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Grays Lake. Type: Lake. Categories: landform and body of water. Location: Bonneville, Idaho, Rocky Mountains, United States, North America. View on OpenStreetMap. Latitude. 43.06681° or 43° 4' 1" north. Longitude.
Grays Lake National Wildlife Refuge is located in Southeast Idaho, 30 miles north of Soda Springs, Idaho. The Refuge was created to protect a portion of the historic Grays Lake, a high elevation 22,000 acre bulrush marsh that hosts the largest breeding population of sandhill cranes in North America.
Photos, information and maps of the Grays Lake National Wildlife Refuge area in southeastern Idaho
- 74 Grays Lake Road, Wayan, 83285, ID
- (208) 237-6615
Grays Lake National Wildlife Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge of the United States located in southeastern Idaho. It has the largest hardstem bulrush marsh in North America . Overview
Grays Lake lies within the Caribou Range of the Rocky Mountains in southeast Idaho, and is at the western edge of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. The valley lies about 30 miles north of Soda Springs, Idaho and about 70 miles southwest of Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
Located in a high mountain valley near Soda Springs, the refuge and surrounding mountains offer scenic vistas, wildflowers, and fall foliage displays. Lands adjacent to the 19,400-acre (79 km 2) refuge are primarily wet meadows and grasslands.
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Grays Lake National Wildlife Refuge is the largest hardstem bulrush marsh in North America. Located in a high mountain valley near Soda Springs in southeastern Idaho, the refuge and surrounding mountains offer incredible scenic vistas, wildflowers, and fall foliage displays.