Photo: Ontario Parks Bonnechere Provincial Park
on parks inside Bonnechere Provincial Parkwhat to expect
Day Use - A daily vehicle permit (DVP) is a great way to explore Bonnechere for the day. It includes entry to the park for one vehicle and its passengers and includes access to the park for all day use activities. Make some wonderful outdoor memories at Bonnechere while swimming, hiking, biking, fishing or having a picnic. The park has a beautiful sandy beach with buoyed swimming area, boardwalk and shady areas with picnic tables. There are no lifeguards posted at the beach. Tall Pines Campground is set among some spectacular White Pine trees that have survived the logging days. These campsites can accommodate equipment ranging from tents only to large trailers; many of which offer electrical hook up. River Loop Campground can accommodate tents only and small trailers. Many of the cam…
Description: Ontario Parks
the basics
The campsites
Things to do nearby
Within 5 km — trails, viewpoints, beaches, boat launches you can reach without packing up camp.
- Boat launch (ON 103605836)
- Boat launch (ON 103607090)
Plus 2 user-tagged beaches on OpenStreetMap — visible as pins on the map below.
What's around
Bonnechere Provincial Park plus 3 named places to see and do nearby — trails, beaches, viewpoints, water, and services.
Water + services
- dump station node/7726643712
6 user-tagged water sources, 1 user-tagged dump station on OpenStreetMap.
what to bring
This list adapts to Bonnechere Provincial Park. no showers means a travel towel;
If Bonnechere Provincial Park is full
Other places to stay within 25 km.
- Bonnechere Provincial Park - Tall Pines Campground
- Bonnechere Provincial Park - Sandy Flats Campground
- Dunne's Trailer Park Camping
- Levairs Campsite
- Bonnechere Baptist Camp
- Beaches at Pine Cone Park
- Covered Bridge Park
- Covered Bridge Park
Plus 54 user-tagged dispersed sites on OpenStreetMap — often genuine wild-pitches; check access rights before relying on one.