Connect with nature and enjoy an Ontario provincial park for free on Friday, July 21

As well as free day use, many parks are also offering special activities and events

On Friday, July 21, you can spend a day at one of Ontario's 330 provincial parks for free (photo: Ontario Parks)
On Friday, July 21, you can spend a day at one of Ontario's 330 provincial parks for free (photo: Ontario Parks)

Ontario’s provincial parks will be open to the public free of charge on Friday, July 21st for all day-use visitors.

This is the third year in a row the Ontario government has offered free admission during July. The government is encouraging everyone to visit a park to improve their health as part of the international “Healthy Parks Healthy People” movement.

On July 21st, if you visit a provincial park that normally charges a fee for day use, the fee will be waived. You can enjoy the park facilities for free until 10 p.m. Charges in addition to regular day use fees still apply for facilities such as swimming pools and equipment rentals.

As well as free day use at all provincial parks, some parks are featuring special events on July 21st, including a few in the Kawarthas region.

You can experience traditional Hiawatha Drumming at Petroglyphs Provincial Park north of Peterborough from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday, July 21 (photo: Ontario Parks)
You can experience traditional Hiawatha Drumming at Petroglyphs Provincial Park north of Peterborough from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday, July 21 (photo: Ontario Parks)

At Petroglyphs Provincial Park north of Peterborough, you can experience the unique sounds of traditional Hiawatha Drumming from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. while you learn about the history of the land and the people. Visit the Learning Place Visitor Centre to discover the traditions of the Ojibwa (Nishnaabe) people through the teachings of the medicine wheel.

For a list of all special events, visit the Ontario Parks Healthy Park Healthy People website at www.ontarioparks.com/hphp/events.

The special activities and fee-free day use of provincial parks on July 21st recognize that the Province of Ontario has joined the world-wide Healthy Parks Healthy People movement. Launched in Australia in 2000, the movement reinforces and encourages the connections between a healthy environment and a healthy society.

Taking a walk through the woods at Sandbanks Provincial Park (photo: Ontario Parks)
Taking a walk through the woods at Sandbanks Provincial Park (photo: Ontario Parks)

For example, research shows that access to nature and green space plays a vital role in physical and mental health, well-being, and development. Contact with nature has been found to lower blood pressure, strengthen the immune system, help fight disease, and reduce stress.

In addition, activities done in a natural environment reduce anger, fatigue, and sadness when compared to the same activities done in a human-made environment.

“Spending time in a provincial park is a wonderful way to connect with nature and stay healthy,” says Kathryn McGarry, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry, which administers Ontario’s provincial parks.


Provincial parks in the Kawarthas

Parks in the Kawarthas region include Balsam Lake near Kirkfield, Emily near Omemee, Ferris near Campbellford, Kawartha Highlands north of Buckhorn, Lake St. Peter north of Maynooth, Mark S. Burnham in Peterborough, Petroglyphs near Woodview, Presqu’ile near Brighton, and Silent Lake near Apsley.

If you’re willing to travel a little north of the Kawarthas, there’s also Algonquin Provincial Park — the most popular provincial park in Canada with more than 2,400 lakes and 1,200 kilometres of streams and rivers.