
Omineca Park and Omineca Protected Area include 80 kilometres of the Omineca River valley, the Wolverine Range, mountains northwest of Germansen Landing to Nina Lake, and areas around Evans Creek and Germansen Lake.
BC Parks says the 132,296-hectare park is about 195 kilometres northwest of McLeod Lake.
Omineca Park is primarily a wilderness area with backcountry opportunities. It has six rustic vehicle-accessible camping areas, while the Nina Lake South area offers a pristine walk-in wilderness camping opportunity that is rustic and user maintained.
The park protects caribou habitat in the Wolverine Range plus provincially significant riparian habitat and wetlands along the Omineca River. Visitors can hike or walk on undeveloped and unmapped routes, swim without lifeguards, canoe or kayak on the Omineca River and Germansen Lake, fish with a licence, watch wildlife, cycle on roadways, ride horseback, and explore winter routes if experienced. The community of Germansen Landing and North Takla I.R. 12 are enclaves within the park and protected area.
Camp in rustic areas, paddle the Omineca River or Germansen Lake, fish, wildlife watch, hike undeveloped routes, cycle only where appropriate, ride horseback, snowshoe or backcountry ski if experienced, and use Nina Lake South for walk-in wilderness camping.
Access from Fort St. James follows North Road, Germansen Forest Service Road, North Germansen Road, and Thutade Forest Service Road. Trails are not developed or mapped. Pets must be leashed, e-bikes are not allowed on trails, and snowmobiling is not permitted in the Wolverine Range.