
Johnston Hrb./Pine Tree Pt. Provincial Park is a nature reserve about 70 kilometres northwest of Owen Sound. Ontario Parks lists the park at 929 hectares, established in 1989.
The official page says the park is located within the boundaries of Bruce Peninsula National Park. Ontario Parks also says there are no visitor facilities.
The parks main published feature is extensive jack pine forest that shelters deer in winter. That gives the page a clear conservation identity for readers researching Bruce Peninsula forest habitat, winter deer cover, and overlapping protected-area landscapes.
The relationship with Bruce Peninsula National Park is important for planning language. This Ontario Parks listing should not be framed as a separate serviced destination with facilities of its own. It is a nature reserve with a specific habitat role inside a broader protected landscape.
Because the official description is brief, the safest long-tail article is one that confirms the park record, highlights the jack pine and deer-shelter context, and points readers back to official sources for access and rules.
The no-facility note should stay prominent because visitors may otherwise confuse this protected Ontario Parks listing with the services available elsewhere in the broader Bruce Peninsula destination area.
Plan around official research, jack pine forest habitat, winter deer shelter context, Bruce Peninsula protected-area learning, low-impact nature appreciation where access is appropriate, and nearby official visitor-service locations.
Confirm access, maps, no-facility expectations, overlap with Bruce Peninsula National Park, sensitive habitat guidance, alerts, seasonal conditions, parking or access rules, and park rules through the official Ontario Parks source before travelling.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.