Ride of a Lifetime
Almost 30,000 kilometers.
That’s what the odometer reads after filming Season 2 of Finding Nowhere - Which concluded the week of April 18th 2026.
30,000 kilometers of backroads and highways, cutting through some of the most breathtaking country British Columbia has to offer. Past quiet lakes and long stretches of timber. Through valleys that open wide and mountains that close in just as fast.
We passed through towns—some iconic, some nearly forgotten, and others still figuring out what they’re becoming.
From gravel roads to long, empty highways, Season 2 took us north to Dawson Creek and the surrounding Peace Country. West from Williams Lake into ranch country, pushing toward the edge of the Chilcotin Plateau. South into Fernie in the heart of the Kootenays. Further still, along the Stikine River and out toward the coast at Kitimat. Then back through the dry, rolling hills of Cache Creek.
Each place is different. Each one shaping the story in its own way.
If the journey is the destination, then the roads of BC are as much a part of this story as the hunts themselves.
They connect it all—the miles, the people, the places—and somewhere along the way, they start to change how you see it.
Taking us there was Bannister Ford Dawson Creek and Bannister GM Dawson Creek. Truthfully, there’s no version of Season 2 that happens without them.
30,000 kilometers of everything—endless highway miles, rough backroads, long days in the snow—and not a single hiccup. No issues, ever. Just turn the key and keep going.
My Ford Tremor 150, and Ryan’s GMC—our chariots for the season. Hauling gear, guides, camera crews, and every story we filmed along the way. At times even pulling floats through small-town parades…because that’s just the kind of season it turned into.
They became more than just trucks. They were part of the rhythm of it all—the early starts, the long drives, the quiet moments between hunts… or even during them, when the cold pushed us back inside.
Everyone who rode in them started calling them the “Finding Nowhere trucks”—the kind of name you give something that stops feeling like a machine and starts feeling like a companion. And in a lot of ways, that’s exactly what they became.
And if you’re going to spend that much time on the road, you start to appreciate the little things: comfort, reliability, and knowing you’ll get where you’re going without thinking twice about it. Yes, that plug. But yes, it’s also true!
As we’ve said before in our Hunt Your Dreams blog, projects like this don’t happen without the people who make it possible—the towns, the restaurants and cafés, the fall fairs and rodeos, the local experts of the wilderness, and the sponsors who help bring all the pieces together. Than you Mark of Bannister GMC and thank you Aaron of Ford Bannister of Dawson Creek for making the ride the of a lifetime possible
We hope the trucks enjoyed the miles as much as we did riding in them. And as characters in the show themselves, you’ll see them in action throughout Season 2.