Discover the best top things to do in Cache Creek, Canada including Cariboo Jade & Gift Shoppe, Cache Creek Library, Thompson-Nicola Regional Library, Cache Creek Pool, Historic Hat Creek, Cache Creek Visitor Information Centre, Marble Canyon Provincial Park, Semlin Valley Golf Course, Juniper Beach Provincial Park, Gold Country Geotourism, Cache Greek.
Restaurants in Cache Creek
5.0 based on 5 reviews
Gift shop featuring B.C. Jade and other semi-precious gemstone jewellery and rough stone specimens from around the world. Also a wide selection of unique gifts and souvenir items including books, moccasins, handmade soap and more.
5.0 based on 1 reviews
Travelers welcome! We offer free wifi and internet access. If you need printing or copying services, a per page fee is charged. A variety of free programming is available and listed on our web site for details. Come and see our gem of a library!
4.5 based on 183 reviews
Historic site with guided tours of original roadhouse (hotel) built in 1860. Over 20 original buildings and many pieces of old farm equipment. First Nations site has a winter lodge and displays of early food storage, shelters, and traditions. Stage Coach rides every day, short shows daily in July and August, and all is included with your admission. A gift/souvenir shop and restaurant are also in the main reception building.
4.5 based on 7 reviews
Our Visitor Centre is open May 15th 2021 for the season! Year round information can be found at our website or feel free to contact us! Adorable 50's themed visitor centre with great resources for travelers. Free WI-FI and clean bathrooms. Local information and province wide publications. Easily accessible parking lot for RV and a sani-station.
Best selection of maps and brochures. Loved the 50s themed decor. Great pit stop at this important junction.
4.0 based on 31 reviews
Love stopping at this park! The lake is beautiful and the mountains are stunning! The park is small and each campsite has access to the lake with a sitting area below your parking spot. The park attendant is the best: super accommodating, helpful, and practical ... on a Sunday morning we discovered the battery in our camper was dead. Having no cell service, the park attendant headed us in the right direction to find a new battery and continue our trip (thank you!). We look forward to seeing you again next year!
3.5 based on 56 reviews
The night before we were to leave I realized that I had done the unthinkable - booked a campground with no flush toilets. All the way there I was doing mental arithmetic to figure out where else to stay, or how on earth I was going to deal with pit toilets! Thanks to barely any coverage on the route, I was prevented from acting. We checked in to #23. At first look it was not good as it borders 3 other sites. However, by the end of the trip I loved that site as it was actually nicely shaded and felt relatively private (plus we're friendly types!).The site had power, and backed onto a nice greenbelt. Although we were in a tent, we didn't choose a tenting site when booking. It was great to have the luxury of charging our stuff. The two ladies who operate the park are incredible. They work so hard! It was just crazy hot and they did such a nice job of cleaning the campsites when people checked out, it was above and beyond the basics. I always clean the picnic table when we arrive, with my paper towels and bleach spray & there was NOTHING on my cloth when I did it. Now...onto the pit toilets. I can safely say that I have never ever been in one of those in which there wasn't a disgusting pissy toilet seat, a stink from hell, and no tp. These things....were luxury. They were regularly cleaned, and had ZERO SMELL. I have no clue how they managed this. There was no grose seat and a full supply of tp. There's also a soap thing outside asking you to wash before & after using. Very very nice surprise. In fact,, rather than fleeing the next morning, we stayed our 2 nights plus added one more. There was no cell service in our site but there is a little picnic table (and min library, adorable) where people can sit and use their phones. I guess some sites can get a signal but ours couldn't. We lucked out and saw the comet while we were there, and the stars and planets are amazing. We spent our days at the little swimming hole, which was nice and refreshing. Our kids (11,13) floated on tubes and a dinghy in the area, had fun for 3 days. Ashcroft is best for shopping but Cache Creek is also near. Firewood was reasonable (maybe $7?), and they sell ice at the campground ($4). We love trains, and didn't mind them at all. Didn't see any mosquitoes, maybe it's too hot? It seems like Goldpan provincial, in that it's a stop-over but that being said, we talked to a number of repeat visitors for whom this is one of their favourite places & they return every year as a destinatiion and not a stop over. Saw several boats going out, there's a launch there. Oh - there are apparently horrible snakes around - bull snakes and...rattlesnakes. The ladies who operate the place know all about them and can put you at ease ( we didn't see any, but we didn't go into the brush surrounding as that would've been...asking for trouble). One of the ladies told us that she had seen a snake a few yrs back & grabbed it and threw it in the brush. Hopefully she sticks around! But, we didn't see any & I felt comfortable that we could relax. We'll be going back next year for sure.
5.0 based on 1 reviews
5.0 based on 2 reviews
This eight (8) foot tall statue of a gold miner, with huge eyes and big smile, represents the hundreds of men who flocked to this area between 1860 and 1863. This friendly wooden man welcomes visitors to Cache Creek, British Columbia. Standing in front of a large pine tree and surrounded by a stone wall and neat flower beds, he is dressed in a blue shirt, brown vest with matching pants that are held in place with a black belt sporting a gold buckle. A large cowboy hat covers his white hair which matches his full beard. In one hand, he holds a pick ax which rests on a log and a gold pan that sits beside him. His big, black boots anchor him to the ground that once upon time held the gold that he seeked. Now, he is a beacon for geocachers to find their "treasures".
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