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Brushy Creek State Recreation Area is a state park in Webster County, Iowa in the United States. With an area encompassing over 6,000 acres (24 km 2), the facility is one of Iowa's largest public outdoor recreation areas. A relatively new recreational area, Brushy Creek did not have an easy beginning.
Big Lake (Iowa) Big Spirit Lake; Black Hawk Lake (Sac County, Iowa) Black Hawk State Park; Brushy Creek State Recreation Area; Buccaneer Arena; Bussey Lake; Carter Lake (Iowa–Nebraska) Cedar Falls, Iowa; Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Clarion Municipal Airport; Clear Lake (Iowa) Council Bluffs Municipal Airport; Crescent, Iowa; Davenport, Iowa ...
Big Creek Lake: Surrounds an 866-acre (350 ha) recreational reservoir originally created as a flood control project. Black Hawk State Park: Sac County: Lake View: 86 35 [6] 1935: Black Hawk Lake: Comprises shoreline on the southernmost glacial lake in Iowa. Brushy Creek State Recreation Area: Webster County: Lehigh: 6,500 2,600 [7] Des Moines ...
Brushy Creek is a stream in Nodaway and Worth counties in Missouri and Taylor County, Iowa, in the United States. [1] It is a tributary of Platte River and is 15.3 miles long. [ 2 ]
Lake Keomah State Park is a state park in Mahaska County, Iowa, United States. To the park's immediate east is Keomah Village and the park is approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Oskaloosa. Lake Keomah State Park is a 366-acre (148 ha) state park that surrounds and includes Lake Keomah. Lake Keomah is an 83-acre (34 ha) reservoir.
Name Location (of main entrance) Major forest Area ()Area () Backbone State Forest: Delaware County: No 186 75 Barkley State Forest: Boone County: No 40 16
Ledges State Park is a state park in Boone County, Iowa, United States, located approximately four miles (6.4 km) south of the city of Boone. The park contains a sandstone gorge carved by Pea's Creek, a tributary of the Des Moines River. The gorge is 100 feet (30 m) deep in places, with concretions jutting from the cliffs.
[2] the IDNR started a departmental committee in 1994 to create a framework for all Iowa state parks, with Green Valley State Park being chosen as the first one to implement the changes. A 1994 plan by the Natural Resources Conservation Service , private individuals, and park visitors created nine separate areas for management to protect the ...