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The beaches are part of the Wasaga Beach Provincial Park; the park area totals 168 hectares (415 acres). [6] Wasaga Beach has a year-round population of 24,862 as of 2021, but during the summer months the population increases with many seasonal residents.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wasaga_Beach_Provincial_Park&oldid=1045014379"
The town is also a short distance from Wasaga Beach Provincial Park, a destination that received the title of Biosphere Reserve in 2004. Local media include the CollingwoodToday.ca News site and Collingwood-Wasaga Connection community newspapers, and radio station CKCB-FM.
Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.
In addition, the highway serves as the main route to Wasaga Beach, a popular recreational destination during the summer months. Highway 26 was first assumed by the Department of Highways, predecessor to the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario , in 1927, along an existing trunk route between Barrie and Owen Sound.
Nottawasaga Bay is a sub-bay within Georgian Bay in Southern Ontario, Canada located at the southernmost end of the main bay. [1] The communities located on Nottawasaga Bay are Meaford, The Blue Mountains, Collingwood, Wasaga Beach and Tiny.
In 1980 or 1981, Highway 92 was extended through Wasaga Beach to Highway 26 via River Road West and Mosley Street after the Schoonertown Bridge over the Nottawasaga River was completed. Highway 27 was transferred to Simcoe County on April 1, 1997, temporarily resulting in Highway 92 ending at a county road.
The Nottawasaga River is a river in Simcoe County and Dufferin County in Central Ontario, Canada. [1] It is part of the Great Lakes Basin, and is a tributary of Lake Huron.The river flows from the Orangeville Reservoir in the town of Orangeville, Dufferin County, through the Niagara Escarpment [2] and the Minesing Wetlands, the latter a wetland of international significance (Ramsar Convention ...