Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park Photo: Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park

Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park

Alberta Parks
Alberta

what to expect

Bow Valley Provincial Park was established in 1959 in the arch of the Bow River at its confluence with the Kananaskis River. The park is one of many within the Kananaskis Country parks system. Visitors can enjoy beautiful trails for hiking, biking, bird watching and wildlife viewing. Spread along the river in the stunning Bow Valley are five reservable campgrounds, one first come, first served campground, and five group camping areas in the park that offer a range of basic to full service sites with many amenities and activities to enjoy.

Description: Alberta Parks

the basics

At the campground
Drinking waterFirewoodFire pitsPicnic shelter
Recreation
Boat launch
Access & policies
Winter camping

the campsites

Total sites
36
Toilets
pit / vault toilets

things to do here

Activities you can do at Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park.

HikingCanoeing & kayakingBoatingCyclingWildlife viewingWinter sportsHorseback ridingRock climbingGeocaching

things to do nearby

Within 5 km — trails, viewpoints, beaches, boat launches you can reach without packing up camp.

Plus 1 user-tagged boat launch on OpenStreetMap — visible as pins on the map below.

what's around

Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park plus 4 named places to see and do nearby — trails, beaches, viewpoints, water, and services.

water + services

what to know

Updated each morning from provincial parks and Environment Canada.

Closure: Yamnuska Trails (Lafarge Quarry)
Alberta Parks has this advisory posted for the park. Effective July 10, 2026 - Until Further Notice. Affects: Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park, Yamnuska Day Use, Yamnuska Climbers' Access Route Trail, Yamnuska East Ridge Trail, Yamnuska Scramble Route Trail, Yamnuska West Col Trail. Check the official advisory for the current status before you travel. Alberta Parks advisory →
Partial Closure: Johnny's Trail
Alberta Parks has this advisory posted for the park. Posted July 3, 2026. Check the official advisory for the current status before you travel. Alberta Parks advisory →
5 more advisories posted
Alberta Parks lists additional advisories for this park. All Alberta Parks advisories →
Road closure reported ~10.8 km away
511 Alberta reports on Spray Lakes Rd (as of 2026-07-04): Traffic advisory on Spray Lakes Rd Southbound At Ken Ritchie Way. All lanes closed. Activities: Road Closed, Use alternate route, Hazardous Roads Detour: {"Head southeast on Spray Lakes Rd (HWY-742). Go for 3.1 km.","Turn right onto Three Sisters Dr. Go for 834 m.","Turn left onto Three Sisters Pkwy. Go for 3.8 km.","Take the 4th exit from roundabout o This may or may not affect your route in — check 511 Alberta before you drive out. 511 Alberta live map →
First-come, first-served
No reservations taken or needed — show up, pick a vacant site, and self-register at the kiosk. Arrive early on summer weekends. See all first-come, first-served camping in Alberta →

recent reports

This page told you what we know — tell the next camper what you saw. One tap, no account needed.

other campgrounds nearby

Other places to stay within 25 km.

Plus 2 user-tagged dispersed sites on OpenStreetMap — often genuine wild-pitches; check access rights before relying on one.

Page generated 2026-07-12. Sources: Alberta Hotel & Lodging Assoc. + Camis reservation system. Neighbourhood joins 12 named anchors.