One-Tank Trip for
May 12/12
(c) By Jim Fox
The first
summer-like long weekend is fast approaching, meaning it’s time to open up that
seasonal retreat or head out for some wilderness camping.
The Victoria Day
holiday weekend is when Ontario parks and campgrounds come alive.
Here are some tips
on how to deal with the “campground full” sign at the most popular parks.
Going fishing at Bass Lake Provincial Park near Orillia. (Jim Fox photo) |
Don’t be shut out of the woods
If you go out in
the woods tonight, you're sure of a big surprise – that is, if you haven’t
booked in advance.
More than half of
the reservations are made in the first two months of the year for the five most
popular Ontario Parks.
So, it’s best to
even book now for the August Civic Holiday or Labour Day weekend or take your
chances as not all sites are spoken for in advance.
Ontario Parks
received almost 10-million visits last year, an increase of 50,000 over the
previous year.
The choice is
immense, with more than 330 provincial parks with some 110 operational and offering
a wide choice of locations, facilities, services and activities.
Provincial park campsites with a lake view such as this one will soon be filled with the start of the Victoria Day holiday weekend. (Barbara Fox photo) |
Many parks offer
TackleShare where visitors can borrow fishing tackle as well as lifejackets
free of charge.
Roofed
accommodation ranges from historic ranger cabins to cottages, yurts (cabin-like
structures) and lodge rentals.
Alternatives to the Big Five
Since the busiest
parks fill up quickly, here are some alternatives.
The Big Five are Algonquin,
Killbear, the Pinery, Sandbanks and Bon Echo, said Lori Waldbrook of Ontario
Parks, who suggests the following:
- Try Arrowhead or
Samuel de Champlain parks instead of Algonquin.
Arrowhead is north
of Huntsville and has new electrical sites and a trail network for cycling and
hiking.
Water-based
activities can be enjoyed on Little and Big East Rivers, the two park lakes are
ideal for paddling and fishing, and three sandy beaches offer good swimming.
The hills were alive with Ontario’s flower, the white trillium, earlier this week at Bass Lake Provincial Park near Orillia. (Jim Fox photo) |
Enjoy amphitheatre
and children’s programs and there are canoe, kayak and mountain bike rentals.
Samuel de Champlain
park is near Mattawa on one of Canada’s most important routes of the fur trade
era.
New exhibits at the
Voyageur Museum showcase the area’s history and there are Voyageur canoe rides.
- Instead of the
busy Killbear Provincial Park, head for Grundy Lake park, 80 kilometres north
of Parry Sound.
It has comfortable,
family camping at lakefront sites and summertime Natural Heritage Education
programs for children.
Canoeing is
plentiful and park lakes provide access to Voyageur routes along French and
Pickerel rivers.
- Inverhuron
Provincial Park, near Tiverton south of Owen Sound, is a good alternative to
the Pinery.
Prized for its
sandy beach, dunes and sunsets, Inverhuron has outstanding swimming and
well-treed campsites along with a full-range of facilities, including a
laundromat and store.
The park’s camping
permit allows for day visits to MacGregor Point, Point Farms, Sauble Falls and
Pinery parks.
- Try Presqu’ile
Provincial Park near Brighton instead of Sandbanks.
It has a
2.5-kilometre sand beach and a variety of campsites from shoreline to forest.
There are 16
kilometres of trails and summer interpretive programs in this birding hotspot
that has recorded 334 species during spring and fall migrations.
The park has a
nature centre and the second-oldest working lighthouse on Lake Ontario.
- Try Murphys Point
Provincial Park, 18 kilometres south of Perth, instead of Bon Echo or
Charleston Lake parks.
Murphys Point is
part of the Frontenac Arch, a geological phenomenon and recognized biosphere,
offering excellent facilities, services and activities including a visitor
centre and children’s programs.
There are guided
tours of the restored Silver Queen mica mine, two pioneer homesteads and ruins
of an early sawmill, canoe and barbecue rentals and boat-in sites as well as
drive-to and backcountry sites.
This deserted provincial park fishing and boating dock will soon be packed with campers and day-trippers. (Jim Fox photo) |
Learning to camp
Ontario Parks is
“reaching out to new campers” through a Learn to Camp program that expands to
six parks and additional community-based programs.
Coordinator Jeff
Brown said more than 800 people learned all about camping at overnight sessions
last year.
Upcoming free
community events lasting one to two hours are in London on May 15 at 7 p.m. at
the Masonville Library; June 7 at 6:45 p.m. at the Byron Library; and June 9 at
10 a.m. at Cherryhill Library. www.londonpubliclibrary.ca
There are also
sessions in Toronto and district, Windsor, Orillia and Bolton through July 16. www.ontarioparks.com/learntocamp
Here’s how to order
Ontario Parks’
reservations can be made online at www.ontarioparks.com
or by calling 1-888-668-7275. For trip planning advice, canoe route maps and
general inquiries, call (613) 332-3940, Ext. 261.
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Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
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