
Klinse-za / Twin Sisters Park is a remote wilderness area in the northern foothills of the Rocky Mountains in the Peace River District. BC Parks places it about 48 kilometres west of Chetwynd and 36 kilometres northeast of Mackenzie.
The Twin Sisters peaks are culturally and spiritually significant to Treaty 8 First Nations.
Klinse-za / Twin Sisters Park is for experienced wilderness visitors who want mountain terrain, alpine views, wildlife habitat, and a rustic base at Carbon Lake. BC Parks says the park offers wildlife viewing, fishing, hiking, camping, unique geological features, and broad wilderness.
Hiking trails are intended for experienced hikers, with steep inclines that rise above the trees quickly and open to views of rolling mountain terrain and alpine peaks. Carbon Lake offers a rustic campground with access to fishing, boating, and hiking, and Carbon Lake and Clearwater Lake also offer canoeing, kayaking, and swimming.
Wildlife is a major planning factor. BC Parks identifies grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, moose, caribou, fishers, and wolverines, and asks visitors to keep their distance from species at risk. Horseback riding and hunting are permitted, but horses are not permitted in the campground.
Plan around experienced hiking, Battleship Mountain Trail research, Carbon Lake camping, fishing, canoeing, kayaking, swimming, wildlife viewing, horseback riding, hunting in season, and winter travel where open.
Pack out garbage. Bring drinking water. Boats on Carbon Lake are restricted to 7.5 kW or 10 horsepower, and snowmobilers must stay out of closed areas.