Richseen Private Journeys · Canada

Canadian Rockies: A Scenic Rail Journey

Panoramic Rail — Vancouver · Fraser Canyon · Banff
6 Days · 5 Nights
From USD 10,000+ per person
"Rocky Mountaineer — the Canadian Rockies in daylight, through glass-domed carriages, at the pace the landscape demands."
The Journey

Mountain Light
by Rail

The Canadian Rockies are the most dramatic mountain landscape in North America — and one of the most extraordinary on Earth. The peaks of Banff and Jasper National Parks rise to over 3,000 metres above sea level and are visible from distances that make their scale difficult to process; the valleys between them contain glacial lakes of a turquoise colour that no photograph adequately reproduces; and the light on the Rocky Mountain snowfields in the late afternoon produces one of the most compelling natural displays available to a traveller who is paying attention. To move through this landscape at train speed, in daylight, through the glass dome of a carriage designed to eliminate the distinction between interior and exterior — is to see it at the pace and from the perspective that it deserves.

The Rocky Mountaineer — the most awarded luxury tourist train in North America — operates exclusively in daylight: the train stops overnight in Kamloops or Quesnel to ensure that no significant landscape is passed in darkness. Every carriage is glass-domed, providing unobstructed views from the upper deck; the Gold Leaf service adds a separate dining room on the lower level, with meals prepared from regional British Columbia and Alberta ingredients. The train is not attempting to replicate the Orient-Express formula — it is doing something more specific and more honest: maximising the experience of moving through the most beautiful mountain railway route in the world.

This six-day itinerary frames the two-day train journey between Vancouver and Banff. One night at the Fairmont Pacific Rim in Vancouver — the most considered address in the city, on the waterfront between the Convention Centre and the Canada Place sails — provides the Pacific prelude. Two nights at the Fairmont Banff Springs — the Canadian Pacific Railway's original 1888 castle hotel in the Bow River Valley, with Sulphur Mountain visible above and the Banff townsite below — provides the mountain conclusion. Two days in Banff are the minimum required to understand what the national park has spent 140 years protecting.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with the Canadian Rockies

The Rocky Mountaineer operates exclusively in daylight — so that no significant landscape passes unobserved.

01
Daylight Only — No Significant Landscape Passes in Darkness
The Rocky Mountaineer stops overnight in Kamloops to ensure the complete route is seen in full light — the most considered operational decision in luxury rail travel, made when Whistler Blackcomb was still a ski hill and the Canadian Rockies were still undiscovered by the world.
02
Gold Leaf Glass Dome — Interior Dissolved into Landscape
The upper deck observation dome that eliminates the distinction between inside and outside — the Fraser Canyon, the Thompson River, the Selkirk Range, and the Rockies themselves seen from within a glass carriage designed so that the view is the primary fact of the experience.
03
Lake Louise — Turquoise That No Photograph Reproduces
The glacially fed lake whose colour — produced by suspended rock flour that refracts light differently at every angle — is the most photographed single view in Canada and the one that consistently exceeds what those photographs led visitors to expect.
04
Fairmont Banff Springs — The 1888 Castle in the Bow Valley
The Canadian Pacific Railway's original castle hotel — built in 1888 when the railway needed a destination worthy of the journey — with Sulphur Mountain above, the Bow River below, and two days to understand what 140 years of national park protection has produced.
05
Columbia Icefield — 325 Square Kilometres of Ancient Ice
The largest icefield in the Rocky Mountains, straddling the Continental Divide — the Athabasca Glacier accessible from the Icefields Parkway, where the meltwater feeds rivers that reach both the Pacific and the Arctic Ocean.
06
Vancouver — The Pacific Prelude at Fairmont Pacific Rim
One night on the Vancouver waterfront before the mountains begin — the Convention Centre sails, the North Shore mountains visible across the inlet, and the city that consistently ranks among the most liveable on Earth as the considered opening to the journey inland.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🚂
Rocky Mountaineer — All-Daylight Journeys
The most awarded luxury tourist train in North America — operating exclusively in daylight so that no significant landscape is passed unseen. Glass-domed carriages with unobstructed upper-deck views; Gold Leaf service with a separate dining room on the lower level; meals from regional BC and Alberta ingredients. The Fraser Canyon, the Thompson River, and the Rocky Mountains in sequence.
02🏔️
Fairmont Banff Springs — The Castle in the Valley
The Canadian Pacific Railway's original 1888 castle hotel in the Bow River Valley — a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1985 as part of the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks. Sulphur Mountain above; the Bow River below; the Banff townsite accessible by foot. The most recognisable hotel building in Canada, and the most historically significant address in the national park system.
03💎
Lake Louise — The Turquoise Standard
Lake Louise is the most-photographed lake in Canada — and the photographs do not prepare the visitor for the actual turquoise of the glacially fed water, which is the result of rock flour suspended in the meltwater from the Victoria Glacier above. The Chateau Lake Louise rises at the eastern shore; the Plain of Six Glaciers trail above provides the view of both the lake and the glacial cirque that feeds it.
04🦌
Banff Wildlife — The National Park's Residents
Banff National Park was established in 1885 — the first national park in Canada and the third in the world — to protect the hot springs and the surrounding Rocky Mountain ecosystem. The park's wildlife: elk in the Bow Valley meadows, grizzly bears in the upper subalpine zone, wolves in the Cascade Valley, and bighorn sheep on the highway shoulders with the confidence of animals that have been legally protected for 140 years.
05🌊
Vancouver — Pacific Gateway
One night at the Fairmont Pacific Rim — the most considered address on the Vancouver waterfront, positioned between the Convention Centre and the Canada Place cruise terminal with views across Burrard Inlet to the North Shore mountains. Vancouver's Stanley Park for the seawall walk that circumnavigates 400 hectares of old-growth forest on a peninsula surrounded by the Pacific; Granville Island Market for the Pacific Northwest produce culture that has made Vancouver one of the most serious food cities in North America.
06⚖️
Relaxed Pace — Landscape as the Destination
The Rocky Mountaineer's daylight-only philosophy extends to the entire itinerary: two nights in Banff rather than one; mornings at leisure rather than scheduled; the Icefields Parkway at the pace the 230-kilometre drive between Banff and Jasper deserves. The Canadian Rockies are not a backdrop — they are the point of the exercise, and the itinerary is constructed accordingly.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Rocky Mountaineer operates from April through October — with June through September offering the optimal combination of clear skies, accessible trails, and the wildlife activity that the shoulder seasons produce. July and August are peak season; June offers the best wildflower displays on the subalpine meadows; September brings the golden larch season, when the forests of the upper Bow Valley turn yellow in the most extraordinary display of autumn colour in the Canadian mountains.

Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Your private consultant will tailor each day to your preferences, pace, and passions.

Day 1
Vancouver Arrival — Fairmont Pacific Rim
Private transfer from Vancouver International Airport to the Fairmont Pacific Rim — positioned on the waterfront in Coal Harbour, with views across Burrard Inlet to the North Shore mountains and the floatplane terminal visible from the hotel terrace. Evening: the Yaletown neighbourhood for the restaurants and wine bars that represent contemporary Vancouver at its most considered, or the seawall walk south from the Convention Centre as the sun descends behind the North Shore range.
Fairmont Pacific Rim, Vancouver
Day 2
Embark Rocky Mountaineer — Vancouver to Kamloops
Morning: the Granville Island Public Market for the Pacific Northwest produce culture that has made Vancouver one of the most food-serious cities in North America; or Stanley Park for the seawall walk that circumnavigates 400 hectares of old-growth forest. Mid-morning: private transfer to Vancouver's Rocky Mountaineer Station and embarkation aboard the Gold Leaf service. The train departs through the Fraser Valley; the Fraser Canyon appears as the mountains begin on the eastern side of the coastal range. Lunch in the glass-dome upper deck as the Thompson River canyon opens above Hell's Gate — the narrowest point of the Fraser River, where 200 million litres per minute pass through a 35-metre gorge. Arrival at Kamloops for the overnight stop.
Rocky Mountaineer / Kamloops
Day 3
Kamloops to Banff — The Rockies Arrive
The second day of the journey — the most dramatic. The train departs Kamloops in the early morning and moves east through the high desert landscape of the Thompson Plateau; the Rocky Mountains appear on the eastern horizon two hours out of Kamloops, growing progressively larger as the train approaches the Continental Divide. The Spiral Tunnels near Field — two complete loops of track built inside the mountains in 1909 to reduce the gradient of the Kicking Horse Pass — are visible from the upper dome as the train loops inside the mountain. Arrival at Banff Station as the Bow Valley opens ahead and the Fairmont Banff Springs appears above the treeline.
Fairmont Banff Springs
Day 4
Banff — Lake Louise and the Valley
Morning drive to Lake Louise — 57 kilometres north of Banff on the Bow Valley Parkway, where the elk are most frequently seen and the Chateau Lake Louise is visible from the lake approach road before the lake itself appears. The lake in the morning: the turquoise water, the Victoria Glacier above, and the Plain of Six Glaciers trail for the guests who walk. Afternoon: return through the Bow Valley for the Banff townsite — the most visited destination in the Canadian national park system, with a main street that has maintained its mountain town character despite the four million annual visitors who require it to.
Fairmont Banff Springs
Day 5
Icefields Parkway — The 230-Kilometre Drive
The Icefields Parkway — the 230-kilometre drive between Banff and Jasper along the spine of the Rocky Mountains — is the most scenically extraordinary road drive in North America. Peyto Lake, whose turquoise colour from the viewpoint above is the most intense of any lake in the Rockies. The Columbia Icefield — the largest icefield in the Rocky Mountains south of Alaska, where the Athabasca Glacier descends to within 300 metres of the highway. Jasper townsite for lunch before the return south through the late afternoon light on the western faces of the mountains. Return to the Fairmont Banff Springs for the final evening.
Fairmont Banff Springs
Day 6
Departure — The Rockies Recede
Morning walk in the Banff townsite or a final drive along the Bow Valley Parkway before private transfer to Calgary International Airport for international departure. The Rocky Mountains are visible from the aircraft window until the foothills give way to the Alberta prairie and the mountains disappear behind the western horizon — which requires longer than expected, because the mountains are larger than they look from the valley floor.
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Coal Harbour, Vancouver, Canada
Vancouver — 1 Night
Fairmont Pacific Rim
Coal Harbour, Vancouver, Canada
The most considered address on the Vancouver waterfront — positioned in Coal Harbour between the Convention Centre and Canada Place, with views across Burrard Inlet to the North Shore mountains. The rooftop pool and terrace provide the most dramatically sited urban swimming experience in British Columbia; the Botanist restaurant represents Vancouver's Pacific Northwest cuisine at its most intelligent.
Vancouver to Banff — Canadian Rockies
In Transit — 1 Night
Rocky Mountaineer — Gold Leaf Service
Vancouver · Fraser Canyon · Kamloops · Banff
The most awarded luxury tourist train in North America — operating exclusively in daylight through glass-domed carriages. Gold Leaf service: a separate dining room on the lower level, meals from regional BC and Alberta ingredients, and the upper-deck dome for unobstructed views of the Fraser Canyon, the Thompson River, and the Rocky Mountains in sequence. The train stops overnight in Kamloops; the journey resumes at dawn.
Bow River Valley, Banff, Alberta
Banff — 2 Nights
Fairmont Banff Springs
Bow River Valley, Banff, Alberta, Canada
The Canadian Pacific Railway's original 1888 castle hotel — a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks, positioned above the confluence of the Bow and Spray Rivers with Sulphur Mountain visible above and the Banff townsite below. The most historically significant hotel address in the Canadian national park system, and the most recognisable building in the Rockies.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🚂
Rail
Rocky Mountaineer — Glass Dome Upper Deck
The upper deck of the Rocky Mountaineer's Gold Leaf carriages — glass-domed, fully air-conditioned, with seating arranged to maximise the view in both directions simultaneously. The Fraser Canyon below the tracks, the Thompson River alongside, the Spiral Tunnels visible from the dome as the train loops inside the mountain: the most scenically rewarding carriage interior currently operating in North America.
💎
Lake
Lake Louise — The Turquoise Shore
Lake Louise at first light — before the shuttle buses begin arriving from Banff and the lake's eastern shore fills with the visitors who have come specifically to photograph what the photographers before them have made look inevitable. The turquoise colour changes with the light and the angle; the Victoria Glacier above provides the source; the Plain of Six Glaciers trail provides the perspective. One of the most extraordinary natural settings in the western hemisphere.
🏔️
Drive
Icefields Parkway — North America's Finest Drive
The 230-kilometre Icefields Parkway between Banff and Jasper — Peyto Lake from the viewpoint above; the Columbia Icefield and the Athabasca Glacier descending to within 300 metres of the highway; the Sunwapta and Athabasca Falls; and the particular quality of the Rocky Mountain light on the western faces of the peaks in the late afternoon. The most scenically extraordinary road drive in North America.
🦌
Wildlife
Banff National Park — 140 Years of Protection
Banff National Park has been legally protecting its wildlife since 1885 — 140 years of elk, grizzly bears, wolves, and bighorn sheep living in an ecosystem that the highway and the townsite bisect without entirely disrupting. The Bow Valley at dawn, when the elk come down to the river meadows; the Lake Minnewanka road for the bighorn sheep that winter on its slopes; the wildlife crossing overpasses that have reduced vehicle collisions by 80% since 1996.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

Begin Your Story

Craft Your
Private Journey

Every detail — from your first evening on the Vancouver waterfront to your final morning in the Bow River Valley — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

From USD 10,000+ per person

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