One of the best Camping site in Ontario is Algonquin Provincial Park
We have experince 3 days and 2 nights in the site and it was so much fun.
Algonquin Provincial Park is one of the best camping site in Ontario
you will see in the video the different activities we did like
building a tent
trailing
canoeing and Kayaking
smore and barbeque
beautiful and tall trees
bone fire
Timelapse shoot of clouds sky lake , sunset and stars
We have a lot beautiful experience in this place , all the people in the are was so nice , there you can use a nice washroom an you can use shower too, there is electric plug in the place so you will not worry about your phone , camera get drain and other stuff. The place was so clean and peaceful but watch out for black bear ^^ but its ok they don't harm unless you harm them..
Adam Ruzzo & Algonquin
What luck! First night traveling and filming across Ontario's Explorer's Edge region in Ontario and ran into good friend, and amazing musician, Adam Ruzzo. He had a few nice things to say about Algonquin.
Motorcycle ride Algonquin-Ottawa-Gatineau-Haliburton
Motorcycle road trip from Toronto through Algonquin park to Ottawa to Gatineau park to Haliburton back to Toronto.
Motorcycle: Suzuki V-Strom 650 2012
Camera: Drift Ghost-S
Music:
ONTARIO DOGSLEDDING ~ ALGONQUIN PARK, ONTARIO!
An amazing, private dogsledding tour company near the border of Algonquin Park. Established 2001, Highland Wilderness Tours has been teaching dogsledding to customers of all ages and sizes for over ten years! Before that owner Penny Nicol won the OFSS gold medal for dogsledding in the 60 mile division. You can still see some of her old racing lines on the dogteams here. Always fun, personal, and private, with a maximum of five dogsled teams per run. Open December 27th to March Break. Visit us online at ridethewilderness.com/ontariodogsledding.htm
Pack of Wild Eastern Wolves in Algonquin Provincial Park (www.algonquinpark.on.ca)
This video shows a pack of 7 wild Eastern Wolves in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada. Watch as the dominant wolf feeds upon the White-tailed Deer carcass and the other pack members interact. More dominant animals (holding their tails high when interacting) dominate subordinate pack members (holding their tails between their legs). At one point a more dominant animal pins down a subordinate wolf who relaxes until the other wolf departs. Common Ravens (the numerous birds) await their opportunity to scavenge for a meal throughout the duration of the video. This is a sight rarely recorded. Only 5 five wolves are visible at one time, but the whole pack of 7 is in the valley out of the camera's frame.
To learn more about wolves and wolf research in Algonquin Park check: and
Recorded from the Algonquin Park Visitor Centre viewing deck on Thursday, February 18, 2010 by Park Staff.
Algonquin Provincial Park Booth Lake - teaser
Awesomeness. The Happy Camper got back from an amazing canoe trip in Algonquin Provincial Park. He took the winners of the The Canadian Canoe Museum auction bid at their annual Beaver Gala - a three day canoe trip with The Happy Camper. Very cool. All $ goes to the Canoe Museum. We had a blast. Amazing group. They've never canoe tripped before - but they are certainly hooked on it now. Here's a quick teaser of the trip. More to come. And thanks so much for Algonquin Outfitters for helping out. It wouldn't have happened without them.
Ride up to Algonquin Provincial Park
I went camping in Algonquin Park for a weekend, and used part of a GPX route I found on the internet to get there.
Some logging roads, some snowmobile trails, some gear lost along the way....
Frost Ski Trails, Algonquin-Haliburton Highlands
Please click this link here for a higher quality version of this video:
For best viewing set at 1080p.
People from the local community and abroad participate in cross-country lessons at the Frost Center in the Algonquin-Haliburton Highlands, lead by ski instructor Joleen Thomas.
The Frost Center Hike/Ski/Snowshoe Trails are located on hwy #35, a 12 minute drive south of Dorset, Ontario, Canada. Near Algonquin Provincial Park.
SkiTheFrost.ca
HaliburtonCounty.ca
ExperienceHaliburton.com
AlgonquinHighlands.ca
trails@algonquinhighlands.ca
Music:
Josh Woodward - 'I'm Letting Go' & 'Little Tom Cat' Instumentals
Black Twig Pickers & Steve Gunn - 'Sally In The Garden'
freemusicarchive.org
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
GoPro2
ZoomQ3
Magix Movie Edit Pro MX
RobArtinian - Canoeing Algonquin 2012 Ontario Canada
Our 2012 deep woods canoe trip in beautiful Algonquin Provincial Park-Canada
Dog sledding at Algonquin Park, Ontario, Canada
Northern Edge Algonquin and Ed Schmidt's Sugar Dogs present dog sledding experiences at Algonquin Park as part of Making Tracks three day winter adventures. Dog sledding on lakes and snow covered trails is truly memorable. A-Once-in-a-Lifetime experience for many, is it time to check this off your bucket list? Special Thanks to Greg and Laurie Scott for sharing video footage with us.
Algonquin Park Ontario
Algonquin Provincial Park is a provincial park located between Georgian Bay and the Ottawa River in Central Ontario, Canada, mostly within the Unorganized South Part of Nipissing District. It is the oldest provincial park in Canada having been established in 1893. Additions since its creation have increased the park to its current size of about 7653 square kilometres. For comparison purposes, this is about one and a half times the size of Prince Edward Island or the US state of Delaware and about a quarter the size of Belgium.
Its size, combined with its proximity to the major urban centres of Toronto and Ottawa, make Algonquin one of the most popular provincial parks in the province and the entire country. Highway 60 runs through the south of the park, while the Trans-Canada Highway bypasses it to the north.
Over 2,400 lakes and 1,200 kilometres of streams and rivers are located within the park. Some notable examples include Canoe Lake and the Petawawa, Nipissing, Amable du Fond, Madawaska, and Tim rivers. These were formed by the retreat of the glaciers during the last ice age.
The park is considered part of the border between northern Ontario and southern Ontario. The park is in an area of transition between northern coniferous forest and southern deciduous forest. This unique mixture of forest types, and the wide variety of environments in the park, allows the park to support an uncommon diversity of plant and animal species. It is also an important site for wildlife research.
Algonquin Park was named a national historic site in 1992 in recognition of several heritage values, including: its role in the development of park management; pioneering visitor interpretation programs later adopted by national and provincial parks across the country; its role in inspiring artists, which in turn gave Canadians a greater sense of their country; and historic structures such as lodges, hotels, cottages, camps, entrance gates, a railway station, and administration and museum buildings.
-wikipedia
Algonquin Wolves 2016
Trail Cam Footage of Algonquin Wolves in the Park
Algonquin Park - Fall 2014
Footages taken on October 4th, 2014
The Canadian Dinner Jacket - In Algonquin
The Happy Camper and partner Kristine Redmond show off their new plaid Canadian Dinner jackets while fall camping in Algonquin's Barron Canyon/Achray Campground.
Two Algonquin Wolves
Two Algonquin Wolves (a.k.a. Eastern Canadian Wolves)
at night in the Haliburton hinterlands. This video was filmed
of completely wild wolves--no compounds, zoos, or enclosures.
The wolves run on through the evergreen forests in their
eternal pursuit of the deer. And for their part, the deer lead the
wolves on a deadly chase. Each hones the other to perfection by
natural selection. It's not only the weak and the old who falter
and fall; it's the inefficient — the ones who stray too far from
the edge. To those who do the dance, whether deer or wolf,
belongs the day. It's not a good day to die. It never is. And so
the wolves run on through the evergreen forests.
Centennial Ridges Algonquin park
360 viedo of highligts of Centennial Ridges Algonquin park
Algonquin Park, The Cascades
Chris, Marc, Dave, Mike, Scott, and Sue really roughed it for 6 days in Algonquin Park in mid August, 2011. Although the going was tough at times, views like this one of The Cascades falls and rapids, that we encountered along the way to the Barron Canyon made the difficulties well worth it!
10-Day Solo Canoe Trip, Algonquin Provincial Park
Background music Green Leaves, Autumn Sunset & One Fine Day by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license ( Artist:
Algonquin drive
Arriving late at night in Algonquin Park (Ontario, Canada) we drove slowly to avoid wildlife whilst eerie music was playing on the radio.
Haliburton Hiking Festival First Overnight Trip
Tina Jackson and I lead the first overnight backpacking trip for the Haliburton Hiking Festival. Amazing trip with amazing people.