Within McCall Payette Lake is a glacier-carved 4,986.7 acre lake at the north end of McCall surrounded by the
Payette National Forest. The average depth of the 8.3 square mile lake is120 feet with a maximum depth of 304 feet. Activities on the Lake include swimming, sailing, wake surfing, waterskiing, jet skiing, canoeing, kayaking, stand-up paddle boarding, and boating. It is a popular fishing spot with many species present including tiger muskie, walleye, crappie, smallmouth bass, and three species of trout and kokanee. Trophy-sized fish are frequently caught. There are several public and private boat launch sites including a public boat launch next to the Mile High Marina, a private marina with 175 slips. There are also several options for renting boats and jet skis in town. The McCall Recreation Area, McCall Ranger District is accessible from the City and includes French Creek Trailhead, Smokejumper Base Interpretative Site, and Upper Payette Lake Campground, Camping Area and Group Campground. There are also many opportunities for outdoor activities in the McCall area.
Ponderosa State Park offers overnight camping in a variety of standard and serviced campsites, as well as cabins for small or large groups. There are many hiking and biking trails that double for groomed cross-country ski trails in the winter. It is also home to the McCall/University of Idaho Field Campus. The Park and the community of McCall hosted the 2008 Masters World Cup Nordic Ski Races. The McCall Municipal Golf Club is a 27 hole public course located near Ponderosa State Park. The Harshman
Skate Park, is a top 10 skate park in Idaho that was designed by the Skate Park Project, a foundation founded by
Tony Hawk. The annual Winter Carnival started in the 1941 The carnival features elaborate ice sculptures, fireworks, parades, live music nightly and special events in the City. The Manchester Ice and Event Center, located in the center of the City across the street from Payette Lake, has a regulation NHL-sized hockey rink, seating for 650 spectators and a cafe. In addition to hockey games, ice skating shows and public free skate times, the Center has private lessons in freestyle and hockey, skate rentals, sharpening, bumper cars, and curling lessons and leagues. The first annual McCall Ultra Sleddog Challenge race was held in January 2018. The race was developed by nearby resident Jerry Wortley, who had experience as a pilot for the Iditarod dogsled race in Alaska. Wortley wanted to commemorate the area's rich dog mushing tradition. Well-known musher Jessie Royer won the inaugural race.
Nearby McCall's
Little Ski Hill, formerly the "Payette Lakes Ski Area," is west of town on
Highway 55, just over the county line in
Adams County. Opened in 1937 as a diversion for local forest workers, its were donated by Carl Brown. The Little Ski Hill was the second
ski area in Idaho, after
Sun Valley, which opened a year earlier. It currently operates a
T-bar surface lift and has a vertical drop of , with a summit of above
sea level, and its slopes face north and west. The aging Nordic ski jump on the lower north slope, overlooking the bend in Highway 55, was removed in the 1990s.
Brundage Mountain, northwest of McCall, opened in November 1961. Brundage has a summit elevation of above sea level, and a vertical drop of . The slopes on Brundage Mountain are primarily west-facing and the mountain's average
snowfall exceeds . It currently has five
chairlifts and one Magic Carpet (two high-speed quad chairs, three triple chairs, and one magic carpet) with a capacity of 9,000 people per hour. The lifts afford access to 1920 acres of terrain, including 420 acres of lift-accessed, un-patrolled, without avalanche mitigation, backcountry terrain. The resort also operates a backcountry
snowcat skiing operation which provides guided access to of untracked powder in the
Payette National Forest north of the ski area. There are also three terrain parks of varying difficulty. Summer activities include lift-served mountain biking trails, scenic chairlift rides, summer concerts, yoga and other calendared events. Brundage was owned by the DeBoer family, descendants of early McCall pioneers, with
J. R. Simplot. In April 2016, the DeBoers took full control of the property, purchasing the 50% interest of his family. In 2020, ownership was transferred to Brundage Mountain Holdings with the DeBoer family maintaining an ownership stake.
Tamarack Resort is southwest of McCall, on the west side of
Cascade Reservoir, also known as
Lake Cascade. Originally conceived as "Valbois" in the early 1980s, the project was revived as "WestRock" in the late 1990s and ultimately renamed "Tamarack" in 2002. Tamarack opened for lift-served skiing on December 15, 2004, with a summit elevation of on West Mountain, up Rock Creek. Its vertical drop was over ; it used five chairlifts and a
poma lift. The slopes on Tamarack faced east, overlooking the
Cascade Reservoir and Long Valley. The resort also offered,
Osprey Meadows, an 18-hole championship golf course overlooking the Cascade Lake. The course was originally designed by Robert Trent Jones II and renovated by Robert Trent Jones Jr prior to its reopening in 2024. The resort also offers boating on Lake Cascade and miles of mountain biking trails. The resort now offers a variety of activities in addition to winter mountain sports, hosting many summer concerts, mountain biking competitions, golf tournaments and community activities. Jug Mountain Ranch is southeast of McCall at the foot of Jughandle Mountain and includes 1,000 acres of open space. Winter activities include nordic skiing and snowshoeing on 16 miles of groomed trails. Summer activities feature 20 miles of hiking and mountain biking on trails. In addition, Jug Mountain Ranch Golf Course provides a variety of terrain and vista. The course was designed by Don Knott, who had worked with Robert Trent Jones II, designer of Osprey Meadows at Tamarack Resort. ==Government==