The main lodge houses the guest and staff dining rooms, kitchen, and a cozy guest lounge with satellite television where guests can catch up on the news, cheer-on their favorite team, or relax and watch a movie.

The two four-bedroom guest cabins are fully-modern, accommodating eight guests each. The cabins are configured for the maximum comfort of our guests. The four guest bedrooms each have two twin beds and electric baseboard heat. Two full bathrooms, each with either a large shower stall or a bathtub / shower combination ensure minimal waiting times for that hot shower after the day’s hunting. Each cabin has a large common room heated by a glass-front high-efficiency wood-burning stove. The common area is furnished with comfortable couches and chairs as well as a large pine dining room table where guests gather to enjoy appetizers and a pre-dinner cocktail before taking the short walk from their cabin to the lodge dining room. A spacious mud / gun room equipped with a gun rack and plenty of coat hangers at the entrance to each cabin provides a convenient place for our hunters to leave their boots, guns, hunting gear and outerwear.

The area surrounding the Kaskattama River is an integral part of Canadian history. Kaskattama was originally built by the York Factory branch of the Hudson Bay Company as a fur-trading outpost in 1923. Five years later, when Kaska wasn't profitable, it was abandoned. Kaska's main lodge was once the storeroom and warehouse of the original post. The remains of the old trading post and settlement can be found several miles up the Kaskattama River from the lodge.

Accommodating a maximum of sixteen guests per trip, Kaska's two modern four-bedroom cabins look over the Kaskattama River. Each cabin is equipped with a mud / gun room, large living room and two full washrooms with either a tub/shower or shower stall, electric baseboard heat in the bedrooms and high-efficiency wood burning stoves in the living rooms. The guest cabins provide clean, solid comfort in a rustic wilderness camp atmosphere.

The two four-bedroom guest cabins are fully-modern, accommodating eight guests each. The cabins are configured for the maximum comfort of our guests. The four guest bedrooms each have two twin beds and electric baseboard heat. Two full bathrooms, each with either a large shower stall or a bathtub / shower combination ensure minimal waiting times for that hot shower after the day’s hunting. Each cabin has a large common room heated by a glass-front high-efficiency wood-burning stove. The common area is furnished with comfortable couches and chairs as well as a large pine dining room table where guests gather to enjoy appetizers and a pre-dinner cocktail before taking the short walk from their cabin to the lodge dining room. A spacious mud / gun room equipped with a gun rack and plenty of coat hangers at the entrance to each cabin provides a convenient place for our hunters to leave their boots, guns, hunting gear and outerwear.

The area surrounding the Kaskattama River is an integral part of Canadian history. Kaskattama was originally built by the York Factory branch of the Hudson Bay Company as a fur-trading outpost in 1923. Five years later, when Kaska wasn't profitable, it was abandoned. Kaska's main lodge was once the storeroom and warehouse of the original post. The remains of the old trading post and settlement can be found several miles up the Kaskattama River from the lodge.

Accommodating a maximum of sixteen guests per trip, Kaska's two modern four-bedroom cabins look over the Kaskattama River. Each cabin is equipped with a mud / gun room, large living room and two full washrooms with either a tub/shower or shower stall, electric baseboard heat in the bedrooms and high-efficiency wood burning stoves in the living rooms. The guest cabins provide clean, solid comfort in a rustic wilderness camp atmosphere.


Lodging. . .
Kaska Goose Lodge is an oasis of comfort in the rugged wilderness of the Hudson Bay Lowlands. Kaska’s main lodge and two well-appointed guest cabins can accommodate a maximum of sixteen guests in total comfort. The camp faces southeast and has a picturesque view overlooking the Kaskattama River

