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Ferris Provincial Park | Ontario

Ferris Provincial Park is a recreational park near Campbellford with seasonal day use and camping, wooded and open campsites, trails, Trent River views, and a pedestrian suspension bridge. Ontario Parks lists the park at 198.30 hectares, established in 1962.

The park is small enough for a focused weekend, but it has unusually memorable scenery for its size. The Trent River Gorge, Ranney Falls lookout, bridge views, and forest trails give it a clear identity.

Why Visit Ferris Provincial Park

Ontario Parks highlights the pedestrian suspension bridge over the Trent River Gorge, a selection of wooded and open car and RV campsites, more than 10 km of trails through forest and riverside settings, a lookout over Ranney Falls, spring woodland wildflowers along Drumlin Trail, and strong fall colours and vistas.

That makes Ferris a good choice for campers who want trails and viewpoints close to the campground, plus day visitors looking for a scenic walk near Campbellford.

Things To Do

Plan around car camping, RV camping, hiking, the suspension bridge, Ranney Falls views, Drumlin Trail wildflowers in spring, fall colour walks, riverside photography, picnics, and Campbellford side trips.

The official page currently notes an alert, so visitors should check current notices before relying on a specific facility or route.

Planning Notes

Ontario Parks lists Ferris day use and camping from May 8 to October 18, 2026. Confirm reservations, alert details, bridge and trail access, campsite availability, spring and fall conditions, facility hours, 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