The park comprises 54,170 hectares (133,900 acres)[2] in East Kootenay on the western side of the Continental Divide, which in this region forms the border between British Columbia and Alberta. It borders Elk Lakes Provincial Park, also in British Columbia, to which it is linked by a trail, and Banff National Park and Peter Lougheed Provincial Park in Alberta.[3] The park lies east of Invermere; the closest communities are Elkford to the south and Canal Flats and Radium Hot Springs to the west. The park is accessible on foot or horseback via logging roads and trails to 6 trailheads. All mechanized access is forbidden, and there are no campgrounds or other park services in the park.[2][3][4] The Great Divide Trail passes through the park.[5]
The park is an Alpine environment with forested bottomland. It includes several lakes, the Palliser River valley, the Middle Fork of the White River, and the Royal Group of mountains.[6] It encompasses 26 peaks over 3,000 metres (9,800 ft).[4] The highest peak, Mount Joffre (3,449 metres (11,316 ft)), is on the border with Alberta. There are seven important mountain passes.[2]
The park is at one end of the Southern Rocky Mountain Management Plan, aimed at coordinating ecosystem preservation and providing wildlife corridors, in particular for grizzly bears.[9][10][11] Also to provide more comprehensive protection of the environment and wildlife habitat, British Columbia has considered asking the United Nations to add Height of the Rockies and 5 other provincial parks to the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site.[12]
History
The passes through what is now the park were used by the Kootenai Indians and by mid-19th-century European explorers. Two archaeological sites over 8,000 years old have been identified on the Middle Fork of the White River.[2][3]
A national park was proposed early in the 20th century. In 1936 the White River Game Reserve was established. However, construction of logging roads and clearcutting became so extensive in the Southern Canadian Rockies that by 1986, the area that is now the park had become the last major refuge for wildlife in the region. Two provincial environmental organisations, BC Spaces for Nature and the Palliser Wilderness Society, with guide outfitter Hiram Cody Tegart, led a campaign to protect it permanently by making it a wilderness park, and in 1987, after a twelve-year process of negotiation between government, conservationists, hunting guides and outfitters, and logging companies, it became the first Forest Wilderness Area in British Columbia.[13][14][15][16] In 1995 it became a Class A Provincial Park.[2][3][17] It was part of the Kootenays regional plan, which created 16 new provincial parks and sought to protect both logging jobs and wilderness areas.[18]
^ abcBob Hahn, Kootenay National Park, Calgary: Rocky Mountain Books, 2000, ISBN9780921102748, p. 52.
^Dustin Lynx, Hiking Canada's Great Divide Trail, rev. ed. Surrey, British Columbia: Rocky Mountain, 2007, ISBN9781894765893, pp. 111–12.
^Mount Prince Albert, Mount Prince Edward, Mount Prince George, Mount Prince Henry, Mount Prince John, and Mount Princess Mary; Mount Princess Margaret is nearby in Banff National Park. Glen W. Boles, William Lowell Putnam, and Roger W. Laurilla, Canadian Mountain Place Names: The Rockies And Columbia Mountains, Calgary/Custer, Washington: Rocky Mountain, 2006, ISBN9781894765794, p. 204.
^Ric Careless, To Save the Wild Earth: Field Notes from the Environmental Frontline, Vancouver: Raincoast / Seattle: The Mountaineers, 1997, ISBN9780898865677, p. 131.
^Aaron Cameron and Matt Gunn, Hikes Around Invermere & the Columbia River Valley, Surrey, British Columbia: Rocky Mountain, 1998, repr. 2009, ISBN9781897522516, p. 161.
^Peter Aengst, "The Yellowstone to Yukon Initiative: A New Conservation Paradigm to Protect the Heart of North America", in Laura M. Darling, ed., At Risk: Proceedings of a Conference on the Biology and Management of Species and Habitats at Risk: February 15–19, 1999, University College of the Cariboo, Kamloops, British Columbia, [Victoria]: British Columbia Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks, 2000, ISBN9780772643483, pp. 898–99 (pdf pp. 4–5).
^Bill Dolan and Larry Frith, "The Waterton Biosphere Reserve—Fact or Fiction?"[permanent dead link], in Neil Munro, ed., Making Ecosystem Based Management Work: Connecting Managers & Researchers: Proceedings of the fifth International Conference on Science and the Management of Protected Areas, Wolfville, Nova Scotia: Science and Management of Protected Areas Association, 2004, ISBN9780969933861, pdf p. 7.
^Bill Schneider, Where the Grizzly Walks: The Future of the Great Bear, Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot/Falcon, 2004, ISBN9780762726028, p. 182.
^Rich Landers, "Elk Beyond the Bootprints: A hunter's primer to Northwest Wilderness Areas", Field & Stream Far West edition, n.d., pp. 78–79, p. 79.
^Karsten Heuer, Walking the Big Wild: From Yellowstone to the Yukon on the Grizzly Bears' Trail, Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 2002, repr. Seattle: Mountaineers, 2004, ISBN9780898869835, pp. 95–96.
^Goody Niosi, Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives: Recipients of the Order of British Columbia, Surrey, British Columbia: Heritage House, 2002, ISBN9781894384520, p. 230.
^Careless, p. 146; review in Nature Canada volumes 26–27 (1997) p. 109.
^David Leyton-Brown, Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs, 1995, Toronto: University of Toronto, 2002, ISBN9780802036735, p. 181.
Further reading
Appendix 3 in: British Columbia Round Table on the Environment and the Economy. Dispute Resolution Core Group. Reaching Agreement Volume 1 Consensus Processes in British Columbia. Vancouver: Round Table, 1991. ISBN9780772613462.