
Roselea Natural Area is an Alberta Parks natural area in the Central region, 25 kilometres southeast of Barrhead. Alberta Parks lists no developed day-use area count.
Activities surfaced by the official page include cross-country skiing, front-country hiking, equestrian use, hunting, and geocaching.
Roselea is a low-service natural area for visitors researching skiing, hiking, riding, hunting, geocaching, and boreal forest habitat southeast of Barrhead. Alberta Parks lists the site at 643.98 acres, or 260.618 hectares.
The park-management section classifies Roselea under the Wilderness Areas, Ecological Reserves, Natural Areas and Heritage Rangelands Act and places it in the Boreal Forest - Central Mixedwood Natural Region. The natural-region description says the site contains moderately rolling pitted outwash and is mainly aspen, balsam poplar, and paper birch forest.
The official page does not list camping, developed day-use facilities, a marked trail network, a boat launch, or a visitor centre. Visitors should plan around access, boundaries, current conditions, and activity permissions rather than expecting serviced facilities.
Hunting information links to Alberta's parks-system hunting page, regulations, and licence purchasing. Special permit categories include grazing or haying, filming and photography, fishing, guiding, hunting, industrial activity, research, special events, and trapping.
Expect rustic conditions.
Start early.
Plan around cross-country skiing, front-country hiking, equestrian use, hunting where permitted, geocaching, pitted outwash terrain, aspen-birch forest, map review, and permit checks.
Confirm access, boundaries, trail conditions, hunting seasons, licences, special permits, maps, weather, wildlife safety, and Alberta Parks updates before travelling.