As featured on New Lives in the Wild with Ben Fogle, in The Sunday Times, the FT, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, Travel & Leisure and the Wall Street Journal.
As featured on New Lives in the Wild with Ben Fogle, in The Sunday Times, the FT, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, Travel & Leisure and the Wall Street Journal.
Wild Bear Lodge is a small, intimate wilderness lodge that offers three, four and eight-night holidays in May-June and September-October.
It is the home of Julius Strauss, a renowned bear guide and war correspondent, who has spent the past 18 years living off-grid in bear country. He will host you and still does much of the guiding.
The lodge is located deep in the British Columbia interior where few tourists ever go. Yet it is easily accessible – only a scenic day’s drive from Calgary, Vancouver or Spokane in the US.
During the day we take our guests on walks and 4×4 drives deep into remote valleys and into ancient old-growth forests to watch grizzly and black bears as well as other Canadian megafauna.
We tailor our trips to the season and our guests’ appetite for adventure and exercise. For some a gentle stroll in the forest to a viewpoint is enough, with others we hike or snowshoe into the sub-alpine to seek out mountain bears.
In the evenings we gather around a log fire in our hand-built wooden lodge for a drink, a chat, and a sumptuous meal cooked by our in-house chef.
After dinner we sometimes head for the sauna and hot tub, which is suspended over our wilderness river and gives out over one of the best views in western Canada.
Or we give a presentation on bear behaviour, Canada’s megafauna, or another nature-related topic.
We pride ourselves on our rugged professionalism, versatility, and our perfect safety record. We offer old-fashioned hospitality but also high-tech modern amenities.
Each guest or couple is given their own riverside log cabin with a wood-burning stove. There is high-speed internet in each cabin, tea, coffee, slippers, hot showers, fresh towels, binoculars and a bird guide.
"If you are inclined towards experiencing pristine wilderness, you will be hard-pressed to beat a few days at Wild Bear Lodge in British Columbia’s Selkirk Mountains. Or if, like me, you are an urban beast whose love affair with the wild is limited to watching David Attenborough, then you should try it, for it is quite an eye-opener."
Mark Franchetti, Sunday Times, UK
"If you want to escape this is the place to come... a unique wilderness experience. Julius is one of North America's top bear guides. The property covers 32 acres with the main house and six guest cabins... it's absolutely beautiful. I don't think I've ever stayed in wilderness that is quite as comfortable as this... a quintessential off-the-grid luxurious cabin... surrounded by bears."
Ben Fogle, New Lives in the Wild, Channel 5, UK
"An experience that feels unique and personal. It felt intimate. We never felt like customers or clients. We felt more like welcome guests at a friend's estate. We felt like house guests. This is something that is extremely difficult to deliver but Wild Bear Lodge does it very well."
Paul & Liz from Ireland visited in Oct 2023
"We saw grizzly bears, moose, deer, and a wide variety of bird life. We also encountered signs of beaver, wolf, and puma whilst out trekking. The opportunity to track and photograph these majestic animals both on the forest floor and while rafting is something those with a love of biodiversity should experience."
David from Australia visited in Oct 2023
"From a few hundred yards up river, on the far bank, there was a loud crashing noise. I looked through my binoculars. It was a large grizzly bear, with three cubs in tow. The family moved ever closer to us, now perhaps only 100 yards away across the shallow river. Then directly opposite us, 40 yards away, so close that I didn’t need the binoculars any more. I could hear her breath, amplified over the narrow stretch of water, see her terrifying claws glinting white in the gloom, as she idly scooped a salmon out of the river and tore its head off, feasting on the brain, sheathed in fat, ideal for these hyperphagic bears, gorging themselves to survive their impending hibernation."
Mike Carter writing in the Financial Times
Wild Bear Lodge is a bit different from other wilderness lodges in Canada. For one we are very small and usually only have a maximum of eight guests at a time.
We do not aim to offer the sort of globalised brochure experience that international five-star hotels provide.
We believe in hospitality that is warm, real and personal and wilderness experiences that are absolutely authentic.
Nothing is staged or scripted and we do not use man-made or natural attractants to draw in wildlife.
One of the biggest compliments we have had is that we treat those that book with us not like paying customers but treasured house guests.
That said we also offer a far greater degree of privacy than most lodges. Each guest or couple is given their own riverside cabin separated from the others.
Some of our guests return season after season from as far away as the United Kingdom or Australia. One family booked out the entire lodge for four days six years running.
Conservation and charity projects are part of our lifeblood.
Our signature conservation achievement was spearheading a successful campaign to end grizzly bear hunting in British Columbia.
We have also taken part in a ground-breaking science project to develop facial recognition for grizzly bears.
Most recently the lodge has initiated a programme for wounded military veterans and combat medics from different parts of the world.
The FT, the Sunday Times, and the Guardian have all written about the experiences we offer.
A four-night holiday with us begins at C$2,980. They are everything-inclusive except 5% tax. We can accommodate most ages and fitness levels.