icefields parkway - silverhorn creek
Parks Canadawhat to expect
Located on the Icefields Parkway (highway 93N) 56 km north of Lake Louise village and 177 km south of Jasper. Click here to access driving directions.
Silverhorn Creek is an RV-friendly campground offering a rustic camping experience along the Icefields Parkway, just minutes from Waterfowl Lakes, Bow Lake, and the Peyto Lake viewpoint.
Campsites are unserviced and best suited for tents, or motorhomes and trailers up to 20 meters (70 feet). RV campers can fill with potable water and use the sani-du…
the basics
what to know
updated each morning from provincial parks and Environment Canada.
what to bring
this list adapts to icefields parkway - silverhorn creek. no showers means a travel towel;
commission links. we get a small cut; you pay the same price. how this works.
common questions about icefields parkway - silverhorn creek
- can dogs camp at icefields parkway - silverhorn creek?
- No. Icefields Parkway - Silverhorn Creek does not allow dogs according to operator policy.
- does icefields parkway - silverhorn creek have electric hookups?
- No. Icefields Parkway - Silverhorn Creek does not list electric hookups in its amenity profile. Plan for off-grid use.
- how far is icefields parkway - silverhorn creek from calgary?
- Icefields Parkway - Silverhorn Creek is 193 km from Calgary — approximately a 2.6-hour drive on highway routes.
- do you need reservations at icefields parkway - silverhorn creek?
- Yes. Icefields Parkway - Silverhorn Creek is operated by Parks Canada and uses an online reservation system. Book direct via the operator link on this page.
nearby places
within ~100 km of icefields parkway - silverhorn creek.
Glacier - Illecillewaet
Parks CanadaGlacier - Loop Brook & Hermit Meadows
Parks Canadawant to camp at icefields parkway - silverhorn creek?
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
volunteer at parks canada
Provincial parks rely on volunteer stewards for trail maintenance, beach clean-ups, and shoulder-season hosting. Most parks run programs through their park association.
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