chin coulee
chin coulee
Alberta Parks Alberta
what to expect
Provincial Recreation Area. 1 hectares.
the basics
pet-friendlyaccessible
drive from calgary
2.8h · 208 km
drive from edmonton
6h · 448 km
drive from vancouver
10.5h · 790 km
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 chin coulee. no showers means a travel towel; the lake means a swimsuit;
gear · amazon
commission links. we get a small cut; you pay the same price. how this works.
common questions about chin coulee
- can dogs camp at chin coulee?
- Yes. Chin Coulee Provincial Recreation Area allows dogs on-leash according to operator policy. Confirm specific site-level restrictions with the operator at booking time.
- does chin coulee have electric hookups?
- No. Chin Coulee Provincial Recreation Area does not list electric hookups in its amenity profile. Plan for off-grid use.
- how far is chin coulee from calgary?
- Chin Coulee Provincial Recreation Area is 208 km from Calgary — approximately a 2.8-hour drive on highway routes.
- when is the best time to camp at chin coulee?
- Peak season at Chin Coulee Provincial Recreation Area aligns with swimmable months — Jun through Aug. Shoulder months (May, September) offer fewer crowds.
nearby places
within ~100 km of chin coulee.
check operator
Writing-on-Stone
Alberta Parks sites available
St. Mary Reservoir
Alberta Parks sites available
want to camp at chin coulee?
Cancellation alerts are coming. We’ll email when sites open up at this park.
One email. Unsubscribe anytime. We don’t share addresses. — chris@calgaryanalytica.ca
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 →