
Coal River Springs Territorial Park is a Territorial Park in Yukon, listed by Government of Yukon. With its extensive limestone terraces created by cool water springs and the rich diversity of life forms associated with year-round flowing water, Coal River Springs is a unique feature of territorial and national significance.
A small camping area and outhouse 200 m east of the main limestone formations is provided for visitor use.
Coal River Springs Territorial Park is worth planning from the official Yukon listing because Yukon parks, campgrounds, recreation sites, and backcountry sites can differ sharply in access, services, permits, and self-reliance requirements.
For long-tail planning, the useful details are specific: region, site count, serviced dates, gate status, warnings, directions, facilities, local cultural context, wildlife guidance, and whether the site is road-accessible or backcountry.
Plan around camping, backcountry planning, paddling or boating, hiking, cultural and natural history, and scenic viewpoints. Keep the plan tied to the official listing, especially where fishing rules, boat launches, bear safety, backcountry permits, no-reservation sites, or pack-in/pack-out responsibilities are noted.
When the official page is brief, keep the itinerary modest. Confirm whether the place is a road-accessible campground, a recreation site, a territorial park, or a backcountry location before assuming services, staff, firewood, reservable sites, or maintained trails. In Yukon, the same listing can combine access notes, Indigenous stewardship context, wildlife protection, and permit requirements, so those details should shape the visit before distances or activities are added.
Confirm serviced dates, gate status, campsite availability, reservations or self-registration, road conditions, map downloads, park permits, fire rules, bear-safe food storage, drinking water, garbage, toilet paper, weather, and current Yukon advisories before travelling.
Access is restricted due to wilderness travel conditions.