Address:
Phone:
Hours of Operation:
Ponderosa State Park offers every kind of overnight experience imaginable with a variety of standard and serviced campsites, or cabins for small or large groups, amid a beyond-scenic mountain setting next to Payette Lake. There’s always more to explore! Learn more about all that Ponderosa State Park offers.
Beautiful Payette Lake surrounds the Peninsula Unit and is the shoreline of the North Beach Unit of the park, located in the heart of one of Idaho’s most popular year-round destinations. Hike and bike on your own or with a guide, listen to a park naturalist in the evening at the amphitheater or walk with them on one of the trails. Children can participate in the Junior Ranger Program in the summer months. Visitors can meander the North Fork of the Payette River in a canoe or kayak (rentals available), Nordic ski on groomed trails, snowshoe on designated trails, or simply sit on the front porch of a park cabin and enjoy the spectacular view.
Whether you enjoy cooking in a Dutch oven at a primitive camp site or an indoor stove in the comfort of a deluxe, lakeview cabin, Ponderosa State Park presents plentiful overnight experiences with a variety of standard and serviced campsites, or cabins.
The University of Idaho McCall Outdoor Science School (MOSS) is located on the shore of Payette Lake and within the boundaries of Ponderosa State Park. As Idaho’s ONLY publicly operated K12 outdoor school, MOSS offers a one-of-a-kind learning experience for youth, graduate students, teachers and the community. MOSS is open to educational groups who would like to hold workshops, seminars and courses in the McCall area. Contact us today to see if we have space for your group.
Visit University of Idaho McCall Outdoor Science School
Call 1-888-634-3918 or E-Mail
Ponderosa State Park has nine cabins nestled along the shore of Payette Lake. These cabins come with a full-size refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave, and dishwasher. The kitchens also include; cookware, bakeware, dinnerware, utensils, cups, coffee maker, toaster, and so much more. The bedrooms and bathrooms come stocked with blankets, sheets, and towels.
Photos of Mule Deer cabin:
Photos of Moose cabin:
Photos of White-tail cabin:
Camper Cabin: Non-Deluxe
Photos of Fawn cabin:
There is a 2-night minimum stay per reservation.
There’s more to explore! Learn more about all that Ponderosa State Park offers!
No additional seasonal information provided.
The Watertower II project will connect two previously treated areas, creating a continuously restored site from east to west across the park. This is part of three-decades worth of work to restore the historic landscape and reduce wildfire risk in the park.
The project will focus on cutting (thinning) select grand fir trees. Work will include road edge maintenance and the creation of “fuel breaks” that will facilitate better emergency access and evacuation routes. Fuel breaks are areas where bushes, low branches, and other wildfire-risk fuels are removed. Fuel breaks also help slow wildfire.
The project is planned to begin the last week of November and continue through mid-January. It is in a 35-acre block of land north of the new Kokanee Cove entrance road within the park roads to the north, east and west.
The park waterline and Kokanee Cove projects are underway and will bring enhanced service and new recreational opportunities to Ponderosa State Park.
The line will provide better, more reliable service to guests, while the Kokanee project will bring new opportunities for the public to enjoy a largely unused area. Besides a new beach access, the Kokanee project will include an event center, rental cabins and an outdoor fire pit/gathering place.
See video of the work CM Company is doing to transform Kokanee.
For more information, please see this article about the project.
Please note that some clearing of trees has been required to run the line and create the Kokanee service road. Every effort has been taken to minimize the overall impact.
Most of the $1.3 million in work will start in September 2020 and run through the winter, when visitor activity slows and weather conditions favor construction and rehabilitation work on the MeadowMarsh Forest.
The construction work includes utility upgrades to the Aspen loop in the Peninsula Campground, paving of the road to Osprey Point, and repair of the Peninsula Boat Ramp.
Here is a summary of upcoming and completed work:
2023 Updates:
2022 Updates:
This fall (2022), the Park plans to burn the remaining piles from the mechanical thinning/piling portion of the restoration project and broadcast burn 2 units, encompassing seven acres on the north and south ends of the project area.
Camping will be closed in the Blackberry loop starting Wednesday September 7,2022. Aspen and Chokecherry loops will be open and available for camping after Labor Day, but construction crews will be working in the Blackberry loop so consider that before planning a stay.
2021 Updates:
The MeadowMarsh II project will improve the health of 90 acres of forest while decreasing the risk of a catastrophic fire. A combination of targeted tree thinning, prescribed burning and other techniques will restore the historical balance to the forest, which in a natural state should be dominated by Ponderosa pines. The sale of harvested trees is anticipated to raise $88,000, which will fund the restoration work.
Today, largely because of fire suppression, the forest is overgrown with Grand firs and other species vulnerable to severe and potentially uncontrollable fire. Under normal conditions, the Ponderosas are adapted to withstand periodic, low-intensity fires, which clear space and improve forest health. The project will return the forest to a more natural and sustainable state.