Nitinat Lake Explained

Nitinat Lake
Location:Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Coordinates:48.75°N -124.75°W
Type:lake and inlet
Pushpin Map:Vancouver Island#British Columbia
Pushpin Label Position:left

Nitinat Lake is a large lake and inlet on the southwestern coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. The lake is about northwest by road from Victoria, BC's capital on the southern tip of Vancouver Island, and about southwest by road from the town of Lake Cowichan. The city of Port Alberni is about by road to the north.

The southern end of the lake lies in Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, which also contains Nitinat Hill on the lake's northern shore and Nitinat Cone on the southern shore. Hitchie Creek Provincial Park and Nitinat Lake Ecological Reserve lie on opposite sides of the lakeshore about a third of the way from the lake's northern shore and the point where Nitinat River flows into the lake. On the lake's eastern shore lie Mt. Rosander and the foot of Carmanah Mountain, the eastern part of which is in Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park.

Nitinat Lake drains into the Pacific Ocean just north of the Pacific entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca via the Nitinat Narrows, a narrow tidal passage about long. Tidal bores (ocean waves travelling up the lake) occur on the narrows, the heights of which depend on tide heights, and these can be dangerous. The small First Nations village of Whyac lies on the southern lakeshore beside Nitinat Narrows and just north of the First Nations village of Clo-oose, also on the coast.

The main volume of Nitinat Lake is salt water, with a thin layer of less dense fresh water floating on top.[1]

Recreation

Nitinat Lake has consistent winds that offer some of the best kiteboarding and windsurfing in North America, attracting kiteboarders and windsurfers from around the world.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nitinat Lake Ecological Reserve. BC Parks.