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Wabakimi Provincial Park

Provincial park in Ontario, Canada


Provincial park in Ontario, Canada

FieldValue
nameWabakimi Provincial Park
iucn_categoryIb
iucn_ref
photoCanoe Wabakimi.jpg
locationThunder Bay District, Ontario, Canada
nearest_townArmstrong, Ontario
mapOntario
map_captionLocation of the park in Ontario
reliefyes
coordinates
area_ha892061.00
area_ref
established1983
visitation_num3,004
visitation_year2022
governing_bodyOntario Parks
urlhttps://www.ontarioparks.com/park/wabakimi
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom9
mapframe-wikidatayes

| mapframe-zoom = 9 | mapframe-wikidata = yes

Wabakimi Provincial Park is a wilderness park located to the northwest of Lake Nipigon and northwest of Armstrong Station in the province of Ontario, Canada. The park contains a vast and interconnected network of more than 2,000 kilometres of lakes and rivers. The park covers an area of 8,920 km2 and became the second largest park in Ontario (after Polar Bear Provincial Park) and one of the world's largest boreal forest reserves following a major expansion in 1997 (it was expanded almost sixfold that year). A number of local citizen groups and residents, including Bruce Hyer (former MP for Thunder Bay-Superior North) have been instrumental in the creation, expansion, and preservation of this region.

Armstrong Station has access points to this remote park by Caribou Lake Road, Little Caribou Lake, canoe, float plane, or rail. The main line of the Canadian National Railway skirts the south end of the park and Via Rail provides passenger service twice a week.

Paddlers (mostly canoeing) often travel the Allan Water, Flindt, Pikitigushi, and Ogoki River (along with a number of additional extended waterways) during the summer months. Wabakimi Provincial Park's waterways straddle a height-of-land from which water flows either to the Atlantic Ocean via Lake Superior or to the Arctic Ocean via the James Bay/Hudson Bay basins.

Several provincial waterway parks connect to Wabakimi:

  • Ogoki River Provincial Park, to the east
  • Albany River Provincial Park, to the north
  • Kopka River Provincial Park, to the south
  • Brightsand River Provincial Park, to the southwest

Many camps and outfitters use Wabakimi including Keewaydin Canoe Camp.

Wabakimi Project and Friends of Wabakimi

The Wabakimi Project (2004-2018) was a not-for-profit effort to rediscover and explore the lost and/or abandoned canoe routes that lie within Wabakimi Provincial Park and on adjacent Crown lands. The Friends of Wabakimi is an Ontario non-profit that advocates for canoe routes and protection of the greater Wabakimi area.

References

References

  1. UNEP-WCMC. "Protected Area Profile for Wabakimi Provincial Park". World Database on Protected Areas.
  2. "Wabakimi". Ontario Parks.
  3. Parks, Ontario. "Ontario_Parks-Visitation-Statistics 2022 - Ministries".
  4. (1999). "Explore the boreal forests of Wabakimi Provincial Park".
  5. Wabakimi Wilderness Park, http://www.wabakimi.com/ecotours.html
  6. (1999). "Backcountry Maps & Safety".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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