logo
background

Dussault Lake Natural Area | Alberta

Dussault Lake Natural Area is an Alberta Parks natural area in the Central region, located 10 kilometres east and five kilometres north of Entwistle. The official page lists no day-use areas and surfaces hunting as the activity.

The park-management detail gives the natural area its main visitor context.

Why Visit Dussault Lake Natural Area

Dussault Lake Natural Area contains mainly black spruce-paper birch peatlands and sedge wetlands, according to Alberta Parks. That habitat description points to a wet, sensitive landscape where low-impact travel and current access information matter.

The official hunting section links to hunting in Alberta's parks system, Alberta Hunting Regulations, and licence purchasing. Fishing is also surfaced in the broader information area, so anglers should check current regulations before including it in a plan.

The page does not describe a campground, day-use area, picnic site, or developed trail system. Visitors should treat it as a low-service natural area and build the trip around official maps, advisories, access conditions, and weather.

Because peatlands and sedge wetlands can be fragile and difficult to cross, route choices should avoid unnecessary disturbance and should stay within posted permissions.

The wetland setting also means waterproof footwear, conservative navigation, and alternate plans can matter more than a long activity list.

Things To Do

Plan around hunting where permitted, fishing-rule checks, peatland and wetland observation, map review, advisory checks, access confirmation, and low-impact natural area travel.

Planning Notes

Confirm access, hunting and fishing regulations, licences, wetland sensitivity, maps, advisories, closures, weather, and current Alberta Parks instructions.

Park Details

Designation
Natural Area
Jurisdiction
Provincial
Managing Agency
Alberta Parks
Province/Territory
Alberta