Bear Lake (Utah)
Recreational activities include waterskiing, swimming, scuba diving, and sailing. Anglers enjoy year-round fishing for cutthroat trout, mackinaw trout, Bonneville cisco, and whitefish.
Recreation areas
Rendezvous Beach
Rendezvous Beach is named for the historic rendezvous of fur trappers and Native Americans held here during the summers of 1827 and 1828. A thousand or more Native Americans and mountain men, including Jedediah Smith, attended these gatherings. There were so many campfires at the south end of the lake at these trading sessions that one observer called the area "a lighted city."
Today Rendezvous Beach is a 1.25-mile-long (2.01 km) recreation area with 220 campsites, along with restrooms, showers, and utility hookups. It is a popular area for large gatherings such as family reunions. A local business rents small boats and personal water craft.
Bear Lake Marina
The Bear Lake Marina area is located about 8 miles north of Rendezvous on the west side of the lake, about 2 miles south of the Idaho border. The Bear Lake Marina area provides a sheltered harbor, an 80-foot (24 m)-wide concrete boat ramp, boat slips, 13 campsites, restrooms, and showers. There is also a visitor center, along with a business renting boats and selling fishing and boating supplies.41°57′54″N 111°23′57″W / 41.96493°N 111.39922°W
East Side
The East Side portions of the park consists of six primitive camping sites and two concrete boat ramps. From the south end of the lake, about one mile up is and First Point 41°52′34″N 111°17′44″W / 41.8760359°N 111.2954776°W with a boat ramp. Then 2 miles further begins the Cisco Beach area, which runs approximately three miles from South Eden campground at the south to Rainbow Cove on the north 41°58′14″N 111°16′14″W / 41.9706725°N 111.2704647°W. And one mile further north, is the North Eden campground, at the Idaho border.
References
- ^ "Maps | Data Basin". databasin.org. Retrieved December 29, 2018.
- ^ "Bear Lake State Park: About the Park". Utah State Parks. Archived from the original on March 16, 2011. Retrieved February 4, 2011.
- ^ "Park Visitation Data". Utah State Parks. July 6, 2023.
- ^ "Bear Lake State Park". Utah State Parks.
- ^ "Bear Lake Camping and Picnics". Bear Lake Convention and Visitors Bureau. Archived from the original on December 1, 2008.
This article incorporates public domain material from the Utah Division of State Parks document "Bear Lake State Park: About the Park".