While on a recent camping trip, Zenning with Zay & I explored this Abandoned Junior Rangers Camp!
Forgotten in the Pines: The Story of the Abandoned Junior Rangers Camp in Northern Ontario
Tucked deep within the old-growth forests and shimmering lakes of Northern Ontario, lies the ghost of a once-thriving youth wilderness program and later a remote wilderness camp. What began as a proud Ontario Junior Rangers site eventually evolved into an outdoors camp — a rugged and remote destination for adventurers. Today, only traces remain.
The Junior Rangers Era
Back in the mid-20th century, Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources ran the Junior Rangers Program to provide high school-aged youth with summer jobs in conservation, forestry, and outdoor skills. These camps weren’t just about work — they were about building character, independence, and a deep respect for the wilderness. One of these camps was located in the heart of northern Ontario, surrounded by towering red and white pines, some of which are among the oldest in the province.
The Junior Rangers built trails, repaired fire towers, planted trees, and learned essential bushcraft. Many stayed in canvas tents or rustic cabins, sharing meals in a communal dining hall and spending evenings around the fire under star-laced skies. The bonds formed in these camps lasted a lifetime. But by the late 1980s and early 1990s, Ontario began phasing out many of these traditional wilderness camps, and the Temagami site was eventually decommissioned.
The Birth of The Outdoors Camp
After the Junior Ranger camp closed, the site took on a second life. It was reborn as as an outdoors camp, a rustic wilderness outpost used for canoe trippers, nature lovers, and remote getaways. Though the infrastructure was basic — think log buildings, wood stoves, and outhouses — it provided a base for exploring the areas famed canoe routes and the surrounding old-growth forests.
The camp was not your average cottage retreat. It catered to those seeking solitude, raw nature, and the type of silence only found in the northern wilds. With no road access, it was reachable only by boat or bush plane, further adding to its allure.
A Quiet Fade Into Obscurity
Over time, this camp, like its Junior Rangers predecessor, also fell into disuse. Nature began reclaiming the site. Roofs sagged under heavy snow loads, windows shattered, and moss crept across the forest floor like a green tide. Today, the site is largely abandoned. Only a few weathered buildings remain — silent witnesses to generations of youth, adventurers, and explorers who once called this patch of forest home, if only briefly.
Echoes in the Trees
For those who stumble upon it, or remember it from their past, the site of the former Junior Rangers Camp and Outdoors Camp holds a deep emotional pull. It’s a reminder of Ontario’s deep-rooted relationship with the land, of the value of outdoor education, and of a time when summers were spent working under the sun, canoeing endless lakes, and sleeping under the stars.
In northern Ontario, the land remembers. Even when buildings crumble, the spirit of the place lingers — in the breeze off the lake, in the rustle of the pines, and in the stories still shared around northern campfires.