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Eleven Sisters Park | British Columbia

Eleven Sisters Park is a BC Parks site about 93 kilometres southwest of Williams Lake. BC Parks says it was established through the Cariboo-Chilcotin Land-Use Plan Goal 2 Special Feature process.

The park's defining feature is a large chain of lakes in a wilderness setting.

Why Visit Eleven Sisters Park

Eleven Sisters is for visitors researching quiet Cariboo wilderness recreation rather than a heavily developed park experience. The official BC Parks page is brief, but it identifies the combination of high lake productivity, wild rainbow trout, and a large chain of lakes as unique in the Cariboo.

Fishing and lake-based wilderness values are the main reasons to look closely at this park. BC Parks says the lakes have a good recreational fishery, and limited access helps preserve a wilderness recreation experience. The lakes also provide good viewing opportunities for waterfowl.

Because the official listing does not describe campgrounds, maintained trails, boat launches, or detailed access instructions, planning should stay conservative. Treat the park as a remote lake system where maps, current advisories, fishing rules, and local access research matter more than assumptions about services.

Things To Do

Plan around wilderness lake research, wild rainbow trout fishing with the required licence, waterfowl viewing, photography, quiet paddling research where access allows, map review, limited-access planning, and Cariboo protected-area study.

Planning Notes

Check current advisories and fishing regulations before travelling. Bring self-sufficient supplies, confirm access from official or local sources, avoid disturbing waterfowl habitat, and do not assume developed visitor facilities unless BC Parks lists them.

Park Details

Designation
Park
Jurisdiction
Provincial
Managing Agency
BC Parks
Source Region
Cariboo
Province/Territory
British Columbia