Places to Go Camping in Ontario

Ontario is Canada's second largest province, and it borders three U.S. states and two of the Great Lakes: Lake Erie and Lake Superior. Ontario has many provincial and national parks, most of which have large numbers of campsites available for Canadian and U.S. visitors to enjoy.
  1. Quetico Provincial Park

    • Quetico Provincial Park is the Canadian counterpart to the United States' Boundary Waters Canoe Area. Quetico has a total of 2,200 back-country campsites and one drive-in campground with 106 campsites, 38 of which have electricity. This drive-in campsite is located on French Lake and has showers and a laundry facility. Besides camping, visitors to Quetico can enjoy hiking, biking, fishing, swimming, as well as canoeing and kayaking on the park's network of interconnected lakes. The park is accessible by car through two entrances and by canoe or kayak at four different points.

      Quetico Provincial Park
      Atikokan, Ontario
      P0T 1C0
      807-597-2735
      ontarioparks.com/ENGLISH/quet.html

    Sleeping Giant Provincial Park

    • Sleeping Giant Provincial Park is located on a peninsula between Thunder Bay and Lake Superior, directly opposite the United States' Isle Royale National Park. Sleeping Giant has a number of campgrounds, including a 200-site campground that has one picnic table and fire pit per site and two nearby comfort stations with flush toilets, showers and laundry facilities. All campgrounds are either on or near Marie Louise Lake. Sleeping Giant also has hiking and biking trails, fishing, swimming, as well as canoeing and kayaking. Sleeping Giant also has cabin, canoe and kayak rentals.

      Sleeping Giant Provincial Park
      General Delivery
      Pass Lake, Ontario
      P0T 2M0
      807-977-2526
      ontarioparks.com/ENGLISH/slee.html

    Lake Superior Provincial Park

    • Lake Superior Provincial Park is located right on Lake Superior and has a total of 249 campsites in three campgrounds; 175 of these campsites are back-country sites that are accessible only by hiking or paddling. Two of the campgrounds have sites with electrical hookups and comfort stations with flush toilets, showers and laundry facilities. Besides hiking and canoe or kayak paddling, Lake Superior Provincial Park also allows fishing, swimming and hunting. The park's eastern border can be accessed by using the Algoma Central Railway, which drops off hikers and paddlers along the way.

      Lake Superior Provincial Park
      P.O. Box 267
      Wawa, Ontario
      P0S 1K0
      705-856-2284
      ontarioparks.com/ENGLISH/lakes.html

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