Yukon Gold Game
The goal of Yukon Solitaire is to split all cards into four home stacks, one for each suit.
The cards in the home stacks must be placed in ascending order, from Ace to King.
You are currently playing game #11170. Best result for this game is winning in 88 moves. If you want to play a specific game, enter the number below (1-50000) and press the 'Start numbered game' button. Start numbered game. Yukon Solitaire. Use simple deck. All you need to start digging for some gold. Of course, you have to buy some gold claims from the well-known fields of Yukon. You can mine the gold-rich area between Yukon and Indian River, just nearby Dawson city, on Eldorado Creek, Quartz Creek, Dominion Creek, or Bonanza Creek.
Multiple cards can be moved from one column to another as long as they form a sequence at the join.
Sequences must be descending of alternating colors.
Only a group of cards headed by a King can be moved to an empty space on the table.
Did you know?
The first inhabitants of the Yukon arrived using the Bering land bridge from Asia around 20,000 years ago.
The woolly mammoth, Yukon horse, scimitar cat and saiga antelope used to roam the Yukon.
Explorers from Russian started trading with the First Nations people in the 18th century.
The discovery of gold in a tributary of the Klondike River near Dawson City in 1896 started the Klondike Gold Rush.
33,897 people live there according to the 2011 census, almost the same as back in 1900. The capital and largest city is Whitehorse (population 27,000).
The word Yukon comes from the native Athapaskan word 'Yu-kun-ah' meaning great river. The river is 3600 kilometres long and you can canoe 2,050 miles from Whitehorse to the Bering Strait.
The entire territory has 185,000 caribou, 50,000 moose, 25,000 mountain sheep, 10,000 black bears, 7000 grizzlies and 5000 wolves. And not forgetting the 70 trillion mosquitoes and black flies buzzing around.
It's home to Canada’s highest mountain: Mount Logan, at 19,551 feet.
Yukon Gold Casino Game
The central part of Yukon receives 6.5 inches (165 mm) of rain per year, less than Arizona.