
Clifford E. Lee Natural Area is an Alberta Parks natural area in the Central region, located 10 kilometres northwest of Devon. The official page lists no day-use areas and surfaces hunting as the activity.
The site has an important conservation context: Alberta Parks says it contains cattail-sedge marsh and sandy upland habitat.
Clifford E. Lee Natural Area is closely tied to the Clifford E. Lee Nature Sanctuary. Alberta Parks says the natural area is critical to the Canadian Nature Federation's sanctuary and protects the outlet channel of the sanctuary's main wetland.
That makes the page more than a simple hunting listing. Visitors should recognize the marsh, upland, and wetland-outlet context and plan for low-impact travel, careful access, and respect for adjacent sanctuary values.
The hunting section links to hunting in Alberta's parks system, Alberta Hunting Regulations, and licence purchasing. The official page also surfaces fishing in the broader information area, so current rules should be checked before any angling-related plan.
Because the listing does not describe a campground or developed day-use hub, visitors should use maps, advisories, and current Alberta Parks instructions to decide whether a trip fits.
The wetland outlet context also makes seasonal water levels and sensitive-ground travel worth checking before leaving home.
Plan around hunting where permitted, fishing-rule checks, marsh and upland habitat observation, wetland sensitivity, map review, access confirmation, and low-impact natural-area travel.
Confirm access, hunting and fishing regulations, licences, maps, advisories, sanctuary context, wetland sensitivity, closures, weather, and current Alberta Parks guidance.