Mary March Wilderness Park
The park is located right on the shoreline of Newfoundland's Islands 2nd largest lake, the historic Red Indian Lake, we promote the natural beauty and wilderness areas in the park and areas nearby attraction. The park has access to the ATV Trail System. Seeing is believing! There are 9.5km of hiking trails in the park including a nature walk trail along the lake shore where the Beothucks lived, hunted, fished and enjoyed nature.
Location data provided by the operator. Please confirm location
before departure. Also see offshore area disclaimer.
The offshore lines appearing in the map above which purport to delimit the offshore area of the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador have no legal effect. Apart from the boundaries established pursuant to the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Atlantic Accord Implementation Act, which include the line established pursuant to the 2002 award of the arbitration tribunal concerning the delimitation of portions of the offshore areas between Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia, there are no agreed boundaries between the offshore areas of Newfoundland and Labrador and the Government of Canada, the Provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island or Quebec or the Nunavut Territory, and no such boundaries have been established under statute, regulation or agreement. The Government of Newfoundland and Labrador has made these facts known to Google.
Amenities
Fishing, boat launch and rentals, showers, swimming, hiking trails, guided tours for wildlife viewing and photos, petting zoo, convenience store, cookhouse, playground, 15 & 30 amp service, electrical and water, dumping station, boat marina and boat security/storage.
Helpful Information
Contact Information
+1 (709) 672 7074
Social Media
Directions
Driving distances and calculations derived using Google Maps. Actual driving times may vary. GPS coordinates have been provided by tourism operators. Please confirm location with operator before departure.




Newfoundland & Labrador is known for its unique culture and quiet ingenuity, so its no wonder that even our trash bins can be an source of creativity.





