
Bocock Peak Park is a remote, high-elevation BC Parks site on the continental divide in the headwaters of the Peace River. BC Parks places it south of the Peace Arm of Williston Lake, beside Eleven Mile Creek and about 70 kilometres west of Hudson's Hope.
The park is entirely surrounded by Klinse-za / Twin Sisters Park and has no designated trails.
Bocock Peak is for experienced backcountry visitors who want a quiet mountain landscape with important geology and wildlife values. BC Parks highlights limestone cave systems in the park, including one 253 metre system described as the ninth deepest cave system in Canada.
Those karst landscapes are fragile. Surface features, subsurface caves, and hydrology are closely connected, so caving requires careful low-impact travel and gear decontamination to help protect bats from White-Nose Syndrome. The surrounding Hart Ranges setting also supports grizzly and black bears, mountain goats in the upper elevations, moose in lower valleys, and small mammals such as pine marten, marmots, and porcupines.
Recreation is deliberately undeveloped. BC Parks lists hiking for experienced remote-area visitors, wildlife viewing, cycling where permitted, horseback riding, caving, hunting during open season, snowshoeing, and backcountry skiing. Snowmobiles are not permitted.
Plan around remote hiking, careful cave exploration, wildlife viewing, cycling on permitted routes, horseback riding, hunting in season, snowshoeing, backcountry skiing, and nearby trip planning through Klinse-za / Twin Sisters Park.
There are no developed trails or services. Prepare for remote navigation, changing alpine weather, bear country, and cave-specific safety. Use clean caving gear, confirm hunting rules, and check BC Parks advisories before travelling.