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This is a list of protected areas of Saskatchewan. Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park Main Beach Kenosee Lake, Moose Mountain Provincial Park Fort Carlton Provincial Park Big Bear at Fort Pitt, Saskatchewan Island on Lac la Ronge Saskatchewan Landing Provincial Park
Courtenay Lake [1] is a lake in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It is situated in the Churchill River Upland ecozone [2] in the north-eastern corner of the Northern Saskatchewan Administration District. The lake is set in a forest of jack pine and most of the eastern shore is part of a provincial campground.
Writing-on-Stone Park contains the greatest concentration of rock art on the North American Great Plains. [citation needed] There are over 50 petroglyph sites and thousands of works. The park also showcases a North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) outpost reconstructed on its original site. The original outpost was burned down by persons unknown ...
Makwa Lake Provincial Park has three separate campgrounds with a combined 260 campsites. All three campsites have beach access while the largest is Stabler Point Campground with over 200 campsites. Stabler Point Campground is located on Little Jumbo Lake and is well treed has a sewer-dump, showers, washrooms, and a picnic area. [4]
Saskatchewan Parks Narrow Hills Provincial Park [ 1 ] is a northern boreal forest provincial recreational park in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan . [ 2 ] It is located in a hilly plateau called the Cub Hills and contains several recreational facilities and over 25 accessible lakes within its boundaries. [ 3 ]
The local Facebook group HVL Rocks has members painting and hiding rocks. They have been found all across the U.S. and even overseas.
Saskatchewan Landing Provincial Park [1] (often shortened to Sask Landing [2]) is a provincial park in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.It is in the valley of the South Saskatchewan River at the western end of Lake Diefenbaker in the RM of Saskatchewan Landing No. 167, about 50 kilometres (31 mi) north of Swift Current. [3]
There are campgrounds, hiking trails, and multiple lakes accessible for recreation and fishing. Access to the park and its amenities is from Highway 21 . The Bronson Forest is in the boreal forest transition zone and is made up of trembling aspen, willow, balsam poplar, white spruce, jack pine, paper birch, and black spruce trees.