
Whitemud Falls Wildland Provincial Park is an Alberta Parks wildland park in the North region, 80 kilometres east of Fort McMurray. Alberta Parks lists one backcountry camping area and no developed day-use area count.
The official page says the park surrounds Whitemud Falls Ecological Reserve.
Whitemud Falls Wildland is a remote Clearwater River backcountry park for fly-in access, random camping, hiking, hunting, and river-valley landscape research. Alberta Parks says aircraft landing in the park requires authorization.
The park and adjacent ecological reserve occupy a stretch of steep-sided, deeply incised Clearwater River valley where the river has cut into underlying Devonian limestone and dolomites. Alberta Parks also notes that the Clearwater River from the Alberta-Saskatchewan border to Fort McMurray was designated a Canadian Heritage River in 2004.
Activities include backcountry camping, front-country hiking, backcountry hiking, and hunting. Random backcountry camping is permitted, but there are no campsites or facilities, and no permit or fee is required. Visitors should review current random camping guidance before travel.
Because the official page identifies fly-in access and aircraft authorization, this is a serious remote-planning destination rather than a road-access campground.
Remote access makes conservative timelines, weather windows, and backup communication especially important.
Plan around authorized fly-in access, random backcountry camping, hiking, hunting where permitted, Clearwater River geology, Canadian Heritage River context, and map review.
Confirm aircraft authorization, access, random camping guidance, hunting regulations, licences, no-facility expectations, maps, weather, emergency planning, and Alberta Parks updates.