| Vidette Lake | |
|---|---|
| Location | British Columbia |
| Coordinates | 51°09′N120°54′W / 51.15°N 120.9°W /51.15; -120.9 |
| Primary inflows | Hamilton Creek |
| Primary outflows | Hamilton Creek |
| Basin countries | Canada |
| Settlements | nearSavona, B.C. |
Vidette Lake is a smalllake in theDeadman River Valley of theThompson Country in theInterior of British Columbia,Canada. It is not on the Deadman River, but it is on a tributary within the river's valley.
The route in the gold rush era from Kamloops to theCariboo goldfields passed the lake.A cabin, which is now the home of a tourist lodge on the lake, was a trading post on theHudson's Bay Brigade Trail.
From 1933 to 1939, the Vidette Lake Mine operated on the east side of the lake producing 28,869 oz of gold, 46,573 oz of silver and 48 tons of copper. In the years since there has been further exploration.[1]: 4
The lake has been visited and investigated byTibetan Buddhist monks who have declared a location overlooking the lake to be the "Centre of the Universe." The owner of the property operates a guest lodge, the Vidette Lake Gold Mine Fishing Lodge, for people wishing to visit the site, which is unmarked.[2]
This article about a location in theCariboo Regional District,Canada is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it. |