
Beekahncheekahmeeng Deebahncheekayweehn Eenahohnahnuhn Provincial Park is a large unclassified Ontario park associated with Pikangikum First Nation. Ontario Parks lists the park at 99,576 hectares, established in 2011.
This page needs especially careful framing. Ontario Parks says sacred sites are found throughout the park and that Indigenous people conduct traditional activities for livelihood and cultural purposes.
Its large size makes permission, route clarity, and cultural respect essential.
The official page identifies waterways as a defining feature of the landscape, including rivers and lakes along their course. Ontario Parks locates the park along many waterways or portions of waterways, including the Berens River, Throat River, Nungesser River, Serpent River, Mamakwash Lake, Dowling River, Barton Lake, and others.
Ontario Parks also says there are no visitor facilities available. That means this should not be presented like a conventional visitor park with campsites, beaches, trails, or day-use infrastructure.
The most useful planning message is respect: understand the protected landscape, recognize the presence of sacred sites and ongoing Indigenous traditional activities, and verify current guidance before considering any travel.
Plan around official research, route and access verification, learning the waterway context, respecting sacred and cultural sites, understanding that no visitor facilities are available, and contacting the appropriate official sources before making travel assumptions.
Ontario Parks lists the address through Pikangikum First Nation. Confirm access, permissions, cultural-site guidance, maps, no-facility expectations, waterway conditions, alerts, emergency planning, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.