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Moose Lake State Park was established in 1971. In total, the park is 1,194 acres in area. Some of the highlights of the park include 5.5 miles of hiking trails, a 105-acre Echo Lake, wildlife pond, paved trail to Moose Lake and Willard Munger State Trail, and Agate/Geological Interpretive Center; located within the park office.
Moose Lake Provincial Park is a provincial park in northern Alberta, Canada, located 15 km (9.3 mi) west of Bonnyville. The park is situated around Moose Lake , at an elevation of 535 m (1,755 ft) and has a surface of 16.5 km 2 (6.4 sq mi).
Moose Mountain Provincial Park was designated a park in 1931. From then until 1935, several work projects around the park were completed. Work began in the spring of 1931 with the building of Moose Mountain Chalet, landscaping, building of Main Beach on Kenosee Lake, and a road going south connecting the park to Carlyle Lake and the town of Carlyle, and going north to Kennedy.
Provincial Road 384 (PR 384) is a 39.3-kilometre-long (24.4 mi) north-south spur of PR 287 in the NorMan Region of Manitoba, providing the only road access to the hamlet of Moose Lake, the Mosakahiken Cree Nation, as well as the Moose Lakes, all of which are located in Saskatchewan River Delta.
The Moose River Plains Wild Forest is a 64,322-acre (100.5 sq mi; 260.3 km 2) tract in the Adirondack Park in Hamilton and Herkimer counties in the state of New York in the United States of America; it is designated as Wild Forest by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
The Moose Lake Star Gazette was founded in 1983. It is a weekly that comes out on Thursdays. It is owned by Franklin Newspapers and had a circulation of 1774 in 2019. The following newspapers have also been published in Moose Lake: [12] [13] Moose Lake Star (1896–1906) Star Gazette (1907–1962) Moose Lake Star Gazette (1962–1978) Star ...
Get the Moses Lake, WA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
The area was subsequently settled by Swampy Cree migrating from the east. [3] Today, logging, fishing, and trapping are practiced in the Moose Lake area. [4] Tom Lamb operated a cattle ranch at Moose Lake from 1953 to 1964, when flooding of the area by the Grand Rapids hydroelectric project forced its closure. [5]