Tetachuck Falls. be had by trolling. Stiff westerly winds prevail in the afternoons, but rarely to the extent where they interfere with travel, or with one’s enjoyment of the splendid panorama of this brooding solitude of waters. The area enclosed by the main group is thickly studded with smaller lakes, little tarns hidden among the glittering peaks of the Quanchus, and the entire circuit is scenic to a degree which is quite beyond exag- geration. Tetachuck Lake is 22 miles long, and from ¥2 to 114 miles in width, and much frequented by moose and bear. It inclines to the south-west, and at its western extremity is entered by the Tetachuck River, a smoothly-flowing stream unless for a short “ chute ” half-way along its course. ‘Tetachuck is at a considerably higher elevation than Euchu Lake, into which it empties over a series of falls, one of them—Teta- chuck Falls—about 15 feet high, but between Tetachuck and Eutsuk Lakes the difference is small, the latter being higher by some 30 feet. Eutsuk Lake, 47 miles long and from 1 to 314 miles wide, is grandly scenic, and the fishing is excellent. Its southern shore is deeply in- dented, with bold promontories and innumerable bays and inlets, one of which has two quite considerable islands, John Buchan and Lady Susan. The western extremity is thrust like a wedge into the mountains with Twenty-three.