Okmulgee Lake

Okmulgee, Oklahoma, US

Dam

59 species

Okmulgee Lake

Okmulgee, Oklahoma 74447

About this Location

Waterfowl at Lake Okmulgee are plentiful during the migration periods and many spend the winter. Birding from the spillway below the dam is best in spring when warblers, vireos, flycatchers, buntings, woodpeckers, and Eastern Bluebirds are here. The Wood Duck, Belted Kingfisher, and Wood Thrush have nested. 

Follow SH 56 west at 6 St. in downtown Okmulgee (not the 56 Loop at the northern edge of town). Birding along the Deep Fork River en route to the recreational area is excellent, with additional species to be found in open fields across the road--Dickcissels, Horned Larks, and Eastern Meadowlarks.

Fourteen miles west of Okmulgee at the large wooden Okmulgee Recreation Area sign, keep to the right on SH 56 which goes by the spillway at Lake Okmulgee. Park and explore the area below the dam from the spillway back to the bridge across Salt Creek to the west. Birding from the spillway below the dam is best in spring when warblers, vireos, flycatchers, buntings, woodpeckers, and Eastern Bluebirds are here. The Wood Duck, Belted Kingfisher, and Wood Thrush have nested. The Pileated Woodpecker is seen occasionally.

As one of two special-use public facilities, the lake is designated as the Lake Okmulgee Recreation Area with 535 acres. Waterfowl are plentiful during the migration periods and many spend the winter. The Game Management Area is 7,719 acres of river bottoms and woods. Roads are dirt, rocky and rough. Be cautious if roads are muddy or if trails are dry sand for it is possible to get stuck in either. Enter the Game Management Area beyond the spillway and follow the graded road. Just beyond the pistol range take the first right turn. Parts of this road are bordered with multiflora roses. Watch for Rufous-sided Towhees, Cedar Waxwings, Mockingbirds, Cardinals and wintering sparrows.

Turn back where the road forks and return to the main route. Follow

this past the machine shed to a right turn, about 2 miles. This leads to a slough and the river, a good spot for wintering birds - Great Blue Herons, ducks, woodpeckers, sparrows, towhees, and Yellow-rumped Warblers. Greater Prairie-Chickens have been observed in the open grassy areas in spring. Turn left to continue the drive back to the highway. October is the best birding time in the Recreation Area. Deer are common and the area is usually closed during deer hunting season. It is not necessary to sign in or to have permission to use this area.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

Content from Originally published in Tulsa Audubon's "A Guide to Birding in Oklahoma" (1973, 1986)

Last updated November 10, 2023