Nebraskaland

April 2026 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: https://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1544678

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April 2026 • Nebraskaland 47 The sky glows over the Kingsley Hydroplant on Lake Ogallala. Tent camping sites line much of the west side of Lake Ogallala. American white pelicans take flight from a sandbar in the Keystone basin. If you want some exercise, you can take the nearly mile-long mowed trail up the north end of the dam, hop across the highway and go explore the beach at Martin Bay. Or you can take the Lake Ogallala Hike-Bike Trail from the east campground to the Nebraska Public Power District's Diversion Dam. There, along the shallow Keystone Pool, you might find pelicans, shorebirds and other waterbirds feeding on shallow flats or in deeper water. If you are really adventurous, you can take a 6.4 mile lap around the lake. The Keystone basin draws duck and goose hunters during the fall a n d w i n te r. A n d d u r i n g w i n te r, especially when rivers and lakes, including McConaughy, freeze, bald eagles and other waterbirds f lock to the spillway in the southwest corner of the lake to feed on alewife, gizzard shad and other fish that f lushed through Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District's hydroelectric plant. "We love it over here," said Vincent Cooper of North Platte, who, with his wife, Tia, camp there often. "You can't beat waking up and looking out of your tent and seeing this." He pointed to the lake and the cedar-covered hills on its south shore. It's a different world below the dam. And people like it that way. N

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