presqu'ile
Ontario Parkswhat to expect
Presqu’ile provides day use, car camping and roofed accommodations. The park offers various hiking trails, a 2km sand beach, a Visitor Centre, the Lighthouse Interpretive Centre, a grassy picnic area, a rentable picnic shelter and a Park Store.
High Bluff Campground has many open, sunny sites that are popular for RVs. The few sites directly on the water are the most popular in the park. Wooded sites are available in the back of the loop. A comfort station with an accessible washroom is available.
Pines Campground is the smallest campground with all electrical sites situated among a Scots Pine forest. It is popular for RVs. A comfort station without showers is available.
Maples Campground has spacious sites, in a mixed deciduous-coniferous forest.
Lakeside…
the basics
what to know
updated each morning from provincial parks and Environment Canada.
what to bring
this list adapts to presqu'ile. no showers means a travel towel; the lake means a swimsuit;
commission links. we get a small cut; you pay the same price. how this works.
common questions about presqu'ile
- how far is presqu'ile from edmonton?
- Presqu'ile Provincial Park is 2793 km from Edmonton — approximately a 37.2-hour drive on highway routes.
- do you need reservations at presqu'ile?
- Yes. Presqu'ile Provincial Park is operated by Ontario Parks and uses an online reservation system. Book direct via the operator link on this page.
- when is the best time to camp at presqu'ile?
- Peak season at Presqu'ile Provincial Park aligns with swimmable months — Jun through Aug. Shoulder months (May, September) offer fewer crowds.
nearby places
within ~100 km of presqu'ile.
want to camp at presqu'ile?
Cancellation alerts are coming. We’ll email when sites open up at this park.
One email. Unsubscribe anytime. We don’t share addresses. — chris@calgaryanalytica.ca
volunteer at ontario parks
Provincial parks rely on volunteer stewards for trail maintenance, beach clean-ups, and shoulder-season hosting. Most parks run programs through their park association.
see how to help →