Buffalo Pound Provincial Park

Buffalo Pound Provincial Park is in southern Saskatchewan, Canada, about 30 km north-east of Moose Jaw and 86 km north-west of the city of Regina. Access to the provincial park is from Highways 301 and 202.

The park centres on Buffalo Pound Lake, a prairie lake formed from glaciation about 10,000 years ago. Seasonal recreation activities include swimming (two public beaches and a pool), camping, fishing, mini-golf, biking, hiking, and access to the Trans Canada Trail. The park also features a captive herd of buffalo, along with the Nicolle Flats Marsh where a variety of wildlife can be observed. There is also a trout pond, known as Buffalo Pond, which is stocked with rainbow, brown, and tiger trout.

Amenities and attractions
There are seven different camping areas in the park with a total of about 270 campsites. Many of the individual sites have electric, water, and sewer services. The seven campgrounds are Lake Side, Elm View, Valley, Maple Vale, Shady Lane, Trail Ends, Lower Chalet, and Rankins Campgrounds.

Two disc golf courses are in the park. One is a 9-hole course for beginners and the other is a professional 18-hole course.

Completed in 2020, the park features a 4,000-square foot heated swimming pool called Buffalo Pound Provincial Park Pool. This pool replaced the original one, which was built in 1972.

Opportunities are available for canoeing, kayaking, swimming, fishing, and boating at the beach areas along the lake. There are over 30 km of mountain biking trails of varying difficulty levels, multiple hiking and walking trails totalling over 16 km, bison viewing areas, mini-golf, and picnicking sites.

Nicolle Flats Marsh
Nicolle Flats Marsh, with a total area of 73.18 km2 and an elevation of 511 m, is a large marshy area located in the park at the south-east corner of Buffalo Pound Lake. The confluence of the Qu'Appelle and Moose Jaw Rivers is in the marsh. The area is an Important Bird Area of Canada (Nicolle Flats SK 060) and is home to several species including mallards, American white pelicans, black-crowned night herons, Franklin's gulls, willow flycatchers, yellow-breasted chats, great blue herons, and black terns.

Several interpretive trails wind their way in and around the marsh and park area, including Nicolle Flats Trail (9.8 km), Valley Interpretive Trail (1.5 km), Dyke Trail (4.5 km), Bison View Interpretive Trail (3 km), and Marsh Boardwalk Trail (0.5 km). The Dyke Trail is part of the Trans Canada Trail.

Nicolle Homestead
The Nicolle Homestead (50.5613°N, -105.2995°W) was built by Charles Nicolle and his family in 1903. It is located at the easternmost part of the park. Charles Nicolle was a veteran of the North-West Mounted Police and settled in the Qu'Appelle Valley with his family and 1881. All that remains of the homestead is the fieldstone house that was built in 1903. The farm was named Mapleford and the Nicolle family lived and farmed there until 1959. The site can be reached along the Nicolle Flats Trail.