
Mudzenchoot Park is about 90 kilometres northwest of Fort St. James, with the nearest road access from Witch Forest Service Road off Germansen Landing North Road. BC Parks lists map reference 93N/1 for the area.
The 644-hectare park was designated in January 2001 and protects a high-elevation dry meadow area with vegetation types including cotton grass, erigeron, and aster species. BC Parks lists the region as Omineca.
Mudzenchoot is a small, remote Omineca park where the official focus is high-elevation meadow habitat rather than developed recreation. BC Parks lists fishing and hunting opportunities, but also makes clear that there are no facilities and no developed trails.
That combination makes the park best suited to self-sufficient visitors who already have a reason to be in the area and who can plan around rough access, weather, and limited information. The high-elevation meadows are the main conservation draw, and visitors should treat vegetation as sensitive rather than as a general travel surface.
Fish with the proper licence, hunt during open seasons where regulations allow, observe high-elevation meadow vegetation, photograph the dry meadow setting, and use the park as a low-impact backcountry destination rather than a serviced trail stop.
Bring drinking water because potable water is not available. There is no firewood, so bring a portable stove for cooking. Pets must be leashed, backcountry areas are not suitable for dogs, and visitors should carry navigation, weather gear, first aid, and enough supplies to be self-reliant.