Swan Lake Canoe Route

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This information is a public record of the 1981 NRT application and may be out of date if it has not been updated by a trail manager --
check with the trail manager for updated details before visiting.

Swan Lake Canoe Route

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Water Trail (other)
  • Length
    60 miles
  • Elevation Gain
    --
  • Route Type
    out & back

The Swan Lake Canoe Route 30 lakes are linked with the main branch and the West Fork of the Moose River in an interconnecting system of waterways and portages. This forms a canoe route of about 60 miles, though many shorter excursions are possible and even more likely.

  • Kenai Canoe trails. Photo by Alaska Canoe.
  • two scout groups going from west entrance to Swan lake Moose river. Photo by Alaska Canoe.
  • swan lake kenai canoe trails. Photo by Alaska Canoe.
  • Swan Lake in the town of Sitka on Baranof Island, southeast Alaska, USA, viewed from Halibut Point Road; fireweed flowers in for. Photo by Sepheng3.
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Location: In Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, N side of Kenai Peninsula, E of Kenai. (recertified 1993)

  • States: Alaska
  • Counties: Kenai Peninsula

"A wilderness, in contrast with those areas where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain." With these words, the Congress of the United States defined the general characteristics of a wilderness area. The Kenai Canoe Trails is one of only three wilderness canoe systems established in the United States (the other being Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in northeastern Minnesota and Okefenokee in Georgia).

These trails are located within the northwestern section of the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, an area of 1.3 million acres, established by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act of 1980 for its outstanding wildlife and recreational values. The Kenai Canoe Trails are divided into two systems, the Swan Lake and Swanson River Canoe Routes. Both trails are National Recreation Trails. The Swan Lake System is perhaps the most visited of the two systems and contains 30 lakes linked with the main branch and the West Fork of the Moose River in an interconnecting system of waterways and portages. This forms a canoe route of about 60 miles, though many shorter excursions are possible and even more likely.

The Swanson River Canoe Route lies north of the Swan Lake System and connects 40 lakes with 46 miles of the Swanson River. In total, the Swanson River Canoe Route forms a trail system of just over 80 miles in length. Besides the lakes directly connected by portages and waterways, this area contains thousands of other lakes which are seldom explored or even seen. The contour of this wilderness is not particularly rugged but is generally flat to gently undulating topography of ancient glacial deposits.

Surrounding the lakes that are scattered throughout the area are rounded hills and ridges rising up to a maximum of 295 feet in elevation. But the lakes are the most noticeable feature. They drain either directly or indirectly into two systems, the Moose and Swanson Rivers. These are both shallow streams, following meandering paths through poorly-drained swamps and muskeg flats. Both the Moose and the Swanson Rivers also offer interesting floating possibilities. (From The Kenai Canoe Trails, by Daniel L. Quick, 1995)

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Allowed Uses:

Boating, human-powered

Other Activities

  • Camping
  • Fishing
  • Hunting
  • Wildlife viewing / observation

Public Contact

Scott Slavik
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge
Soldotna, AK 99669
[email protected](907) 262-7021
kenai.fws.gov

More Details

  • Elevation (low): --
  • Elevation (high): 295
  • Elevation (cumulative): --

  • Part of a Trail System? No
  • Surface (primary): Water, calm
  • Surfaces (additional): --

  • Tread Width (average): 0"
  • Tread Width (minimum): --
  • Running length (minimum): --

  • Tread Grade (average, percent): --
  • Tread Grade (maximum):
  • Running length (maximum): --

  • Cross-slope (average, percent): --
  • Cross-slope (maximum): --
  • Running length (maximum): --
  • Certified as an NRT
    Jan 1, 1981
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