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Rescue Bay ConservancyPlan Rescue Bay Conservancy near Klemtu and Bella Bella with a sheltered bay, narrow passage, forested shores, freshwater anchorage, hunting, and low-service notes./british-columbia/parks/rescue-bay-conservancy/british-columbia/parks/rescue-bay-conservancypark

Plan Rescue Bay Conservancy near Klemtu and Bella Bella with a sheltered bay, narrow passage, forested shores, freshwater anchorage, hunting, and low-service notes.

Rescue Bay Conservancy is on the central coast, approximately 20 kilometres southeast of Klemtu and 50 kilometres northwest of Bella Bella. BC Parks says it is adjacent to Jackson Narrows Marine Park.

The conservancy was established as part of the government’s land-use decision for the Central Coast planning area.

BC Parks lists the conservancy in the Cariboo source region despite its central coast setting.

Why Visit Rescue Bay Conservancy

Rescue Bay protects a small bay and narrow passage with forested shorelines. BC Parks identifies Rescue Bay as a boat haven with very good anchorage and freshwater, making the official page most useful to marine travellers moving through the Klemtu and Bella Bella area.

The page is otherwise spare. It does not list campground facilities, docks, developed trails, picnic areas, potable water systems, toilets, or a broad recreation menu beyond hunting. Visitors should treat the conservancy as a low-service coastal protection area and plan marine travel with current charts and conditions.

Its usefulness for planning is therefore the confirmed anchorage, location, and conservation status.

Things To Do

Use the bay as a sheltered anchorage if marine conditions and regulations allow, observe forested shoreline, travel respectfully near adjacent Jackson Narrows Marine Park, and hunt during open seasons where regulations allow.

Planning Notes

Anyone hunting in British Columbia must comply with BC hunting regulations. Check current advisories before travel and contact BC Parks with site-specific questions. Because the official page provides limited facility information, do not assume shore access, maintained paths, waste facilities, or freshwater treatment. Marine visitors should carry water, communications, charts, and backup anchorages.