Killbear Provincial Park

Get More Gone Outside

 
 
 
Killbear Provincial Park
Website: www.ontarioparks.ca
 

Natural Features

Killbear Provincial Park is on the Georgian Bay peninsula and is a water lover's paradise for swimming and other water activities.  It has great places you can camp which could be by a sandy beach, on a rocky shore or under the trees.  You can also hike to lookouts for views of Parry Sound or to see one of Georgian Bay's spectacular sunsets.
Set in the middle of Georgian Bay's 30,000 Islands, Killbear sits on the southern edge of the Canadian Shield, which accounts for the dramatic and unspoiled landscape.  
The gentle sand beach is perhaps the finest on the eastern shore of Georgian Bay.  The coastline is steep and jagged and along the entire shoreline the point features wind-swept pine.  Northern hardwoods compete with southern deciduous trees like maple and beech.  Black spruce and cedar occupy the wet boggy areas and rock outcrops, and hemlock is found on the southern slope of the central ridge.  
A few hills, vestiges of ancient mountains, roll across a landscape that is otherwise flat and scrubbed clean by glaciers.  Outcroppings of rock and exposed patches of bedrock are comparable in age to the rock found at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, possibly the oldest exposed rock on the planet.
Plants and Wildlife

Rare or endangered species of snake and turtle are found in the park in a sedge meadow environment. Other protected habitats include a black spruce bog, a floating sphagnum bog, and the park's remaining sand dunes.
Learn about the park's natural and cultural resources at the Visitor Centre.
Visit the Friends of Killbear web site.
 

Location(s)

Address: Killbear Provincial Park
#35 Killbear Park Road, RR#1
Nobel, Ontario
Canada
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