Gipsy Lake Wildland Provincial Park Explained

Gipsy Lake Wildland Provincial Park
Iucn Category:Ib
Map:Canada Alberta#Canada
Relief:1
Map Width:200
Location:Wood Buffalo, Alberta, Canada
Nearest City:Fort McMurray
Coordinates:56.4953°N -110.3878°W
Area:35766.3ha
Area Ref:[1]
Established:20 December 2000[2]
Governing Body:Alberta Forestry, Parks and Tourism

Gipsy Lake Wildland Provincial Park is a wildland provincial park in Wood Buffalo, northern Alberta, Canada. The park was established on 20 December 2000[2] and has an area of .[1] In the Lower Athabasca Regional Plan, Gipsy Lake is planned to be significantly extended into the new Gipsy-Gordon Wildland Provincial Park with an area of 158542ha.[3] Although the Lower Athabasca Regional Plan has been adopted, the new Gipsy-Gordon park has not been created.[4]

Location

The park consists of three separated parcels of land surrounding Gipsy, Birch, Gordon and Shortt lakes.[1] [5] It is located south of Fort McMurray on Highway 63, then southeast on Highway 881. The park is remote; access during winter months only is east on Winter Road 956 for approximately . The remaining trail into the park is via four-wheel drive or snowmobile. Summer access is via aircraft only.[5]

Ecology

The park is in the Central Mixedwood subregion of the Boreal Forest natural region of Alberta. The park preserves a lake and wetland complex. Birch Lake contains a diverse wetland habitat. Birch and Gipsy lakes contain nesting sites for the American white pelican. Gordon Lake is one of the most important waterfowl breeding, moulting, and staging areas in the region. Double-crested cormorants nest on an island in Birch Lake.[5]

Activities

The park has no developed facilities so only wildlife viewing and random backcountry camping are available. Off-highway vehicles and snowmobiles are permitted on existing trails during frozen conditions only. Aircraft access and landing in the park requires authorization. Hunting is allowed with proper permits. Fishing and boating on the lakes are permitted. The Gypsy Lake Lodge is a fly-in fishing lodge located within the park.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gipsy Lake Wildland Provincial Park . Alberta Parks . 29 November 2000 .
  2. Web site: O.C. 511/2000 . Orders in Council . Alberta King's Printer . 20 December 2000 . 13 January 2023.
  3. Book: Lower Athabasca Regional Plan 2012–2022 . Alberta Government . August 2012 . 84 . 978-1-4601-0538-2 .
  4. Web site: Find a Park . Alberta Parks . 16 February 2021 . 13 January 2023 .
  5. Web site: Gipsy Lake Wildland Provincial Park . Alberta Parks . 13 January 2023 . 22 July 2022.