Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park

Summary

Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park (officially Kawartha Highlands Signature Site) is a 375-square-kilometre (145 sq mi) area of preserved wilderness and recreational areas in south-central Ontario, Canada. It is located to the north and east of the main belt of the Kawartha Lakes, primarily in the township of North Kawartha. It is the largest single area of preserved land in the southern part of the province (excluding Algonquin Park, parts of which are in northern and southern Ontario).[1]

Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park
Copper Lake in Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park
LocationOntario, Canada
Nearest cityPeterborough, Ontario
Coordinates44°45′N 78°15′W / 44.750°N 78.250°W / 44.750; -78.250
Area375.87 km2 (145.12 sq mi)[1]
Established1999, expanded in 2003
Governing bodyOntario Parks

The park was expanded from its original size of 18.6 square kilometres (7.2 sq mi) to its current size in June 2003. It was previously a mostly wilderness tract enclosing Bottle Lake and Sucker Lake, and accessible primarily by canoe, many by portage routes only. It now encloses many more small lakes as well as all of Anstruther Lake, and has many cottages and access roads.

The park officially became operational in May 2011 and ministry permits for camping and parking are now required. Campsites are designated and provided with picnic tables, fire rings and thunder boxes. Official Ontario Parks maps indicate the park boundaries and exclude small tracts of land which contain pre-existing cottages. Additionally, some cottages on Serpentine and Copper Lakes remain without owning land and continue to use motor boats.[clarification needed]

Municipally, the park is completely within Peterborough County: about two-thirds of its area is in the township of North Kawartha, and the remaining western portion is in the township of Trent Lakes. The park office is located offsite in Bancroft, Ontario, and co-located with the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park Introduction". Ontario Parks. Retrieved 26 November 2016.

External links edit

  Media related to Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website