Field Guide / 103 / 134
RegionSouth Algonquin, Ontario
Best WindowLate May through October for paddlin…
Verified2026-05-05

South Algonquin.

45.50° N78.00° WSouth AlgonquinOntario23 activitiesVerified · 2026-05-05
South Algonquin landscape
01 — Abstract

South Algonquin is the eastern gateway township to Algonquin Provincial Park — the East Gate sits at km 55.8 of the Highway 60 Corridor, just east of the village of Whitney inside the township boundary. The upper Madawaska River drains east out of the Park through Whitney and the hamlet of Madawaska, and Madawaska River Provincial Park protects roughly 25 km of Class II–IV whitewater from Aumonds Bay east to the Griffith area.

From the East Gate, day-hike trailheads on the Highway 60 Corridor — Lookout at km 39.7, Booth's Rock at km 40.3, Two Rivers at km 31, Beaver Pond at km 45.2 — are reached through the township, alongside the Old Railway Bike Trail and the Leaf Lake Ski Trails at km 53.8. Galeairy Lake at Whitney sits on the Park boundary and feeds the same shield-water system.

Highway 60 between Whitney and the Park's West Gate carries one of Ontario's headline fall-colour drives. This is not the Park interior — the township's claim is the gateway and the Madawaska whitewater corridor that begins here.

02 — Conditions

Today's read.

Air Quality
24
eu-aqi · low
UV Index
0.8
scale 0–11
Humidity
72%
relative
Visibility
24.1 km
clear
Temp
-0.2°
H 14° · L -4°
Sun
05:44 / 20:32
14h 48m daylight
A+
BRACING COLD

Real-time conditions updated; AI field notes unavailable.

9-day high · -4° → 14°
04 — Featured

9. activities
worth your time

▲ signature · 2strong · 7also available · 14
HikingStrong
01May through October

Hiking

Day-hike trailheads along the Highway 60 Corridor reach the township from the East Gate: Lookout Trail at km 39.7, Booth's Rock Trail at km 40.3, Two Rivers Trail at km 31, Beaver Pond Trail at km 45.2, and Track and Tower Trail near Mew Lake. These are the canonical Park-corridor day hikes — short to moderate, well-marked, and family-accessible. The Park interior carries longer backcountry routes, but the day-hike inventory along Highway 60 is what most visitors arriving through Whitney walk on.

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CampingStrong
02Mid-May through mid-October for fron…

Camping

The Park's east-side frontcountry campgrounds reach through the East Gate: Mew Lake (the only year-round campground), Lake of Two Rivers, Pog Lake, Rock Lake, Kearney Lake, Coon Lake, and Canisbay Lake along Highway 60. Backcountry interior camping starts from east-side access points at Galeairy Lake, Rock Lake, and Lake of Two Rivers, where shield-country lake-and-portage routing opens into the larger Park interior. All sites are reserved through the Ontario Parks reservation system; sites are date- and party-specific.

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Paddling — FlatwaterStrong
03May through October

Paddling — Flatwater

The upper Madawaska River carries the headline experience here. Madawaska River Provincial Park protects roughly 25 km of Class II–IV whitewater from Aumonds Bay east through the township to the Griffith area — a named provincial waterway run starting at the Algonquin Park east boundary and continuing through Whitney and Madawaska village. Flatwater paddling is gateway-access work: the East Gate at km 55.8 of Highway 60 opens the east-side interior canoe routes from access points at Galeairy Lake, Rock Lake, and Lake of Two Rivers, where shield-country lake-and-portage tripping carries the same character as the Algonquin interior. The Madawaska River PP section is unstaffed; whitewater boaters self-register.

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Paddling — Whitewater▲ Signature
04May through July for whitewater (wat…

Paddling — Whitewater

The upper Madawaska River carries the headline experience here. Madawaska River Provincial Park protects roughly 25 km of Class II–IV whitewater from Aumonds Bay east through the township to the Griffith area — a named provincial waterway run starting at the Algonquin Park east boundary and continuing through Whitney and Madawaska village. The Madawaska River PP section is unstaffed; whitewater boaters self-register.

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Freshwater FishingStrong
05Lake trout Jan 1 – Sept 30; bass 4th…

Freshwater Fishing

Galeairy Lake at Whitney sits on the Park boundary and carries lake trout, smallmouth bass, and brook trout. The upper Madawaska River below the Park boundary holds smallmouth bass, walleye, and brook trout. Lake of Two Rivers and Rock Lake — accessed via the East Gate inside the Park — round out the cold-water and warm-water inventory. All waters fall under FMZ 15 within the Central Bait Management Zone, where live or dead baitfish and leeches cannot be transported into or out of the BMZ; many lakes carry waterbody-specific overrides.

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Cross-Country & NordicStrong
06Mid-December through early March

Cross-Country & Nordic

The Leaf Lake Ski Trails at km 53.8 of Highway 60 — immediately west of the East Gate — are the headline classic-XC network reached through the township. Reliable Canadian Shield snow cover holds the season together, and surrounding Park terrain opens up backcountry-XC routes on frozen lakes and the Old Railway Bike Trail corridor once cover sets. The trailhead is a short drive west of Whitney through the East Gate.

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Snow AdventureStrong
07Mid-December through early March

Snow Adventure

The Round Algonquin Park (RAP) Tour — an OFSC TOP-trail snowmobile circuit of roughly 700 km looping the Park's exterior — passes through Whitney and Madawaska on its eastern leg, and the Whitney–Madawaska Snowmobile Club maintains local trail conditions. Snowshoeing on the Park's east-side trail network and frozen-lake routes from Galeairy and the Highway 60 Corridor lakes adds quiet shield-interior travel once cover sets.

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Seasonal Phenomena▲ Signature
08Fall colours peak late September thr…

Seasonal Phenomena

The Highway 60 Corridor fall-colour drive runs from the East Gate at Whitney through the Park to the West Gate near Dwight — a sugar-maple-dominant northern hardwood canopy at peak between late September and mid-October. The eastern arrival is in the township, and the East Gate at km 55.8 is the corridor's eastern terminus. The drive carries the same canopy whether the Park's interior trails and viewpoints are open or not, and it is the routine reason most visitors arrive in Whitney in autumn.

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Wildlife ViewingStrong
09Late April through early June for mo…

Wildlife Viewing

The Highway 60 Corridor is the standard Ontario moose-spotting drive — late April through early June, when moose come to roadside salt pools — and the eastern arrival is in Whitney through the East Gate. The Algonquin Park Public Wolf Howl program runs Thursday evenings in August from venues on the Park's east side accessed through the township. Black bear and bald eagle are also present in shield-and-wetland habitat along the Madawaska River corridor.

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04b — Also available

14. more outings
surveyed.

Activities supported across South Algonquin without a featured write-up.

  • 01

    Trail Running

    Highway 60 Corridor day-hike trails
  • 02

    Walking & Strolling

    Whitney village
  • 03

    Nature & Discovery

    birding · nature-interpretation
  • 04

    Cycling

    road
  • 05

    Mountain Biking

    Algonquin Park Old Railway Bike Trail (km 53.8 Highway 60 — accessed via East Gate)
  • 06

    Sailing & Boating

    motor-boating
  • 07

    Swimming & Beach

    lake-swim
  • 08

    Sky Watching

    stargazing
  • 09

    Aerial Experiences

    float-bush-plane-tour
  • 10

    Motorized Touring

    scenic-drive
  • 11

    Indigenous Experiences

    Available
  • 12

    Food & Drink

    Whitney village
  • 13

    Heritage & Culture

    heritage-historic-site
  • 14

    Outdoor Education

    Algonquin Park interpretive programming accessed via East Gate