Don Getty Wildland Provincial Park

Don Getty Wildland Provincial Park is a wildland provincial park in Kananaskis Country, Alberta, Canada. It was created on 24 July 2001 and has an area of 62775 ha. The park was named for the 11th premier of Alberta, Don Getty. The park was designated as part of the Special Places 2000: Alberta’s Natural Heritage initiative.

Location
Don Getty WPP is not one continuous tract but sixteen separate parcels stretching 200 km from north to south. The park is on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains.

The three northern-most parcels are north of Canmore, the Bow River and the Trans-Canada Highway. The first is north of the Ghost River and borders the Ghost River Wilderness Area to the west. The northwest edge of the park borders Banff National Park. This parcel is the headwaters of Waiporous Creek. The second parcel is south of the Ghost River and north of Banff Nation Park. It borders the Ghost River Wilderness Area to the west. These two parcels would be continuous except for the Ghost River valley. The third parcel is the headwaters of the South Ghost River and borders Banff National Park to the north and west and Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park to the southwest. It borders the Reserve of the Stoney Nakoda First Nation to the east. This parcel includes Association Peak and End Mountain as well as slopes of Orient Point and Saddle Peak.

The parcels south of the Bow River are part of Kananaskis Country. There is a parcel on the upper Canyon Creek west of the Powderface Trail bordering Elbow-Sheep Wildland Provincial Park on the north, west, and south. There are two parcels on the west and east of Little Elbow Provincial Recreation Area at the southwest end of Highway 66. The western parcel borders Elbow-Sheep WPP on the north, west, and south and includes the eastern faces of Mount Cornwall, Mount Glasgow, Outlaw Peak & Banded Peak. The eastern parcel is east of the Elbow River and contains Forgetmenot Ridge and Forgetmenot and Threepoint Mountains. This parcel borders Elbow-Sheep WPP and Bluerock Wildland Provincial Park on the south.

Further south, there is a parcel east of the Junction Mountain and west of the Junction Mountain fire lookout tower bordering both Elbow-Sheep WPP and Bluerock WPP to the west. South of this is another parcel adjoining Elbow-Sheep WPP to the north containing Mount Patterson, Mount Head, and Holy Cross Mountain in the Highwood Range. This parcel is north and east of the Highwood River, east of Highway 40, and north of Highway 541. Another parcel is south of the Highwood River and Highway 40, north of Cataract Creek Provincial Recreation Area, and east of Highway 940. The parcel is centered on the valley of Cataract Creek. Going further south, there are five parcels in the Livingstone Range surrounding Mount Livingstone Natural Area. They are east of Highway 40 and the Livingstone River, south of Highway 532, and north of Bob Creek Wildland Provincial Park.

To the west, lies a long, thin strip on the eastern slopes of the Continental Divide, the border with British Columbia. It starts at Mount Odlum at the Elbow-Sheep WPP boundary. It runs south to Mount Gass and borders the Beehive Natural Area. This strip is over 40 km long and varies from 200 m to 5 km wide.

Ecology
The Don Getty WPP parcels connect with existing protected spaces and add ecological integrity, continuity, and contiguity to adjacent protected areas that preserve the natural heritage. The park contains alpine, sub-alpine, and montane ecosystems. The park also contains one of the deepest known caves in Alberta at Forgetmenot Pot on the south end of Forgetmenot Ridge. There are examples of several well-preserved periglacial features in the park: felsenmeer, stone stripes and stone polygons. The park includes Cataract Creek, "one of Alberta's finest walk-in trout fishing streams".

Activities
Motorized vehicles are not permitted in the park. Backcountry camping, hiking, and mountain biking are permitted; there are no developed facilities. Hunting and fishing are allowed with authorization.