Hiking & Outdoors in
the Okanagan
Desert canyons, glacier-carved lakes, vineyard ridgelines, and alpine meadows โ all within an hour of each other. The Okanagan isn’t just a place to visit. It’s a place where outdoor access shapes how you live, every single day.
๐ Why the Okanagan
Where Outdoor Living Is Everyday Life
Most places make you drive to nature. In the Okanagan, you walk out your door and you’re in it. That’s not a tourism tagline โ it’s the reason so many people move here.
The Okanagan Valley stretches roughly 200 kilometres through British Columbia’s Southern Interior, from Osoyoos at the US border to Vernon in the north. It’s defined by a chain of deep, warm lakes, dry grassland hills, vineyard benchland, and forested mountains that climb into alpine terrain. The South Okanagan sits in Canada’s only pocket desert โ semi-arid terrain where sagebrush meets canyon walls and the sunshine hours rival anything in the country.
What makes this region different from most outdoor destinations is proximity. In Penticton, you can walk from downtown to the lakeshore in five minutes and be on a ridge trail overlooking two lakes in twenty. In Oliver, a paved river trail starts at the edge of town and runs through wine country. In Summerland, an extinct volcano with panoramic lake views sits right in the middle of town.
The climate extends everything. With over 2,000 hours of sunshine per year and mild winters in the valley bottom, the outdoor season here isn’t a window โ it’s the default. Golf runs March to November. Hiking works nearly year-round at lower elevations. And when winter hits, five ski resorts sit within 30 to 90 minutes of most South Okanagan communities.
๐๏ธ Get Outside
What You Can Do Out Here
The Okanagan isn’t a one-trick region. From quiet lakeside paddles to technical rock climbing, the range of outdoor activities here is what makes it a genuine year-round lifestyle โ not just a vacation.
๐ Find Your Fit
Best Towns for Outdoor Living
Every Okanagan community has its own outdoor personality. Where you buy depends on what kind of lifestyle you’re after. Here’s how the towns stack up for people who want to live actively.
๐ฅพ Trail Ideas
Signature Hikes & Trail Experiences
The Okanagan’s trail diversity is what sets it apart โ from 30-minute summit hikes to multi-day backcountry trips, desert boardwalks to historic railway routes. Here are some of the experiences that define outdoor life in this valley.
๐บ๏ธ Trail tip: Download the AllTrails app before you head out โ most Okanagan trails are well-documented with community reviews, difficulty ratings, and GPS maps. For South Okanagan trail conditions and road closures, check DriveBC.ca and local trail reports before venturing into backcountry areas.
๐ก More Than Recreation
Outdoor Access & Where You Live
For most people moving to the Okanagan, outdoor lifestyle isn’t a bonus โ it’s the reason. How you spend your mornings, evenings, and weekends depends entirely on which community you choose.
When buyers tell me they want to “live closer to nature,” I always ask: what does that actually look like for you? Because “close to outdoors” means very different things depending on the community. In Penticton, it means walking to two different lakes, cycling the KVR trail before work, and skiing at Apex on a Wednesday afternoon. In Oliver, it means quiet river trail mornings, vineyard cycling, and a canyon hike that starts from the edge of town.
In Keremeos, it means being 30 minutes from Cathedral Provincial Park’s alpine wilderness. In Princeton, it means two rivers, cross-country skiing at China Ridge, and access to Manning Park. In Kelowna, it means the most infrastructure โ urban trails, organized sports, and Big White skiing 45 minutes away.
Active retirees often gravitate toward Oliver, Summerland, and Osoyoos โ communities where the pace is gentler, the golf season is long, and the trails are accessible without being extreme. Families tend to prefer Penticton and Kelowna for the combination of outdoor access and school options. Remote workers who want wilderness on their doorstep look at Naramata, Kaleden, and Keremeos.
The point is: the Okanagan isn’t one outdoor lifestyle โ it’s a dozen, depending on where you land. And that’s exactly why it’s worth understanding each community before you buy.
Outdoor Quick-Match by Lifestyle
- Most variety: Penticton โ two lakes, trails, climbing, skiing nearby
- Wine country active: Oliver โ vineyard cycling, river trail, canyon hikes
- Golf lifestyle: Osoyoos โ long season, desert courses, warm lake
- Backcountry access: Keremeos โ Cathedral Park, Similkameen River
- Quiet lakefront: Summerland โ Giant’s Head, beach, orchard walks
- Trail culture: Naramata โ KVR trail, Three Blind Mice MTB
- Four-season affordable: Princeton โ rivers, skiing, Manning Park
- Urban + outdoors: Kelowna โ Knox Mountain, Myra Canyon, Big White
๐๏ธ Four Seasons of It
Outdoor Living, All Year
The Okanagan doesn’t shut down in October. Each season brings a different outdoor rhythm โ and the mild climate means the transitions are gentle, not abrupt.
โ Common Questions
Outdoor Okanagan, Answered
Whether you’re planning a move or just curious about what outdoor life actually looks like here โ these are the questions I hear most often from people considering the Okanagan.
Hiking
What are the best hiking areas in the Okanagan?
The South Okanagan offers desert canyon hikes like nสaylintn (McIntyre Bluff) near Oliver and Skaha Bluffs near Penticton. Giant’s Head Mountain in Summerland is a local favourite. The Kettle Valley Rail Trail connects Penticton to Naramata with stunning lake views. Cathedral Provincial Park near Keremeos has world-class alpine terrain.
Communities
Which Okanagan towns are best for outdoor lovers?
Penticton leads for variety โ two lakes, the KVR trail, Skaha Bluffs climbing, and Apex Mountain skiing. Oliver offers desert canyon hiking and river trails. Summerland has Giant’s Head Mountain and quiet lakefront access. Kelowna has Knox Mountain, Myra Canyon trestles, and Big White skiing nearby.
Lake Life
Is Penticton good for hiking and lake life?
Penticton is exceptional for both. The city sits between Okanagan Lake and Skaha Lake, with the Okanagan River Channel connecting them. Skaha Bluffs Provincial Park offers moderate to challenging trails and rock climbing. The KVR trail runs to Naramata through vineyard country. Apex Mountain Resort is 30 minutes away for skiing.
Retirement
Is the South Okanagan good for active retirees?
The South Okanagan is ideal for active retirees. The semi-arid climate means mild winters and extended outdoor seasons โ golf from March to November, hiking nearly year-round, and warm lake water from June through September. Communities like Oliver, Summerland, and Osoyoos offer walkable downtowns with easy trail and lake access.
Year-Round
What outdoor activities can you do year-round in the Okanagan?
Hiking, road cycling, and golf extend from early spring through late fall. Summer brings lake swimming, paddleboarding, kayaking, and fishing. Winter offers skiing at Big White, Silver Star, Apex, and Baldy Mountain, plus cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. Mountain biking and trail running work nearly year-round in the South Okanagan.
Access
Which communities have the best access to trails and lakes?
Penticton offers direct access to two lakes and the KVR trail from downtown. Summerland has lakefront parks and Giant’s Head Mountain within town limits. Naramata is surrounded by vineyard trails and KVR access. Oliver’s Hike and Bike Trail runs along the Okanagan River through the heart of town with Tuc-El-Nuit Lake steps away.
Skiing
Can you ski in the Okanagan?
Yes. The Okanagan has five ski resorts within driving distance. Big White near Kelowna is the largest with over 118 runs. Silver Star near Vernon offers a charming village feel. Apex Mountain near Penticton is known for uncrowded powder. Baldy Mountain near Oliver is a local favourite. Sun Peaks near Kamloops is Canada’s second-largest ski area.
Trails
What is the Kettle Valley Rail Trail?
The Kettle Valley Rail Trail is a historic rail-to-trail conversion running through the South Okanagan. The most popular section connects Penticton to Naramata, passing through vineyard benchland with panoramic Okanagan Lake views. The Myra Canyon section near Kelowna crosses 18 restored trestle bridges and two tunnels โ one of BC’s most iconic trail experiences.
๐ก Live Where You Play
Ready to Make the Okanagan Home?
I’m Riccardo Manazza โ a licensed REALTORยฎ with eXp Realty and a proud South Okanagan local. I help people find homes that match the outdoor lifestyle they’re after โ whether that’s trail access from your front door, lakefront mornings, or vineyard cycling on your lunch break. Let’s find where you belong.