Camp Barcovan is a resort offering RV and camping rentals, banquet facilities, seasonal activities, and special packages for weddings, golf, and wine tours in a picturesque setting.
You'll discover a true getaway at this large KOA: 885 acres flush with hardwoods, pines and granite outcroppings. You'll discover a true getaway at this large KOA: 885 acres flush with hardwoods, pines and granite outcroppings. Fish for trout in the stocked pond. Rent canoes and rowboats for the campground's small lake or take them to area lakes for the day. KOA staff occupies kids with crafts, hikes and other fun twice a week. Adults can lounge by the pool or play the on-site par-3 golf course. Take a steamship tour on the Muskoka Lakes. Visit Santa's summer home in Bracebridge. Top off a weekend with a Sunday night concert by the water at Gull Lake Park. Pool: June 15 - September 16. Max pull thru: 50 feet. Your hosts: Marcel Waters and Paul Cook.Téléchargez un document .pdf contenant les informations de base sur ce terrain de camping. en français.
I'm not much for trailer parks. However, This park is amazing. Cheap golf, great pool, you can rent movies. It's also reasonably priced.
Hope that helpsRead more
Nice small, friendly place.
mostly for seniors.
Clean washrooms and showers.
3 cabins to rent by the weekend or week.
pretty tent sites by the York River.
We'll go backRead more
Camp Barcovan is a resort offering RV and camping rentals, banquet facilities, seasonal activities, and packages for events like weddings and golf tours in Quinte West, Ontario.
A wilderness area in Canada's largest city? That's right! Not too far from the skyscrapers of downtown Toronto, urban dwellers can see a different landscape where historic farms, century-old trees, peaceful meadows and lush wetlands await you at your transit stop. Rouge Park is over 40 km2, protecting two National Historic Sites and a variety of ecosystems joining the post-glacial Oak Ridges Moraine, roughly 50 km north of Toronto, and the City's biggest wetland, where the Rouge River empties into Lake Ontario.