Spray Valley Provincial Park
ab parks inside Spray Valley Provincial Parkwhat to expect
Spray Lakes Provincial Park within Kananaskis Country borders the eastern edge of Banff National Park and surrounds the stunning Spray Lakes Reservoir. The area is particularly important for the grizzly bears that move in and out of the national park. The park is accessible via the Bighorn Highway 40 and from Spray Lakes Highway 742. It is a destination for many outdoor pursuits. In summer, the park offers plenty of hiking, canoeing, kayaking, and fishing opportunities. In winter, the area is a beautiful place for cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, ice climbing and fishing. The park is open to campers year-round.
Description: Alberta Parks
the basics
The campsites
Things to do nearby
Within 5 km — trails, viewpoints, beaches, boat launches you can reach without packing up camp.
- South Buller Pass
- South Buller Pass
What's around
Spray Valley Provincial Park plus 2 named places to see and do nearby — trails, beaches, viewpoints, water, and services.
Water + services
- Nearest dump station — Sewage Dump
- Nearest potable water
what to bring
This list adapts to Spray Valley Provincial Park. no showers means a travel towel;
If Spray Valley Provincial Park is full
Other places to stay within 25 km.
- Ribbon Lake Backcountry Campground
- Ribbon Lake Backcountry Campground
- Lillian Lake Backcountry Campground
- Lillian Lake Backcountry Campground
- Ribbon Falls
- Rummel Lake Winter Backcountry Camping, Spray Valley Provincial Park
- Amphitheater
- Eau Claire Campground
Plus 2 user-tagged dispersed sites on OpenStreetMap — often genuine wild-pitches; check access rights before relying on one.