
Greene Valley Provincial Park is an Alberta Parks provincial park in the North region. The official page places it two kilometres east of Peace River and lists one day-use area.
The only vehicle access to the park is to Twelve Foot Davis Day Use. Alberta Parks says the viewpoint provides spectacular views of the junction of the Smoky and Peace rivers.
Greene Valley is a day-use and viewpoint-oriented park with a strong wildlife-corridor story. Activities include birding, backcountry hiking, front-country hiking, and wildlife viewing. The official page does not list a campground, beach, boat launch, or visitor centre, so expectations should be shaped around trails, habitat, and the Twelve Foot Davis access point.
The park management details are useful for understanding the landscape. Alberta Parks lists Greene Valley as a 7,737.36-acre, or 3,131.31-hectare, provincial park in the Boreal Forest - Dry Mixedwood natural region.
The natural-region description says the park stretches along both sides of the Heart River and preserves a deeply incised river valley. It is an important wildlife corridor for moose and mule deer, has long been protected as a wildlife sanctuary, and provides habitat for black bear, mule deer, white-tailed deer, and other wildlife in a largely agricultural landscape.
Because public vehicle access is limited, map review and realistic route planning matter before travel.
Plan around Twelve Foot Davis Day Use, Smoky and Peace river views, birding, front-country hiking, backcountry hiking, wildlife viewing, habitat research, and photography.
Confirm vehicle access, trail conditions, wildlife safety guidance, maps, advisories, closures, weather, emergency planning, and Alberta Parks updates before travelling.