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Kootenay National Park is a national park of Canada in southeastern British Columbia. The park consists of 1,406 km 2 (543 sq mi) of the Canadian Rockies , including parts of the Kootenay and Park mountain ranges , the Kootenay River and the entirety of the Vermilion River .
Park name Regional districts Coordinates Size Established Remarks; ha acres Akamina-Kishinena Provincial Park: East Kootenay: 10,921.5 26,988 1995 Beaver Creek Provincial Park
Floe Lake is a lake in Kootenay National Park, British Columbia, Canada. The lake is accessible by a 10.7 km [1] hiking trail that leaves from a marked trailhead on highway 93 or the Rockwall Trail. There is a backcountry campground at the lake as well as a Warden's cabin staffed by Parks Canada.
Kootenay Lake Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada.It encompasses five widely dispersed parks around Kootenay Lake: Kootenay Lake Provincial Park (Davis Creek site), Kootenay Lake Provincial Park (Lost Ledge sites), Kootenay Lake Provincial Park (Midge Creek site), Kootenay Lake Provincial Park (Campbell Bay site), and Kootenay Lake Provincial Park (Coffee Creek site).
Boothman's Oxbow Provincial Park: PP Kootenay Boundary: 43 110 2007 Southeast (Columbia River–Kettle River) Border Lake Provincial Park: PP Kitimat-Stikine: 814 2,010 2001 Northwest (North coast) Boulder Creek Provincial Park: PP Kitimat-Stikine: 53 130 2000 Northwest (Skeena River) Boundary Creek Provincial Park: PP Kootenay Boundary: 2 4.9 1956
Kikomun Creek is situated in the southern region of the Rocky Mountain Trench, on the eastern shores of a man-made reservoir along the Kootenay River.This 685-hectare park provides recreational access to Lake Koocanusa, whose name is supposedly a combination of Kootenay, Canada and United States.
The Neil Colgan Hut is an alpine hut located at an altitude of 2,957 metres (9,701 ft) on the Fay Glacier in Kootenay National Park in British Columbia, Canada.It is in a col between Mount Little and Mount Bowlen, one of the peaks overlooking the Valley of the Ten Peaks.
The Kootenay rises on the northeast side of the Beaverfoot Range of southeastern British Columbia and flows initially southeast through a marshy valley in Kootenay National Park. The river becomes significantly larger at its confluence with the Vermilion River, which is actually the larger of the two where they meet near Kootenay Crossing.