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Lakefront on Huge Quesnel Lake

MyImmo-ID: 70532


223.000 € Kaufpreis
5,00 Zimmer
Wohnfläche: 140,00 m²

Objekt-Adresse:
V0L 1Lo Horsefly

Karte

Anbieter-Information:

Landquest Realty
Freddy Marks
# 3 1247 Midnight Drive,
V2G 5 Williams Lake
Telefon: +1 250 398 6319
Fax:


Karte


Objektbeschreibung:

Let the Sun shine in with lots of windows making you feel like you are part of nature as you enjoy the fabulous views overlooking Quesnel Lake. The privacy from this bright 1,400 square feet cottage delivers everything that living in the country is about. This cozy home nestled at the low bank of Quesnel Lake offers two bedrooms, 1 ½ bathrooms and was built in 1990. The current owner completed a total makeover. Almost everything inside is new.

Features include:

• Living room 24’ x 12.5’
• Master 12.5’ x 15’
• Bed 13’ x 10’
• Dining 24’ x 8
• Kitchen 9’ x 15’
• New birch kitchen cabinets (never used)
• New stove, new fridge, new dishwasher
• Hardwood, Laminate and tile floors
• Woodstove and Baseboard heaters
• Screened porch
• Hardwood doors
• Partial basement
• Two bathrooms
• Several outbuildings

There is enough room for your float plane and a big boat.

Ausstattung:
QUESNEL LAKE: is almost 1800 feet deep, with over 800 km of shoreline. It is the deepest glacially formed lake on earth. Set amongst the pristine Cariboo Mountains and Cariboo Mountain Park, Quesnel Lake is surrounded by countless small lakes, rivers and creeks.

Quesnel Lake is home to large Rainbow Trout, Dolly Varden, and Lake Trout, all of which can be caught on flies, spinners or trolling gear all season long. With over 30 small lakes within an hours drive, this is a great location for the still water enthusiast.

There are two major rivers for unparalleled fly-fishing experiences, for both the novice and experienced. The diversity of the area creates a unique fishing experience for all types to enjoy, in a spectacular and uncrowded wilderness setting.

Horsefly

In 1859, local Indians showed gold seekers the location of gold deposits in now historic Horsefly, sparking the great Cariboo Gold Rush. Located 60 kilometres east of 150 Mile House, on the south branch of the Old Gold Rush Trail, Horsefly today is a forestry centre and the gateway to fabulous camping, hiking and fishing in the surrounding area.

Nestled at the base of the Cariboo Mountains, 10 kilometres east of Horsefly, is the beautiful Horsefly Lake, 50 kilometres long and 650 foot deep, with crystal-clear, clean water. Horsefly Lake is just one of the plethora of lakes and rivers in the Chilcotin-Cariboo region that invite exploration, outdoor adventure and fishing.

Horsefly Lake Provincial Park

Set in the heart of what were once bustling goldfields, Horsefly Lake Provincial Park in the Cariboo incorporates the large Horsefly Lake, used extensively by anglers.

Horsefly Lake is a large, deep lake and is usually fished on a troll. Included in the park are a number of smaller lakes that provide excellent fly-fishing. Fishing for rainbow trout is a favourite pastime of many visitors. Hiking trails skirt the lake and provide a great afternoon's exercise. Canoes, paddle boats, and a power boat can be rented from the Park Facility Operator.

Horsefly Lake Provincial Park has 23 vehicle campsites, 7 walk-in tent sites situated along the shoreline of the lake, a picnic/day-use area, and a boat launch. Fees are collected from May 15 to September 15, and the park is closed and gated after September 15th.

Fir, spruce, birch and cedar clothe the slopes along the lower reaches of Dillabough Creek at the west end of Horsefly Lake - a semi-wilderness water body penetrating the Quesnel Highlands. There are two unnamed lakes in the park, once the site of a hatchery operated to restore the run of sockeye to the Horsefly River.

Williams Lake

Set in the heart of the Frontier, amid lakes and rolling ranch land, Williams Lake has been the focal point and service centre for the ranches of the Cariboo and Chilcotin regions since the turn of the century.

The founding of Williams Lake can be traced back to a single building in the Glendale/Comer area, a tiny chapel built in a Shuswap settlement in the 1840s. With the influx of European fur traders and gold prospectors, the church and the encampment flourished to become a small service centre.

Initially bypassed in 1863 by the Cariboo Wagon Road, and all the lucrative traffic that passed along it, Williams Lake's recovery was launched with the arrival of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway in 1919. A village soon appeared, and prospered, around the train station, which still stands at the foot of Oliver Street.

Williams Lake persevered to become the modern commercial centre and transportation hub of the historically famous Cariboo. The town retains that magical 'western frontier character', in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere. Its central location, at the junction of Highway 97 to the north and the Bella Coola highway (Hwy 20), makes it an excellent place from which to foray into the surrounding regions.

From here you can explore the cedar forests of the gold rush country to the east, travel west to the Pacific Ocean over the vast expanses of the Chilcotin Plateau, venture north to Prince George and beyond to Alaska, or head south to the Okanagan and the Lower Mainland.

Williams Lake Stampede

Williams Lake is home to the famous Williams Lake Stampede, one of the largest in North America, featuring local, national and international contestants. Normally held over the Canada Day weekend this four-day event is the hub around which dozens of home grown events circulate, including The Pony Express Race, The Wild Cow Milking, The Team Cattle Penning, and Pony Chariot Races. The city takes on its 'western ancestry', and false facades decorate the businesses; the interiors take on an early nineteenth century decor, and the citizens don their best western garb.

Lage:
5403 Mitchell Bay Road, Horsefly, BC


Access: Access from Williams Lake: 16 kms east on Highway 97 to 150 Mile House, then 56 kms north. Travel east on Horsefly Road to Horsefly then 20 minutes on Mitchell Bay Road.

Recreation: Excellent fishing for Rainbow, Lake Trout, Dolly Varden, Kokanee, Burbot. There is plenty of wildlife viewing and picture taking. Quesnel Lake offers all the activities you can enjoy on one of the biggest lakes in the province.


History: 10,000 years ago glaciers covered the east Cariboo region of the province of British Columbia. As these glaciers receded, today's BC landscape was formed. One of the most recognizable of these landforms is Quesnel Lake. Having an area of over 260 square kilometres and 800 kms of shoreline, it is considered to be the world's deepest Fiord Lake. With depths of over 500m, Quesnel Lake holds many secrets.


Sonstige Angaben:
Legal Description: BLK B District Lot 12200 Cariboo Land District, PID 017-413-958


Taxes: $1,436.44 (2008)


Zoning: Horsefly is zoned Rural 3 (RR3) under bylaw 3503


Investment Features: Waterfront properties are always a good investment.

Services: Water, Septic, hydro, Internet, telephone, road is serviced year round


Weitere Angaben
Einfamilienhaus British Columbia - Canada
0,00 € 223000,00 €
140,00 m² 10000,00 m²
5,00 2,00
2,00 Ja
Ja Modernisiert


 



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