Skip to main content

Site Banner Ads

Site Search

Search

Home Up Here Publishing

Mobile Toggle

Social Links

Facebook Instagram

Search Toggle

Search

Main navigation

  • Magazines
    • Latest Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Up Here Business
    • Visitor Guides
    • Move Up Here
  • Sections
    • People & Places
    • Arts & Lifestyle
    • History & Culture
    • Travel & Tourism
    • Nature & Science
    • Northern Jobs
  • Newsletter
  • Community Map
  • Merch
  • Visitor Guides
  • Our Team
  • Subscribe/Renew

Underground Fun In The Klondike

Things to do in Dawson City that you won’t find in your guidebook

By Katharine Sandiford

A Yukon River pleasure cruise. Photo courtesy Ayra Fox/Klondike Visitors Association

A Yukon River pleasure cruise. Photo courtesy Ayra Fox/Klondike Visitors Association

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Underground Fun In The Klondike

Solstice party on the dome: Ring in the height of summer by joining the strange-things-done party atop The Dome on June 21. It’s where you’ll find a clean cross-section of Dawson’s summer population: equal parts bongo-slapping hippies, camcorder-clutching RV-campers, fancy-clad wedding-party goers, card-dealers, can-can dancers, well-to-do tourists and the janitorial staff that clean their toilets. It’s the biggest, weirdest gathering of humans you’ll find this close to the Arctic Circle this summer.

Run a fishwheel: Want to pluck juicy salmon out of a fish-catching fish wheel on the Yukon River? Sign up for the little-known two-hour tour with Fishwheel Charters to get what might be your most authentic experience in the Klondike. Let owner-guides Dawn Kisoun and Tommy Taylor, members of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in First Nation, take you down the river to their family fish camp where you’ll hear stories, taste fresh bannock, and check out the fish wheel. “It’s the real deal,” says Paul Robitaille at the Klondike Visitors Association. “It’s the best way to get that connection with the local people and culture here.”

Ride the ferry back and forth: The 50-year-old George Black Ferry does more than just shuttle foot traffic and vehicles across the Yukon River to the Top of the World Highway, or off-grid West Dawson—it’s a place where people slow down to connect with each other for 15 minutes. “And why not?” says
Robitaille. “People just love that boat.”

Rest in paddlewheel. Photo by Murray Lundberg

Visit the paddlewheel graveyard: You may think you are walking through the ribcage of a brontosaurus overgrown with weeds. In fact, it’s the haunting remains and rusting machinery of once-majestic sternwheelers dumped to decay here in a pile on the banks of the Yukon River. This is the Sternwheel Graveyard, an unsigned, 10-minute walk away from the ferry terminal on the west shore.
Visit at your own risk.

No pooches were harmed to make this drink. Photo courtesy Humane Society Dawson

Shoot a dog ball highball: Everybody’s heard of the Sour Toe Cocktail—it’s a Dawson City rite of passage to touch your lips to the desiccated toe. Now there’s this: the Dog Ball Highball. A pair of dog testicles in a glass of Yukon Jack for you to shoot back. “People think we’re crazy, but it’s a hoot and it’s such a good fundraiser,” says Kim Martens, shelter coordinator at Humane Society Dawson. She offers her oral dog ball experience roughly six nights a year at various drinking establishments and charges $5—not including your drink. Check the HSD Facebook page for the next scheduled event.

 

Related Articles

UP HERE - JUL/AUG 2025

Photo by Mark Kelly

Let's Go Crazy

Don’t hold back this summer. We have adventures for every level of madness

October 16th, 2025 October 16th, 2025

Tear Sheet

Photos by Pat Kane

Rocking the Folks

“For Yellowknifers, it’s the best weekend of the year.”

October 16th, 2025 October 16th, 2025

UP HERE - MAY/JUN 2025

Photo by Rhiannon Russell

I’ll (Probably) Never Do This Again

You can't prove you're not getting old by riding a bike up a mountain

October 16th, 2025 October 16th, 2025

Tear Sheet

Up Here Magazine May/June 1990

To The Heart of Nahanni

October 16th, 2025 October 16th, 2025

UP HERE - SEP/OCT 2024

SherryBoat

Adventure on the Doorstep

WHY GREAT SLAVE LAKE IS THE BEST BACKYARD YOU COULD ASK FOR.

October 16th, 2025 October 16th, 2025

UP HERE MAGAZINE - JULY/AUGUST 2024

Yvonne

How Yellowknife got its Wings

The capital of the NWT is a haven for private pilots and has been for 60 years. The secret of its success? Simple: Flying is a love story.

October 16th, 2025 October 16th, 2025
Newsletter sign-up promo image.

Stay in Touch.

Our weekly newsletter brings all the best circumpolar stories right to your inbox.

Up Here magazine cover

Subscribe Now

Our magazine showcases award-winning writing and spectacular northern photos.

Subscribe

Footer Navigation

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimers & Legal

Contact Information

Up Here Publishing
P.O Box 1343
Yellowknife, NT
X1A 2N9  Canada
Email: info@uphere.ca

Social Links

Facebook Instagram
Funded by the Government of Canada