Discover the most magical spots to pitch your tent or park your rig on your next Bruce Peninsula National Park adventure.
Camp on an island, snorkel for shipwrecks, or hike along Georgian Bay.
If you don’t expect Canada to have Caribbean blue waters, rocky grottos, or shipwrecks lying beneath the bay, then perhaps you haven’t visited Ontario’s Bruce Peninsula. Close enough for a long weekend road trip from Toronto, Bruce Peninsula National Park, where you can explore waterside caves and hike the Bruce Trail along scenic Georgian Bay, is based around the village of Tobermory. From Tobermory’s Little Tub Harbour, you can catch a boat to the offshore Fathom Five National Marine Park to check out the unusual “flowerpot” rock formations, snorkel or scuba dive to more than 20 shipwrecks, or go camping on a secluded island.
Bruce Peninsula and Fathom Five can be extremely crowded mid-June through September and on holiday weekends spring through fall. Come midweek if you visit in summer, but better alternatives are the first half of October, with beautiful foliage and crisp autumn weather, or the somewhat less busy spring (May through early June). While Bruce Peninsula National Park stays open through the often-snowy winters for snowshoeing and cross-country skiing, most visitor facilities and many Tobermory businesses are closed.