Burnt Timber Provincial Recreation Area

burnt timber

Alberta Parks
Alberta

what to expect

Provincial Recreation Area. 32 hectares.

the basics

flush toiletspet-friendlyaccessible
drive from calgary
1.3h · 97 km
drive from edmonton
3.3h · 245 km
drive from vancouver
8.2h · 618 km

stay options nearby

independent operators within search radius. campsearch may earn a commission on these links — see disclosure.

private campgrounds
camp at a private site

small farms, glamping, off-grid sites listed on Hipcamp near burnt timber.

browse hipcamp
hotel nearby
not camping after all?

hotels and inns near burnt timber when plans change.

check booking.com

what to know

updated each morning from provincial parks and Environment Canada.

no fire ban active
Last checked from the provincial fire-ban feed. Check at the gate before you light — conditions change.
pet-friendly
Dogs are allowed on-leash. Pick up after them; some parks have leash-length rules at the trailheads.

what to bring

this list adapts to burnt timber. no showers means a travel towel; the lake means a swimsuit;

common questions about burnt timber

can dogs camp at burnt timber?
Yes. Burnt Timber Provincial Recreation Area allows dogs on-leash according to operator policy. Confirm specific site-level restrictions with the operator at booking time.
does burnt timber have electric hookups?
No. Burnt Timber Provincial Recreation Area does not list electric hookups in its amenity profile. Plan for off-grid use.
how far is burnt timber from calgary?
Burnt Timber Provincial Recreation Area is 97 km from Calgary — approximately a 1.3-hour drive on highway routes.
when is the best time to camp at burnt timber?
Peak season at Burnt Timber Provincial Recreation Area aligns with swimmable months — Jul. Shoulder months (May, September) offer fewer crowds.

nearby places

within ~100 km of burnt timber.

data last refreshed 2026-05-14 from alberta parks + open sources

give back to this place

volunteer at alberta parks

Provincial parks rely on volunteer stewards for trail maintenance, beach clean-ups, and shoulder-season hosting. Most parks run programs through their park association.

see how to help →