
Eagle-Dogtooth Provincial Park is a large waterway park in northwestern Ontario. Ontario Parks lists the park at 41,128 hectares, established in 2003.
The park spans more than 170 kilometres from Vermilion Bay to Kenora and roughly parallels Highway 17 to the north. Ontario Parks places it 35 kilometres north of Sioux Narrows, 20 kilometres east of Kenora, and 36 kilometres west of Dryden.
Ontario Parks describes Eagle-Dogtooth as an important recreational waterway and a waterway link between Eagle Lake and nearby protected areas, including Rushing River and Winnange Lake.
The park also protects regionally significant moraines, wetlands, and pine forest ecosystems. That mix gives the page value for paddlers, anglers, route planners, protected-area researchers, and travellers comparing Kenora-Dryden corridor landscapes.
There are no visitor facilities available, so the experience should be framed around route planning and self-contained travel. The official page is useful because it establishes the scale of the waterway, the nearby communities, and the protected features without promising developed amenities.
Its size also means readers should choose a sector before planning activities. Kenora, Dryden, Vermilion Bay, Sioux Narrows, Eagle Lake, and nearby protected areas can all point to different access questions.
Plan around waterway route research, paddling and boating where appropriate, Eagle Lake connections, moraine and wetland context, pine forest ecosystems, fishing rule checks, map review, and nearby serviced parks such as Rushing River for facilities.
Confirm access points, maps, water levels, camping permissions, fishing rules, no-facility expectations, weather, emergency planning, alerts, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.