Call Lake Provincial Park


Call Lake is a popular area for all-season fun, including hiking, fishing (brook trout), and cross-country skiing. The park is in an ecologically diverse area that includes coniferous and deciduous woodlands, wetlands, and rare grasslands. This diverse area is home to many birds and mammals.

COVID-19

Keep your distance from other people.

Practicing social distancing is still essential. Only go to the beach if you are able to keep 6 feet or 2 meters away from others. Follow the instructions provided by your local health authorities. If your community has asked that you remain indoors and away from others, do so. Spending a day in any crowded place is the worst thing we can do for our most vulnerable right now and will counter our efforts to curb the virus’s spread.

Water Quality
  • No data available

  • Current Status
  • This status is based on the latest sample. Fraser Riverkeeper updates the status of this beach as soon as test results become available.
For water quality icon legend, click:  
Current Weather
-2°C
Clear
Monitoring Frequency

Call Lake Provincial Park is not sampled

Source Information

Northern Health's responsibility in Northern British Columbia is from the Queen Charlotte Islands to the Alberta border, and as far south as Quesnel. There is a map of Northern Health’s jurisdictional boundaries on the Northern Health website at https://northernhealth.ca/AboutUs.aspx

British Columbia health departments select and test water quality found at primary (swimming) and secondary (non-swimming) contact beaches across the province, following the Canadian Recreational Water Quality Guidelines. Most health departments in the interior test for E. coli from May to September (except for Vancouver Island Health Authority, which tests from June to September). Samples are collected weekly with a minimum of 5 test samples collected in a month. Warnings are posted by Fraser Riverkeeper if the 30-day geometric mean rises above 100 E. coli / 100 ml of water. There is currently no regular monitoring of these beaches.

Read more
Water Quality Graph

Call Lake Provincial Park


COVID-19

Keep your distance from other people.

Practicing social distancing is still essential. Only go to the beach if you are able to keep 6 feet or 2 meters away from others. Follow the instructions provided by your local health authorities. If your community has asked that you remain indoors and away from others, do so. Spending a day in any crowded place is the worst thing we can do for our most vulnerable right now and will counter our efforts to curb the virus’s spread.

Water Quality
  • No data available
  • Current Status
  • This status is based on the latest sample. Fraser Riverkeeper updates the status of this beach as soon as test results become available.
For water quality icon legend, click:  
Current Weather
-2°C
Clear

Call Lake is a popular area for all-season fun, including hiking, fishing (brook trout), and cross-country skiing. The park is in an ecologically diverse area that includes coniferous and deciduous woodlands, wetlands, and rare grasslands. This diverse area is home to many birds and mammals.

Monitoring Frequency

Call Lake Provincial Park is not sampled

Source Information

Northern Health's responsibility in Northern British Columbia is from the Queen Charlotte Islands to the Alberta border, and as far south as Quesnel. There is a map of Northern Health’s jurisdictional boundaries on the Northern Health website at https://northernhealth.ca/AboutUs.aspx

British Columbia health departments select and test water quality found at primary (swimming) and secondary (non-swimming) contact beaches across the province, following the Canadian Recreational Water Quality Guidelines. Most health departments in the interior test for E. coli from May to September (except for Vancouver Island Health Authority, which tests from June to September). Samples are collected weekly with a minimum of 5 test samples collected in a month. Warnings are posted by Fraser Riverkeeper if the 30-day geometric mean rises above 100 E. coli / 100 ml of water. There is currently no regular monitoring of these beaches.

Read more
Water Quality Graph

  Beach Location Water Quality
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