McDougall Lake explained

McDougall Lake
Pushpin Map:British Columbia
Coords:52.22°N -119.91°W
Inflow:File Creek
Outflow:File Creek
Basin Countries:Canada
Length:6.71NaN1
Width:1.21NaN1
Elevation:11520NaN0
Islands:none
Cities:none

McDougall Lake is a lake in Wells Gray Provincial Park in east-central British Columbia, Canada. It drains through File Creek into Murtle Lake.

Naming

McDougall Lake and McDougall Falls on the Murtle River were named for Pete McDougal who homesteaded in the Clearwater River Valley from 1913 to 1936. The different spelling of these names has evolved over the years.[1]

Access

There is no road or trail to McDougall Lake. Some maps show a trail from Murtle Lake up File Creek, but it has been impassable since the 1980s. The Kostal Lake trail from Clearwater Lake was permanently closed by B.C. Parks in 2013. Float planes and helicopters are allowed to land at McDougall Lake with a permit from B.C. Parks.[1]

Canoes and kayaks can be portaged from Murtle Lake around some outlet rapids on File Creek, then one can paddle 41NaN1 upstream. The creek is impassable at a log jam, and a flagged route starts here. The hike to McDougall Lake is 61NaN1 and takes about 3 hours cross-country over the lava flows from Kostal Volcano.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Neave, Roland (2023). Exploring Wells Gray Park, 7th edition. Wells Gray Tours, Kamloops, BC. .