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Aubinadong-Nushatogaini Rivers Provincial Park | Ontario

Aubinadong-Nushatogaini Rivers Provincial Park is a waterway park in the Algoma Headwaters region. Ontario Parks lists the park at 4,928 hectares, established in 2003.

This is a remote route park where access logistics matter. Ontario Parks notes portage areas and boat access zones, but also says there is minimal road access.

Minimal road access makes the park better suited to deliberate route planning than casual arrival.

Why Visit Aubinadong-Nushatogaini Rivers Provincial Park

The official page describes an 85 kilometre network of river and lake sections, including both flat and white water stretches. It is connected to Algoma Headwaters Provincial Park and drains Megisan Lake.

Ontario Parks also describes the rivers as small sand-bottom drainages with bedrock-controlled rapids in some sections. That combination makes the park relevant for paddlers researching route character, portages, access, water levels, and how this waterway connects to the larger protected Algoma landscape.

Because the access is limited, visitors should not treat the park as an easy roadside stop. It belongs in a careful canoe-route plan with current maps, safety equipment, weather checks, and realistic skill assessment.

Things To Do

Plan around canoe route research, flatwater paddling, whitewater decision-making, portage planning, boat access logistics, bedrock rapid observation, backcountry photography, and connecting route ideas to Algoma Headwaters.

Planning Notes

Ontario Parks locates the park about 90 kilometres northeast of Sault Ste. Marie and 50 kilometres south of Chapleau. Confirm access, maps, portage status, boat access zones, water levels, rapid conditions, alerts, weather, camping permissions, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.

Park Details

Designation
Provincial Park
Jurisdiction
Provincial
Managing Agency
Ontario Parks
Province/Territory
Ontario

Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.