
Lesser Slave Lake Wildland Provincial Park is an Alberta Parks wildland provincial park on the north shore of Lesser Slave Lake, one of Alberta's largest water bodies. The official page places it 50 kilometres northwest of Slave Lake.
Alberta Parks lists one campground entry and no developed day-use area count.
Lesser Slave Lake Wildland Provincial Park is a habitat-focused backcountry planning page for visitors who want the less-developed north shore context of Lesser Slave Lake. Alberta Parks says the park contains important fish spawning and rearing habitat, key waterfowl staging and production areas, moose habitat and critical moose winter range, and bald eagle and osprey nesting areas.
Activities include fishing, backcountry hiking, hunting, and on-site OHV riding. Random backcountry camping is permitted, but Alberta Parks says there are no campsites or facilities and no permit or fee is required. Visitors should review the official random backcountry camping guidance before choosing where to camp.
Motorized rules are clear. OHV riding is on existing trails only, and off-trail use is prohibited. The hunting section repeats that OHV use is limited to existing trails and links to hunting information, regulations, and licence purchasing.
Because services are not listed, visitors should treat this as a self-reliant wildland trip where weather, road access, maps, lake conditions, wildlife, and communication planning all matter.
Plan around random backcountry camping, fishing, backcountry hiking, hunting, existing-trail OHV riding, habitat observation, waterfowl staging research, and map review.
Confirm access, random camping guidance, existing-trail OHV rules, fishing and hunting regulations, maps, advisories, weather, wildlife safety, and Alberta Parks updates.