Plan Redbrush Park west of Williams Lake with fens, carrs, alkaline meadows, moose winter habitat, hunting in season, and sparse official facilities.
Redbrush Park is in the Cariboo region, approximately 148 kilometres west of Williams Lake. BC Parks says it was established through the Cariboo-Chilcotin Land-Use Plan Goal 2 Special Feature process.
The official page focuses on wetland conservation and hunting rather than developed visitor services.
BC Parks does not include an About section on this page, so the highlights and hunting notes carry most of the official planning detail.
Why Visit Redbrush Park
Redbrush Park protects a complex of wetlands that includes both fens and carrs. BC Parks also notes that alkaline meadows, while present elsewhere in the Chilcotin, are more abundant in this park. The area also includes some moose winter habitat values.
Those values make Redbrush a careful-observation landscape rather than a casual facility stop.
For visitors researching Cariboo-Chilcotin protected areas, Redbrush is best understood as a special-feature park with sensitive wetland and meadow values. The official BC Parks page does not list camping, trails, drinking water, toilets, picnic areas, swimming, boating, or other recreation facilities.
Things To Do
BC Parks lists hunting as the activity on the park page. The discharge and carrying of firearms is permitted for hunting during open season, subject to provincial hunting and trapping regulations.
Planning Notes
Anyone hunting in British Columbia must comply with BC hunting regulations and should confirm seasons, licences, and any site-specific questions before travelling. Check current advisories through BC Parks. Because the official page gives no facility or route detail beyond the broad location west of Williams Lake, do not assume road quality, marked access, potable water, camping, maintained trails, or visitor services.