In late April, I stopped at Lacombe Lake on the way back from Calgary. I use the public boat launch off Township Road 402 in the NE corner of the lake.
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Saturday, June 21, 2025
Lacombe Lake
I went back out into the main lake and worked my way to the south end of the lake.
The picture below gives you a pretty good sense of the overall experience. The shore is reeds that give way to aspen and fir forest. There are hills on the east side and a farm on the west side.
The wind really came up for the trip back. I usually paddle about 4 km an hour (very average). The trip back down the lake saw me do as much as 12.6 kph (it was really blowing--fortunately the lake is shallow, so the waves were not too bad).
The lake is probably about 8 or 9km around so it's a two-hour paddle if you do the whole thing. If you wanted a shorter paddle, down the east side and into the small bay is interesting. The southern end is also okay. The north end of the lake is the least interesting and is the part to skip.
Saturday, June 14, 2025
Anglin Lake, Prince Albert National Park, SK
In late June, we spent a morning on Anglin Lake, just south of Prince Albert National Park. Anglin Lake is a reservoir and sprawls over a large area. One option for entry is the Great Blue Heron Regional Park on the eastern end. There is a day-use fee here ($10, I think), a campground, standard boat launch, and a beach with put toilets and a picnic shelter.
A second option is the Anglin Lake Bridge, about two-thirds of the way towards the west end of the lake. Again, a day-use fee applies. This allows access to the western basin (down towards the dam or up towards the Spruce River inflow) or the middle basin.
The west side looked easier but both required wet feet.
The middle basin basically looks like the image below: reeds and grassy slopes give way into an aspen forest. We saw a deer frolicking in the shallows (no picture).
We also annoyed this poor heron who flew off.
We paddled around a couple of islands before heading back towards the bridge.
The western basin had more fir trees on the northern shore and was, overall, bit more rugged looking.
After pulling out, we followed the road to the south end of the lake where the dam is. It was good walk from the parking area along the top of the dam and there were lots of butterflies.
The outflow of the dam itself was surprisingly small.
There is a launch here but this end of the lake looked a bit boring.
Overall, a pretty nice lake with enough to explore over several paddles. The folks we talked to said the fishing was also good (jack and walleye).
Elizabeth Lake
In late April, I stopped in Lacombe to try and get on Elizabeth Lake. I'd previously paddled nearby Barnett Lake and Elizabeth was similar. Access is DIY and I've flagged four options below, none of which are very good.
A challenge everywhere is that (1) the lake is shallow and you have to pole or bum-scoot through the shallows to get out where you actually float compounded by (2) the lake level has risen and killed trees at the edge, meaning you also need to navigate submerged stumps while bum-scooting. This is not for the faint hearted and likely isn't a good option for inflatables because of the sharp sticks.
I accessed the lake from the bottom (blue arrow) off the Elizabeth Lake Trail. You can park on Woodland Drive by the Canada Post box (30 meters west of the trail head), carry across the road at he cross walk and then hang a left down the paved trail, which quickly becomes dirt.
You can get the same vibe at Barnett Lake about half a km west with an easier entry. Or you can drive maybe 12km south and have a nicer paddle at Lacombe Lake. I probably won't go back here.
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Muir Lake
As usual, Muir Lake was the first local lake open, this year in mid-April. Likely that reflects the winter aeration and the consequently thinner ice.
The only animals of note were a pair of camera-shy loons and a bunch of angsty geese.
It looks like North lake and Little Mere as well as Chickakoo were also open.