
Klewnuggit Inlet Marine Park is 98 kilometres south of Prince Rupert and about 20 kilometres north of Lowe Inlet, with no vehicle access. BC Parks places it midway through Grenville Channel, where Klewnuggit Inlet reaches into the abrupt hills of the mainland coast.
The park includes East Inlet, plus Freda and Brodie lakes above it.
Klewnuggit Inlet Marine Park is a remote marine destination for boaters, kayakers, and wilderness campers. BC Parks says the best anchorage is at the north end of East Inlet, in nine fathoms over good bottom.
The park has rough, unmarked hiking opportunities rather than developed trail infrastructure. One unmarked trail runs from Exposed Inlet to Brodie Lake near its river outlet, and another trail follows the northwest side of the river between Brodie and Freda lakes.
Kayaking is listed, with landing beaches available, and wilderness camping is permitted. Fishing offers excellent tidal water opportunities for salmon and groundfish. BC Parks also notes history: the park was established as a Class A park on June 14, 1993, ancient stone fish-trap remains are found at the outlet of the falls in Nettle Basin, and cannery wharf remains from an operation active between 1890 and 1934 lie to the north.
Plan around anchoring in East Inlet, sea kayaking, wilderness camping, unmarked trail exploration, swimming, tidal fishing, Brodie and Freda lake context, and coastal history observation.
Bring drinking water because potable water is not available. Use the Marine Visitor Guide, expect no vehicle access, and plan navigation, weather, and emergency communication carefully.