The campground includes six heated yurts which have electric lighting, a power outlet, a propane barbecue and bunk beds.
[3] Situated on the north shore of Georgian Bay in the municipality of Killarney, the park straddles the La Cloche range, large rounded white quartzite hills that dominate the landscape.
The white peaks and cliffs contrast with the pine and hardwood forests and the boggy lowlands that surround the park's many lakes.
Mineral-rich rock types such as diabase and limestone occur locally and the soils that have developed over them support some of the park's more luxuriant vegetation.
[4] The park is home to: moose, deer, black bears, wolves, lynx, bobcats, martens and beavers along with over 20 species of reptiles and amphibians.
The hills and lakes in the Killarney area became a popular place for painting and sketching and over the years several other members of the Group of Seven worked there, including Franklin Carmichael, Arthur Lismer and A.J.
Finally in 1964, with the help of lobbying efforts by the Group of Seven, 4,000 square miles (10,000 km2) of Georgian Bay shoreline were set aside as a wilderness reserve, and Killarney became a provincial park.
Owing in large part to its proximity to Sudbury with its nickel mines and smelters, local lakes were damaged by acid rain.
In 2015, the Wiikwemkoong First Nation on Manitoulin Island also established the adjacent Point Grondine Park on their own unoccupied heritage territory in the area.