Roads from Likely lead southwest to Williams Lake, northwest to Quesnel, south to Horsefly, and north to Barkerville.
(Hydraulic monitors are high-pressure and high-volume water nozzles used to wash down large volumes of gold bearing gravel in placer mining.
Today, the Bullion Pit stands as an astonishing man-made canyon measuring 3 kilometres long by 400 feet (120 m) deep.
One was shot at Beaver Valley, near Likely, by a prospector named Morris when he mistook it for a giant grizzly bear.
One of the Twin Giants (huge Vulcan steam shovels purchased in 1906 to dig a canal from Spanish Lake to the Bullion Mines) lies there.
Transported first by rail then by wagon to a site below the dam on Spanish Lake, they were assembled and placed on railway tracks to begin digging the ditch.