Enthusiast I
Enthusiast I
Off-Road Ranger I
Enthusiast I
Enthusiast I
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Hey guys, quick question- do all of the fueling stations take credit cards or should we be carrying enough Canadian cash for any fuel north of Dawson City? ThanksI hope you have a great trip.
I have to say though that 6 weeks is not long, certainly not long enough the way we travel. It's about 7000 km to Tuktoyaktuk. At the rate we generally travel this would take 30-40 days, and that's one way only.
So, I think that you need to make the first part of the trip as efficient as possible - pick a "starting point" for Yukon and NWT and get there as fast (safely) as you can. Then slow down for the north. The same on the way back.
For the Dempster, you need to make sure you have a tyre repair kit, with lots of extra "jerky", and a compressor. In my opinion you don;t need two spare tyres (based on a lot of experience over the years). AS long you have reasonable range you also don;t need extra fuel (we have a range of about 700 km outside towns and this is fine for the Dempster); however fuel up whenever you can.
Here's one of our posts on this part of our trip last year: The Dempster Highway and Arctic Ocean: uncertain ferries, flat tyres, and new friends.
This post includes videos of the river ferries on the Dempster: Thanks, the vehicle, ferries, and statistics - Canada 2022
Enthusiast I
Thanks for the postI hope you have a great trip.
I have to say though that 6 weeks is not long, certainly not long enough the way we travel. It's about 7000 km to Tuktoyaktuk. At the rate we generally travel this would take 30-40 days, and that's one way only.
So, I think that you need to make the first part of the trip as efficient as possible - pick a "starting point" for Yukon and NWT and get there as fast (safely) as you can. Then slow down for the north. The same on the way back.
For the Dempster, you need to make sure you have a tyre repair kit, with lots of extra "jerky", and a compressor. In my opinion you don;t need two spare tyres (based on a lot of experience over the years). AS long you have reasonable range you also don;t need extra fuel (we have a range of about 700 km outside towns and this is fine for the Dempster); however fuel up whenever you can.
Here's one of our posts on this part of our trip last year: The Dempster Highway and Arctic Ocean: uncertain ferries, flat tyres, and new friends.
This post includes videos of the river ferries on the Dempster: Thanks, the vehicle, ferries, and statistics - Canada 2022
Enthusiast I
Thanks so much for posting the pics and vidsI hope you have a great trip.
I have to say though that 6 weeks is not long, certainly not long enough the way we travel. It's about 7000 km to Tuktoyaktuk. At the rate we generally travel this would take 30-40 days, and that's one way only.
So, I think that you need to make the first part of the trip as efficient as possible - pick a "starting point" for Yukon and NWT and get there as fast (safely) as you can. Then slow down for the north. The same on the way back.
For the Dempster, you need to make sure you have a tyre repair kit, with lots of extra "jerky", and a compressor. In my opinion you don;t need two spare tyres (based on a lot of experience over the years). AS long you have reasonable range you also don;t need extra fuel (we have a range of about 700 km outside towns and this is fine for the Dempster); however fuel up whenever you can.
Here's one of our posts on this part of our trip last year: The Dempster Highway and Arctic Ocean: uncertain ferries, flat tyres, and new friends.
This post includes videos of the river ferries on the Dempster: Thanks, the vehicle, ferries, and statistics - Canada 2022