Swan Lake Provincial Park
Live · 3m ago

Swan Lake Provincial Park

British Columbia45 sitesBC Parks Website

Campsite Availability

3m ago
34
Openings Found
2
Dates Tracked
45
Total Sites
Apr 8
17
38% open
Apr 9
17
38% open

Park Features

44 Campsites1 Picnic Area
RV Friendly
Up to 68ft
Van / Camper
Tent Camping
Fire Pits
Picnic Tables
Pull-Through
Pets Welcome
Double Sites
Group sites available — up to 80 people

About Swan Lake

A small picturesque lakeshore park that offers boating, swimming, a grassy campground and day-use area, baseball diamonds and playground area.

Established Date: June 19, 1918
Park Size: 82 hectares

•History: Established in 1918, it has the distinction of being British Columbia’s third oldest park.
•Conservation: Swan Lake Park provides representation of the Kiskatinaw Plateau ecosection and is covered by the boreal white and black spruce biogeoclimatic zone. Vegetation consists predominately of trembling aspen, balsam poplar, white spruce and willows. Swan Lake is the largest water body in the Alberta plateau. The maximum depth is 7.6 metres and the mean depth is 3.1 metres.
•Wildlife:The occasional moose and white tail or mule deer may pass through the park. However, black bears do frequent the area. Muskrat and beaver can be seen around the lakeshore and the Tupper River which drains into the lake through the park. If you are interested in bird watching, an abundance of waterfowl and migratory bird populations congregate at Swan Lake. An example of birds that frequent Swan Lake include common loon, red-necked grebe, western grebe, trumpeter swan, American widgeon, sandpipers, bufflehead, coot, gulls, eastern kingbird, warblers, blackbirds, killdeer, hooded merganser, red-eyed and warbling vireo, hermit thrush, swallows, yellowlegs, scoters, lesser scaup and goldeneyes, just to name a few. Swan Lake is popular with local anglers. Sport fish include walleye, northern pike, yellow perch and burbot. Northern pike spawn in the spring among lakeshore weeds. Yellow perch, which have been stocked, are also weed spawners, but spawn later in spring. The lake is too shallow and too warm to support cold water salmonid species such as trout and char.

Getting There

Located 35 kilometres southeast of Dawson Creek, 2 km gravel access off Highway #2.
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