Field Guide / 082 / 134
RegionOshawa, Ontario
Best WindowMay through October for Waterfront T…
Drive · Toronto (downtown)60 min
Verified2026-05-06

Oshawa.

43.89° N78.86° WOshawaOntario24 activitiesVerified · 2026-05-06
Oshawa landscape
01 — Abstract

Oshawa sits on the north shore of Lake Ontario in Durham Region, between Whitby to the west and Clarington to the east, with a deep-water harbour at the Port of Oshawa and a coastal-wetland complex that strings Pumphouse Marsh, Oshawa Second Marsh (a 137-hectare Provincially Significant Wetland with over 305 bird species), and the McLaughlin Bay Wildlife Reserve along the lakeshore. The Great Lakes Waterfront Trail runs the full 11-kilometre lakeshore through the city, threading Lakeview Park, the harbour, and the wildlife reserve.

Inland along Oshawa Creek, the Oshawa Valley Botanical Gardens connect via the Oshawa Valley Creek trail to the formal gardens of Parkwood Estate — Colonel R. S.

McLaughlin's 55-room 1916–1917 home, designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1989. Reached from Toronto on the Lakeshore East GO Transit corridor.

02 — Conditions

Today's read.

Air Quality
14
eu-aqi · low
UV Index
0.8
scale 0–11
Humidity
71%
relative
Visibility
22.9 km
clear
Temp
+4.2°
H 13° · L 1°
Sun
05:52 / 20:31
14h 39m daylight
A+
GOOD DAY TO BE OUTSIDE

Real-time conditions updated; AI field notes unavailable.

9-day high · 1° → 13°
04 — Featured

8. activities
worth your time

▲ signature · 0strong · 8also available · 16
HikingStrong
01Year-round at McLaughlin Bay Wildlif…

Hiking

McLaughlin Bay Wildlife Reserve carries about seven kilometres of trails on a lakeshore reserve donated to the City by General Motors of Canada, including the multi-sensory Dogwood Trail designed for partially sighted visitors. The 11-kilometre Oshawa segment of the Great Lakes Waterfront Trail threads Lakeview Park, Pumphouse Marsh, Oshawa Second Marsh, and the wildlife reserve along Lake Ontario, while the paved Joseph Kolodzie Oshawa Creek Bike Path runs north–south along Oshawa Creek as an inland connector. Note that Second Marsh's interior woodlot trail is closed because of falling-tree risk from emerald ash borer; lakeshore access is from the Waterfront Trail.

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Walking & StrollingStrong
02May through October for the full rib…

Walking & Strolling

Lakeview Park's mature lakeshore landscape sits at the heart of the waterfront, connecting directly to the Waterfront Trail and the Joseph Kolodzie Oshawa Creek Bike Path. Inland, the Oshawa Valley Botanical Gardens link via the Oshawa Valley Creek trail to the formal gardens at Parkwood Estate — the Italian, Sunken, Sundial, New Formal, and Japanese gardens of the McLaughlin family's 1916–1917 home — for an unusually rich easy-walking corridor across the city. The Oshawa Valley Botanical Gardens carry a peony collection that's among the largest modern peony plantings in North America.

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Nature & DiscoveryStrong
03Spring (April–May) and fall (Septemb…

Nature & Discovery

Oshawa Second Marsh is a 137-hectare coastal wetland on Lake Ontario, designated by the Province as both a Provincially Significant Wetland and a Provincially Significant Area of Natural and Scientific Interest, with over 380 plant species and 305 bird species recorded. The adjacent McLaughlin Bay Wildlife Reserve carries about seven kilometres of viewing trail and platforms — including the multi-sensory Dogwood Trail — and Pumphouse Marsh sits along the same Waterfront Trail strand. Together the three wetland sites make a continuous lakeshore birding corridor inside the city.

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CyclingStrong
04May through October

Cycling

The Oshawa segment of the Great Lakes Waterfront Trail is an 11-kilometre signed lakeshore corridor along Lake Ontario, running from Whitby in the west through the Port of Oshawa, Lakeview Park, and the McLaughlin Bay Wildlife Reserve, then continuing east toward Clarington and the Bay of Quinte. The paved Joseph Kolodzie Oshawa Creek Bike Path runs north along Oshawa Creek as an off-road connector inland from the lakeshore. Whitby and Pickering connect west on the same Waterfront Trail corridor; Bowmanville and Cobourg are east.

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Paddling — FlatwaterStrong
05May through October

Paddling — Flatwater

The Port of Oshawa is a deep-water Lake Ontario harbour at the mouth of Oshawa Creek, with sheltered launch options off the harbour and Lakeview Park shoreline for kayak, canoe, and stand-up paddleboard. Conditions are calmest in the early morning before the lake breeze fills in; afternoon winds make for choppier conditions on the open lake. The harbour and waterfront sit on the Lakeshore East GO Transit corridor for easy approach from downtown Toronto.

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Sailing & BoatingStrong
06May through October

Sailing & Boating

The Port of Oshawa is a working deep-water harbour on the north shore of Lake Ontario at the mouth of Oshawa Creek, anchoring recreational sailing on the same Great Lakes corridor as Whitby, Pickering, Toronto, Cobourg, and Prince Edward County. Sailing west reaches Whitby, Pickering, and the Toronto inner harbour; east opens toward Bowmanville, Cobourg, and the inner reaches of Prince Edward County. Lake Ontario fetch off the harbour entrance is exposed once outside the breakwater, with substantial afternoon wind common in summer.

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Freshwater FishingStrong
07Open-water Lake Ontario season per O…

Freshwater Fishing

Lake Ontario waters off Oshawa sit in Ontario Fisheries Management Zone 17, which sets seasons and limits for chinook salmon, rainbow trout/steelhead, lake trout, and brown trout, plus catch-and-release Atlantic salmon under the Lake Ontario Atlantic Salmon Restoration Program. Oshawa Creek is a productive Lake Ontario tributary with a March steelhead run and a fall chinook run, fishable under the same FMZ 17 framework with separate tributary rules. A current Ontario Outdoors Card and fishing licence is required, and the FMZ 17 summary on the provincial site is the authoritative season and limit reference.

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Heritage & CultureStrong
08May through October for Parkwood Est…

Heritage & Culture

Parkwood Estate, the 55-room R. S. McLaughlin home built between 1915 and 1917 by the Toronto firm Darling and Pearson, was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1989; its formal gardens include the Italian, Sunken, Sundial, New Formal, and Japanese gardens. The Robert McLaughlin Gallery downtown holds a Canadian modern and contemporary collection of more than 4,500 works and the Thomas Bouckley Collection of regional historical photographs. The Canadian Automotive Museum, in a 1920s former Ontario Motor Sales building downtown, holds the country's most comprehensive Canadian automotive history collection. Together with the Oshawa Valley Botanical Gardens — connected to Parkwood by the Oshawa Valley Creek trail — they form a coherent heritage corridor along the creek.

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04b — Also available

16. more outings
surveyed.

Activities supported across Oshawa without a featured write-up.

  • 01

    Trail Running

    McLaughlin Bay Wildlife Reserve
  • 02

    Camping

    frontcountry
  • 03

    Mountain Biking

    cross-country
  • 04

    Paddling — Sea & Coastal

    sea-kayaking
  • 05

    Surf & Wind

    windsurfing · kitesurfing
  • 06

    Diving & Snorkeling

    Available
  • 07

    Swimming & Beach

    lake-swim · beach-day
  • 08

    Cross-Country & Nordic

    classic-xc
  • 09

    Snow Adventure

    snowshoeing · ice-skating
  • 10

    Seasonal Phenomena

    fall-colours
  • 11

    Wildlife Viewing

    raptor-eagle
  • 12

    Motorized Touring

    scenic-drive
  • 13

    Indigenous Experiences

    Mississaugas of Scugog Island First Nation programming (regional, north of Oshawa)
  • 14

    Food & Drink

    brewery · farmers-market
  • 15

    Geology & Discovery

    Available
  • 16

    Arts & Craft

    Robert McLaughlin Gallery