Cache Creek is a historic transportation junction and incorporated village 354 kilometres (220 mi) northeast of Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada.
This community is also the point at which a small stream, once known as Riviere de la Cache, joins the Bonaparte River.
[6] Although still very active with traffic, Cache Creek was extremely busy for a few decades before the Trans-Canada Highway was superseded by the newer and shorter Coquihalla Highway, which bypasses the Fraser and Thompson Canyons between Hope and Kamloops via Merritt, about 97 kilometres (60 mi) southeast.
The village of Cache Creek is also served by a community television station (run by the Ash-Creek Television Society), CH4472 in the neighbouring town of Ashcroft on VHF channel 4 (with an effective radiated power of 74 watts at 15 metres (49 feet) above ground level), with a repeater (CH4473 on VHF 8, with an effective radiated power of 49 watts at 45 metres (150 feet)) in Cache Creek, British Columbia.
The town is also served by CFMA-FM 105.9, a community radio station run by the Ash-Creek Television Society.