
Indian Point Provincial Park is a natural environment park at the north end of Balsam Lake, near Coboconk and 38 kilometres north of Lindsay. Ontario Parks lists the park at 947 hectares, established in 1989.
Ontario Parks says there are no visitor facilities and that camping is prohibited. The official page identifies water access from Balsam Lake.
Indian Point protects one of the longest undeveloped shorelines in the Kawartha Lakes region. Ontario Parks describes the lake shore property as an alvar, consisting of a low limestone escarpment.
That makes the park valuable for people researching Balsam Lake shoreline conservation, alvar habitat, undeveloped Kawartha Lakes waterfront, and water-access natural environment parks.
Because the park is not a campground and has no visitor facilities, the article should not imply washrooms, serviced trails, rentals, or easy land-based access. Planning should centre on water access, habitat sensitivity, and official rule checks.
Alvars are sensitive open habitats, and the long undeveloped shoreline is the parks main conservation value. That makes quiet observation and careful boating logistics more appropriate than heavy recreation language.
Use nearby Balsam Lake services for practical support.
Plan around Balsam Lake water-access research, alvar and limestone escarpment learning, undeveloped shoreline awareness, paddling or boating where appropriate, photography from respectful distances, and nearby serviced parks for facilities.
Confirm water access, maps, no-camping rules, no-facility expectations, alvar sensitivity, shoreline conditions, boating guidance, alerts, weather, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.