Description
Location Overview
Johanson Lake Airport sits at approximately 4,747 feet (1,447 m) elevation in the deep wilderness of northern British Columbia, near the small community of Fort Ware (Kwadacha) and the Finlay River country. The nearest significant service hub is Smithers, roughly 130 miles to the south. The surrounding landscape is classic northern BC boreal wilderness β dense forest, mountain terrain, and near-total isolation. The closest comparable airports are the Fort Ware Airport and Kemess Creek Airport, both small and remote themselves.
Camping & Recreation
No developed camping or recreational facilities are associated with the airstrip itself, given its defunct status. The broader region offers exceptional wilderness experiences β backcountry fishing, hunting, and wildlife viewing in the Finlay River watershed. The nearby Kwadacha Wilderness Provincial Park provides outstanding remote access for those equipped for self-sufficient backcountry travel. Any visit to this area requires thorough planning and full self-sufficiency.
Notes & Warnings
This airstrip is officially listed as closed/defunct and should not be treated as an active destination without thorough current reconnaissance. The high elevation (~4,747 ft MSL) demands careful density altitude calculations, particularly in warm months. The remote location means no fuel, no services, no communication infrastructure, and no rescue support. Weather in the northern BC mountains can change rapidly, and the terrain surrounding the strip offers limited options in the event of a go-around or emergency. Pilots should not attempt this strip without up-to-date condition reports from local contacts and a conservative safety margin.
History
Johanson Lake Airport was one of many small bush strips developed across northern BC to support resource industries, remote outfitting operations, and Indigenous community access in an era when aviation was often the only practical means of reaching these isolated areas. The Finlay River region it serves was historically significant as part of the vast territory of the Kwadacha (Fort Ware) First Nation and saw activity related to fur trading, prospecting, and forestry over the decades. The airstrip has since fallen out of regular use, earning its defunct classification, likely as the economics of supporting such a remote facility became difficult to justify without consistent demand. It remains a footnote in the broader story of bush aviation that opened up Canada's northern interior throughout the 20th century.
Details
-
Facility ID
CA-0175
-
CTAF
122.9
Location
Lat: 56.602015, Long: -126.191964 - British Columbia - Canada
Add a review