Nancy Lake State Recreation Area Explained

Nancy Lake State Recreation Area
Map:USA Alaska
Relief:1
Location:Alaska, US
Area Acre:22685
Established:July 6, 1966
Visitation Num:40,000
Governing Body:Alaska Department of Natural Resources
Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation

Nancy Lake State Recreation Area is a park near Willow in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough of Alaska. Founded on July 6, 1966, and set aside specifically for recreational use, the park is home to more than a hundred lakes as well as extensive wetlands. The landscape of the park was crafted in glacial retreats around 9,000 years ago, and around this same time the first inhabitants likely moved into the area. They were eventually followed by Russian exploration, and later increases in white settlement due to commerce and the presence of gold.

The Nancy Lake State Recreation Site is an adjacent and smaller site established in 1967. Throughout both, water related activities are a popular draw for visitors, with the larger and smaller parks hosting as many as 40,000 and 12,000 guests annually.

Flora and fauna in the area includes a variety of tree and wildflower species, large mammals such as moose and bears, and a variety of fish species, some of which are actively stocked in the waterways by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

History

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-Susit 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 violation of the ordinance.[1] [2]

The park lies within the Susitna Valley, a large, flat-bottomed valley originally carved out by glaciers, leaving many small lakes behind when they withdrew about 9,000 years ago.[3] Evidence suggests that the Tanaina people, and possibly other groups, used the area for hunting and fishing.[3] The oldest Paleo-Arctic tradition sites in the area date to between 10,500 and 5,200 year ago. The first outside exploration of the area came in the 1790s when members of the Russian-American Company explored the area of the Cook Inlet and the Susitna River. Later, trade and then the prospect of gold attracted increased white settlement.[1]

The Alaska Railroad and later the George Parks Highway pass near the area that is now the park, but due to the wet environment and lack of mineral resources the area was never heavily developed, making it ideal for a lake-based park.[3] The recreation area is named for Nancy Lake, which itself is named after Nancy Lane, daughter of Franklin Lane, Secretary of the Interior 1913–1920.[4]

Facilities

The park is accessed by the Nancy Lake Parkway, a road providing access to various features within the park, ending at 91-site campground located at South Rolly Lake.[5] There are hiking trails but most summer visitors come for the canoe trails that allow exploration of the backcountry lakes.[6] The canoe trails range from one- to two-day paddles, and most routes involve portages between lakes. A few of the lakes allow gasoline-powered motors or electric trolling motors, while the remainder allow only human-powered boats.[3] There is a local vendor that rents canoes to visitors.[6]

There are 13 public-use cabins, none of them accessible by road. Renters must hike or paddle in, or use snowmachines when the lakes are frozen.[3]

In winter months the park is popular with a variety of users, and about of trails are maintained for cross-country skiing, dog mushing and snowmachines. Ice fishing is popular on many of the lakes. Visitors are advised to use caution as conditions on the lakes can change rapidly and temperatures can get as low as .[7]

The park receives an estimated 40,000 visitors annually.[8]

State Recreation Site

The Nancy Lake State Recreation Site is a small separate parcel on the north shore of Nancy Lake, with separate access down a short road from the Parks Highway. It has a 30-site campground, numerous picnic sites, and a boat launch.[5] [9] It was established in 1967 in cooperation between the Alaska Divisions of Mining, Land & Water, and Parks and Outdoor Recreation.[10] The Recreation Site specifically received an estimated 12,000 visitors in 2008.[10]

Physical geography

Nancy Lake State Recreation Area includes of land near the towns of Willow toward the north, and Houston toward the south.[11] There are 41 private inholdings which account for a total of, around 500 privately owned parcels of land adjacent to the park, and another 400 or more within .[10]

The glaciers that once dominated the area, and which retreated in a north-north-easterly direction 9000 years ago, left behind a landscape characterized by low hills, ridges, and lakes oriented in a similar direction to the glacial retreat.[1] The highest point in the park lies west of Red Shirt Lake, standing at above sea level, while the lowest is Red Shirt Lake itself, at .[1]

The soil in the park is shallow, at around in depth, and may be particularly susceptible to erosion. Of the total area of the park, is of a slope of 10:1 or greater, and only consists of open dry land.

At the far northern latitude of the park, summer months experience up to 18 hours of continuous daylight, while winter months may see only five. The area receives an average of of snow per winter. Average temperatures range between and, with extreme temperatures ranging from to .

Oil, gas and coal resources exists throughout the park. A number of permits for accessing these were issued in the 1970s, but all had expired as of 1983.[1] As of 2013, the state of Alaska owned the rights to all subsurface minerals with the exception of near Skeetna Lake, which was owned by the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority, but could not be legally leased for commercial development.[10] Geothermal waters may underlie portions of the area. Ground water is also present. A number of wells have been drill in order to supply drinking water, and these may produces as much as per minute.[1]

Water features

There are 131 lakes of various sizes within or accessible from the park, many of which are part of one of the canoe trails in the area.[10] Of these, 20 are greater than in area, and overall 40% of the area of the park is either water or wetlands.[1] The Little Susitna River also flows through the southeast corner of the park.[12] Motorized watercraft are banned from all lakes, other than Nancy, Lynx, Butterfly, and Red Shirt. Some of the larger lakes in the park include:

Nancy Lake State Recreation Area includes as many as 205 distinct swamps, totaling in area, with the largest covering an area of, and extending into the eastern edge of the park.[16]

Ecology

Fish populations stocked by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game
scope=colBody of waterscope=colYear stockedscope=colSpecies
Big Noluck1999rainbow trout
Delyndia Lake1990coho salmon
Little Noluck1992rainbow trout
Milo Lake1972rainbow trout
Nancy Lake1994sockeye salmon, coho salmon
North Rolly Lake2012rainbow trout
Rhein Lake2012rainbow trout
South Rolly Lake2012rainbow trout
Tanaina Lake2012rainbow trout
Little Susitna River1995Arctic grayling, coho salmon
The low, forested landscape with numerous lakes and relatively mild winters compared to other areas of interior Alaska creates an environment suitable for various types of flora and fauna. This includes dense forests of white birch and paper birch, areas with stands of black spruce or the larger white spruce, burned-over areas in various stages of recovery, and some areas of muskeg and bogs. Lakesides often feature numerous wildflowers in season, and water lilies on the actual lake.[3]

Tree life in areas of the park have been damaged by spruce beetle and other pests, and other areas may be over-mature, creating an increased risk of fire, and increased need for active management efforts.[10]

Wildlife one can expect to see include many animals that prefer wet environments, such as beavers, and numerous waterfowl, in particular the common loon. Wetland areas contain summer nesting sites for Arctic terns. Moose often feed on aquatic plants in the wetlands or lakes and also browse in brushy areas. Bears also live within the park, with black bears being common, although brown bears are seen on occasion.[3]

As a water-oriented park, there are numerous fish species present and fishing is popular throughout the park. The larger lakes contain native populations of Dolly Varden trout, rainbow trout, lake trout and lake whitefish. Several lakes are stocked by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.[10] Northern pike are also present in some lakes and ponds.[17]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nancy Lake State Recreation Area Master Plan . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018 . 1983.
  2. Web site: AS 41.21.455. Nancy Lake State Recreation Area Established . touchngo.com . 25 October 2018.
  3. Web site: Nancy Lake State Recreation Area . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018.
  4. Web site: Feature Detail Report for: Nancy Lake . . . 24 October 2018.
  5. Book: Valencia . Kristine . The Milepost 2018: Alaska Travel Planner . 7 March 2018 . 978-1-892154-37-8 .
  6. Web site: Nancy Lake (brochure) . Alaska State Parks . 24 October 2018.
  7. Web site: Nancy Lake State Recreation Area Winter Information and Activities . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018.
  8. Book: Alaska Railroad Corporation Construction and Operation of a Rail Line Extension to Port MacKenzie: Environmental Impact Statement. 2011. 13.2–13.
  9. Web site: Nancy Lake State Recreation Site . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018.
  10. Web site: Public Review Draft of the Nancy Lake Management Plan . Alaska Department of Natural Resources Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 25 October 2018 . May 2013.
  11. Web site: Nancy Lake State Recreation Area . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018.
  12. Web site: Wholey . Justin . Nancy Lake State Recreation Area (map) . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018 . June 9, 2011.
  13. http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=fishingsportlakedata.lakedetail&lakeid=144&_ga=2.244425989.1627335891.1540270412-882184161.1528159188 Nancy Lake Bathymetric Map and Fishing Information
  14. Web site: Lynx Lake Bathymetric Map and Fishing Information . . 24 October 2018.
  15. Web site: Red Shirt Lake Bathymetric Map and Fishing Information . . 24 October 2018.
  16. Web site: Sam L Huddleston & Associates . Planning Advisory Committee . Nancy Lake Plan Program Budget, March 1967 . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 25 October 2018 . March 20, 1967.
  17. Web site: Nancy Lake State Recreation Area Summer Information and Activities . Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation . 24 October 2018.