Algonquin Provincial Park - Pog Lake Campground, Lookout and Big Pines Trail
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Big Pines Trail
Lookout Trail
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♩♫ Adventure Western Music ♪♬ - The Wild West (Copyright and Royalty Free)
♩♫ Epic and Emotional Music ♪♬ - Parallel (Copyright and Royalty Free)
????ALGONQUIN PARK Day Trip 2019【去阿岗昆看枫叶】 Big Pines Trail || Fall Colours
It was the first time going to Algonquin for all of us and man it was such a long and tiring day. For those who plan to visit this place in the future, I really recommend planning in advance and booking a cottage or something! Your trip will be less rushed and tiring, and a lot more enjoyable and relaxing.
Lookout Trail - Algonquin Provincial Park, Canada
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Adventurer Wolfmaan visit the Algonquin Park Lookout Trail. This trail offers a chance to visit glacier deposits, boreal forest, and beautiful panoramic views of the park.
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Moose Eating Lilies, Mizzy Lake Trail, Algonquin Park, Ontario
Here is a short video I took of a cow moose I saw while hiking the Mizzy Lake Trail in Algonquin Park, Ontario. Just after lunch I heard a huge splash in the water up ahead on the trail. I went to investigate and I found this beautiful cow moose eating lunch as well! Filmed with my $100 point and shoot, sorry about the quality.
Algonquin Provincial Park - Canisbay Lake Campground and Humlock Bluff plus Track and Tower Trails
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Hemlock Bluff Trail
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Pioneers by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Walk on the Big Pines Trail
This 2.9 km loop visits about 80 huge, old White Pines and the site of an 1880s logging camp. The guide discusses how these magnificent trees came to be there, pine ecology, and the Park's logging history.
Camping / RVing 2019: Eastern & Central Ontario (Bon Echo, Murphy's Pt, Driftwood, Algonquin & more)
Late June 2019, found Ranger and crew headed to Eastern and Central Ontario in our 17 Ram Copper Head and Flagstaff 26RBWS, visiting provincial parks from distant childhood memories – they didn’t disappoint.
Our drive east on Hwy 7, past the small Central Ontario communities of Havelock, Marmora, Madoc and Kaladar, brought us to Sharbot Lake Provincial Park. The park is surrounded by Hwy 7 to the north – and an important note here, some of the sites are right next to the road so choose your site carefully if the sound of traffic bothers you – and Black and Sharbot Lakes to the south. Sharbot Lake is a small park. Hiking the park was enjoyable and the call of the loons in the evening was enchanting, but this is not what we’d call a ‘destination campground’- rather, a perfect weekend spot or stop for travelling RVers.
Backtracking on Hwy 7 a short distance, we picked up Hwy 41 and headed north through the towns of Northbrook and Cloyne to Bon Echo Provincial Park. Bon Echo is a large park with lots to see and explore including the 100 metre high Mazinaw Rock featuring over 260 Indigenous pictographs, hiking trails from 1 to 17 km in length and canoe and kayak rentals. Unfortunately the Interpretive Boat Tours on Mazinaw Lake weren’t operating when we there because of damage done to the docks by the spring’s unusually high water level. The park also has an interesting visitor centre but it has limited hours (in June) and wasn’t open during our stay. Bon Echo also has a great pet beach Ranger loved. And for you RVers, the park has the best trailer dump facilities we have ever encountered – two lanes, long to prevent traffic from clogging park roads, they were even tilted slightly to help tanks drain – every other provincial park should take note – this is how it’s done.
Heading further east and south brought us to Murphy’s Point Provincial Park. Located on Big Rideau Lake, the park’s sites are well shaded…and somewhat hilly in areas. The beach was quite small (and crowded) but the tour of the Silver Queen Mine, an early 1900s mica mine, and other regular interpretive programs (offered from end of June to Labour Day) were very interesting. The town of Perth, considered by some Ontario’s prettiest town, is only a 15 minute drive from the park and offers shopping, dining – even theatre.
We next headed 250 kms north, on Hwy 17 kms, past Arnprior, Renfrew, Pembroke, Petawawa and Deep River (a great spot to reprovision btw), to Driftwood Provincial Park, right on the Ottawa River and Quebec border. Driftwood is a small and remote park but many of the sites are right on the beach with panoramic views of the Upper Ottawa River and Quebec’s Laurentian Mountains. A quick note about the beach – Driftwood comes by its name honestly - the beach is covered with driftwood. It’s picturesque but can present hazards – sandals or water shoes are a must. While the waterfront sites have limited privacy, no hydro (electricity) and some have limited swing room when backing in a trailer, they do have stunning sunsets.
From Driftwood we headed south and west into Central Ontario to Algonquin Provincial Park. The park is huge (772300ha) with Hwy 60 transiting 56kms of the southern section of the park where you’ll find 8 different campgrounds including Pog Lake, where we camped. Algonquin is amazing: rugged hills and forests, 1000’s of lakes, incredible wildlife and great attractions – the Visitor Centre and Logging Museums are absolute must see’s. The park is a photographer’s dream with hiking galore. There’s even a couple of lodges that offer dining inside the park.
Having said all that, we did find the campground had an unusual vibe – not nearly as friendly as most other provincial parks (at least while we were there) we’ve visited. And considering the vast number of campers Algonquin attracts, we were surprised by the limited trailer sanitation facilities – only one dump station, and nothing like Bon Echo’s – fortunately for us it was very quiet there mid-week when we departed.
Killbear Provincial Park never disappoints – many campsites are large and private. The beaches are sandy, the trails gentle and picturesque and the wildlife is plentiful – neighbours had a young black bear up a tree on their site for over an hour.
There’s a great fish restaurant, Gilly’s, just 10 minutes outside the park in Snug Harbour, serving fresh caught Georgian Bay perch and pickerel and Parry Sound has plentiful shopping – and fantastic pizza to take back to camp from Maurizio’s.
This was a peaceful trip filled with great memories. Other than Killbear, we hadn’t been to these parks in 25 years or more….and we realized we won’t wait near that long to return. For us, Algonquin and Bon Echo were highlights (for quite different reasons mind you) and it continued to remind us that it's true what our licence plates say: Ontario IS…Yours to Discover.
Hiking Algonquin Park 2017
Join us as we explore Algonquin Provincial Park In Ontario Canada. We hike Bat lake, two rivers, big pine and the lookout trails.
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Algonquin Park - Big Pine II
ALGONQUIN Provincial Park
An overview of Algonquin in all seasons.
Algonquin Provincial Park in HD
A tour of Algonquin Park in 5 minutes! It took me 3 years to film and over 6 trips combined.
From spring to summer to winter. A park for all season. This park is quite amazing.
My video will tell you everything!
Algonquin by Drone
Backcountry Kayaking
Mew Lake
Eastern Pines Hiking Trail: part 1
Rodd's first solo adventure in Canada involves a 9 km hike out to a camp for 2 nights followed by a 9.7 km packraft return to the trailhead in Ontario's Algonquin park. He gets quite a bit of rain the first night and the next morning spends time at High Falls and revels in the wet green environment after being used to the Saudi Arabian desert. Rodd used this trip to check out his equipment and to see if he's prepared for an extended paddling adventure.
Algonquin Park Trail - Lookout Trail
We hiked the lookout trail. Great views. Short and simple it was worth it.
Watch our full movie.
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Two Rivers Trail: Algonquin Park Fall Colours 2018 Family Hiking
We enjoyed hiking the Two Rivers Trail. It's a fairly easy 2.3 km loop that includes a short ascent to a pine-clad cliff with fall views. Elowyn is 22 months and loved singing and hiking on this trip to Algonquin.
ALgonquin Eastern Pines
Backpacking trip Teanna and me did for Long weekend
Camping at Algonquin park Ontario Canada
Algonquin Park - Visitor Centre - Canada Fall Colours
It is the Algonquin Park Visitor Centre like you've never seen.
Opened in 1993 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Algonquin Provincial Park and the entire Ontario provincial park system, the Algonquin Park Visitor Centre has world class exhibits on the Park's natural and human history, a relaxing restaurant and an excellent bookstore. A theatre presentation sums up the Park story and then takes you out to the viewing deck from where you can admire a breathtaking panorama of wild Algonquin landscape.
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Algonquin Provincial Park - Old Growth Forest
Algonquin Provincial Park Old Growth Forest. A canoe trip through Ontario's Algonquin Provincial Park in search of old-growth white pine trees. Maps of Algonquin Provincial Park can be purchased at this AMAZON link:
Provoking Lake Backpacking - Algonquin Park w/Calrissian Abroad
The long weekend of May, Calrissian Abroad and I checked out the Highlands Backpacking Trail in Algonquin Provincial Park. What an amazing place to see! The outdoors, the trees, the rivers and the BUGS! An amazing trail and a tough hike in some spots but a beautiful part of Canada that is still very wild and very rugged. We backpacked in with only the items in our bags and had a great time.
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Why get out and do something different and adventurous? Just for the Trek of it! Scenery, hiking, travel and tips.
Algonquin Provincial Park Paddling Rock Lake to Pen Lake
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GPS Tracks
Day 1- Rock Lake to Pen
Day 2- Day Trip Around Pen
Day 3- Pen Lake Back to Rock Lake Parking Lot Launch
Music Credit
Royalty Free Music: Disfigure - Blank (Electronic)
Artist: Disfigure
Track: Blank
Genre: Dubstep
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Candlepower by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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A Mission - Scoring Action by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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♫ DOCTOR VOX - Frontier