Indigenous Experiences.
Petroglyphs Provincial Park is co-managed with Curve Lake First Nation, and the Anishinaabe Nation regards Kinomagewapkong — the Teaching Rocks — as sacred. The Learning Place visitor centre at the park entrance interprets Anishinaabe history and the carvings, and the protocol around the enclosure (no photography of the carvings, no rubbings, respectful conduct) is set by Curve Lake.
The brief.
Curve Lake First Nation's main visitor programming sits south of North Kawartha at Curve Lake Reserve on Buckhorn Lake — that's the location for the Nation's own cultural-tourism product (Whetung Ojibwa Centre and other on-reserve experiences). Within North Kawartha itself, the Indigenous-experience routing is through Petroglyphs Provincial Park: visit the Learning Place visitor centre and the Teaching Rocks enclosure during the seasonal opening (typically mid-May through Thanksgiving), follow the protocol set by Curve Lake, and treat the site as sacred rather than as a museum exhibit.
No photography of the carvings is permitted. Standard provincial-park day-use fees apply at the gate.
2. places.
- 01
Petroglyphs Provincial Park / Kinomagewapkong
Over 900 Indigenous rock carvings on a white crystalline marble outcrop, c. 900–1400 CE; co-managed with Curve Lake First Nation; sacred to the Anishinaabe Nation.
- 02
The Learning Place visitor centre
Anishinaabe interpretation at the park entrance.
Today's read.
Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.
By the book.
- 01The Petroglyphs site is sacred — no photography of the carvings, no rubbings, respectful conduct.Source ↗
- 02The Teaching Rocks enclosure is open seasonally (typically mid-May through Thanksgiving).Source ↗
- 03Petroglyphs Provincial Park is day-use only; standard provincial-park day-use fees apply.Source ↗