Standing Bear Lake

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Standing Bear Lake
Type Regional
Location South of Bennington, NE
Area 685 acres (277 ha)
Created 1977
Operated by City of Omaha
Status Open all year

Standing Bear Lake, also known as Dam Site 16, is a park located at 6404 North 132nd street in West Omaha, Nebraska.

The park has a 135-acre (55 ha) lake with boating in the summertime, and ice skating in the winter. The park and recreation area covers about 396 acres (160 ha) of land surrounding the lake, with a 131-acre (53 ha) wildlife area is located on the west side of the park.[1]

History

Standing Bear Lake park opened in 1977, and includes fishing and boating, trails, and picnic areas.[2]

Also known as Dam Site 16, the lake was originally built as a dam for flood control on Papillion Creek in the Lower Papio Valley. Recently the Nebraska State Game and Parks Commission added trout fishing to the lake.[3]

The park is named after Chief Standing Bear, who with his people, was told to leave his homeland along the Niobrara River in northeast Nebraska for Indian Territory in Oklahoma. After finding no supplies in Oklahoma and many of his people dying, including his own son, Standing Bear led 30 members of the Ponca Tribe back to Nebraska. He had to fight for the right to be recognized as a human being and his basic humanity, saying, "I am a man. The same God made us both." [4]

Features

One of the earliest trails in the Omaha area is around Standing Bear Lake. The 6-foot-wide (1.8 m) trail slopes in places and is 3.5 miles (5.6 km) around but does not completely encircle the lake.[5] The path is narrow and not biker-friendly.[clarification needed]

A large variety of fish may be found in the lake, including walleye, catfish, bass, bluegill, crappie, drum, saugeye, yellow perch, and trout.[6]

The park includes a remote control airplane flying field.[7]

Ice skating is offered in the winter.

One unusual feature at Standing Bear is a wind organ. Created by artist Douglas Hollis, the sculpture is a combination of metal pipes placed vertically in the ground. Each pipe has a hole in its side for filtering the wind and making sound.[8]

Standing Bear sits in the middle of various housing developments. This makes it easy to get to, yet it still offers a secluded area to relax and get away from the city.[9]

See also

References

  1. "Zorinsky Lake", U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved 3/23/08.
  2. "2006parklisting.pdf", City of Omaha. Retrieved 3/23/08.
  3. "Midwest Fishing Lake Guide, Standing Bear Lake" Gravity One Communications. Retrieved 3/23/08
  4. poncacity.com
  5. omahatrails.com
  6. Midwest Fishing Lake Guide
  7. "City of Omaha Parks & Recreation", City of Omaha. Retrieved March 23, 2008.
  8. from squeak.preminant.org.blog
  9. Yahoo Travel Guide

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