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Opeongo Hills
York River Valley.JPG
Opeongo Hills near Boulter, Ontario.
Highest point
Peak Unmarked point
Elevation 586 m (1,923 ft)
Geography
Opeongo Hills is located in Southern Ontario
Opeongo Hills
Location in Southern Ontario
Country Canada
Province Eastern Ontario
Range coordinates 45°30′N 77°40′W / 45.500°N 77.667°W / 45.500; -77.667

The Opeongo Hills (sometimes called the Opeongo Mountains or Madawaska Highlands, particularly for the easternmost hills) are a range of hills in Southern Ontario, near Algonquin Provincial Park. The hills stretch from Opeongo Lake in Algonquin Park in the west, along the Madawaska and Opeongo Rivers, towards the Opeongo Colonization Road, and extending towards the Deacon Escarpment (north of Killaloe, Ontario in Renfrew County), Bonnechere, Ontario, and Dacre in the east. To the east of the Opeongo Hills lie the Madawaska River valley, the Mississippi River Valley, and the Ottawa-Bonnechere Graben along the Ottawa River. The hills continue into Quebec across the Ottawa River as the Laurentian Highlands and the Laurentian Mountains. Its tallest peak is roughly 7 km northeast of Highway 60. At roughly 586 meters, it is the tallest point in Southern Ontario. The community of Foymount (along the former Highway 512, the Opeongo Line) is one of the highest settlements in Southern Ontario.

The Opeongo Hills are a continuation of the Laurentian Highlands, which extend into Eastern Ontario, towards Gananoque, and across the Ottawa River Valley into Quebec, and the Laurentian Mountains, which continue parallel to the St. Lawrence River, north of Montreal, Trois-Rivières and Quebec City.

The geography in this area of Central Ontario is dotted with rolling hills and forests with streams, lakes, and small waterfalls, typical of a place in the Canadian Shield.

The first European explorer to visit the region is Samuel de Champlain, in 1615, while exploring the area with the Huron natives. When settlers first started arriving in the area in the late 1790s and early 19th century, land areas were given to settlers by the Canadian Land and Emigration Company for settlement and farming. The soils of the area were not perfectly suited for farming, but small-scale agriculture was able to be conducted on the land. Today, the Opeongo Hills are crossed by many provincial highways, many of which still follow the original Historic Colonization Roads.

Municipalities located in the Opeongo Hills

Below is a list of communities and municipalities located in the Opeongo Hills, from west to east

Frontenac County

  • Frontenac County
    • North Frontenac

Haliburton County

Hastings County

Hwy 28 Ontario
The northern portion of Hastings County is characterized by the Opeongo Hills.
  • Hastings County
    • Bancroft
    • Faraday
      • Paudash
    • Carlow/Mayo
    • Hastings Highlands, Ontario
      • Maynooth

Lanark County

  • Lanark County
    • Lanark Highlands

Lennox and Addington County

  • Lennox and Addington
    • Addington Highlands

Nipissing District

Renfrew County

Hwy 41 ON
Highway 41 winding through the Madawaska Highlands in Renfrew County.
  • Renfrew County
    • Greater Madawaska
      • Calabogie
    • Madawaska Valley, Ontario
      • Barry's Bay
      • Combermere
    • Killaloe, Hagarty and Richards
      • Bonnechere, Ontario
      • Wilno, Ontario
    • Laurentian Valley
    • North Algona-Wilberforce
    • Bonnechere Valley
      • Eganville
      • Hyndford
      • Balaclava
    • Brudenell, Lyndoch and Raglan
      • Craigmont
      • Quadeville

Lakes and rivers

Parks

Below is a list of Conservation areas, Provincial and National parks located in the Opeongo Hills

  • Algonquin Provincial Park
  • Bell Bay Provincial Park
  • Bon Echo Provincial Park
  • Bonnechere Provincial Park
  • Bonnechere River Provincial Park
  • Centennial Lake Provincial Park
  • Conroys Marsh Provincial Conservation Reserve
  • Constant Creek Swamp and Fen Provincial Conservation Reserve
  • Deacon Escarpment Provincial Conservation Reserve
  • Dividing Lake Provincial Nature Preserve
  • Foy Provincial Park
  • Egan Chutes Provincial Park
  • Lake St. Peter Provincial Park
  • Little Mississippi River Provincial Conservation Reserve
  • Matawatchan Provincial Park
  • North Frontenac Park Lands
  • Opeongo River Provincial Park
  • Silent Lake Provincial Park
  • Upper Madawaska River Provincial Park

Roads

Denbigh ON
The north-eastern end of Highway 28 in Denbigh.

Roads that cross the Opeongo Hills include:

Notable attractions

  • Balaclava ghost town
  • Art Gallery of Bancroft
  • Bonnechere Caves, near Fourth Chute
  • Quadeville is home to a cottage once owned by famed gangster Al Capone. It still stands to this day north of the hamlet near a ghost town called Letterkenny.
  • Near the intersection of Highways 41 and Highway 132 is a spot known as "Magnetic Hill", where the road slopes uphill but appears to be going downhill.
  • Mount Pakenham Ski Resort, near Pakenham, Ontario
  • Calabogie Peaks Ski Resort
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