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Big Lake South State Recreation Site has a smaller campground, picnic sites, and boat launch. [9] Winter activities in both parks include cross country skiing, ice fishing, and dog mushing. The Rocky Lake State Recreation Site is a 49 acres (20 ha) park with a campground, picnic areas, and lake access.
Logo of the Alaska State Park system Campsite at Bluberry Lake SRS in the Chugach Mountains Denali seen from Denali State Park. Alaska’s state park system is managed by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation. The system contains over 120 units spanning 3,427,895 acres, making it far larger than any ...
The lake is home to the Harding Lake State Recreation Area a 325 acres (132 ha) park [4] which features a large campground, boat launch, and facilities for sports and outdoor games. [5] This is one of the oldest units in the Alaska State Park system, having been founded in 1967, [4] before the formal state park network was even in place. [6]
Ketchikan (Alaska) The "salmon capital of the world" is a quaint fishing village in the southeastern part of the state, home to Alaska's Native Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian peoples.
The Nancy Lake State Recreation Area was established by the Alaska State Legislature on July 6, 1966, to be set aside specifically for use as recreation. The day prior, the nearby Matanuska-Susitna Borough designated the area as a special land-use district in order to apply local zoning laws which would reinforce the recreational use of the land, and allow the borough to apply penalties for ...
Johnson Lake State Recreation Area is situated on 332 acres (134 ha) wooded acres on the shores of Johnson Lake. It has a large campground, picnic areas, [5] and access to the Tustumena Lake road, which ends at the Slackwater boat launch on the river with a small, free campground. [6]
Summit Lake (or Upper Summit Lake) [1] is located on Canyon Creek in the Chugach National Forest, Alaska, United States and is situated along the Seward Highway 10 miles (16 km) north-northeast of Moose Pass and about 23 miles (37 km) southwest of the Portage area of Anchorage. [2]
Tustumena Lake (Dena'ina: Dusdu Bena) is a lake on the west side of the Kenai Peninsula in southcentral Alaska, within Kenai National Wildlife Refuge and near the town of Kasilof. Access is only via the Kasilof River , as there are no roads that lead directly to the lake.