
Opeongo River Provincial Park is a 955 hectare waterway park adjacent to Algonquin Provincial Park, 87 kilometres northeast of Bancroft. Ontario Parks lists the park as established in 1985.
The river can be accessed from Highway 60 west of Madawaska and from the Shall Lake access point of Algonquin, north of Victoria Lake. That access context makes the park especially relevant for travellers already researching Algonquin-area routes.
Opeongo River is a focused page for spring whitewater canoeing and forest-habitat research. Ontario Parks says whitewater canoeing is possible in spring, while also noting there are no visitor facilities.
The ecological diversity is the bigger official story. Ontario Parks identifies no fewer than 34 distinct forest communities in the area, including white pine, sugar maple, poplar, and white birch. Hikers may also encounter wet meadows and shoreland habitat.
Because the park has no visitor facilities, visitors should treat it as a route and nature-study destination rather than a serviced campground. Spring water conditions, skill level, access points, and current maps should shape the whole plan.
The Algonquin-adjacent access points make it especially important to distinguish this waterway from nearby serviced areas.
Plan around spring whitewater canoeing, forest community observation, wet meadow and shoreland habitat awareness, hiking where appropriate, map review, and Algonquin-area access planning.
Confirm access from Highway 60 and Shall Lake, maps, water levels, whitewater skill requirements, no-facility expectations, weather, alerts, and park rules through Ontario Parks.
Non-operating park in Ontario Parks locator.