada's greatest hidden rail trip." And every voyage is packed with tourists trying to take it to Seton Portage.

A brand new hotel was recently completed in Seton, drawing more and more tourists to the idyllic valley, to take in the two lakes, the forest, the waterfalls. For locals, they hope that trip continues to begin and end on the Kaoham Shuttle.