Bonnechere Caves

Bonnechere Caves • Renfrew County • Ottawa Valley, Eastern Ontario

Wander 500 million-year-old limestone passageways where dripping stalactites, ancient coral fossils, and the steady rush of the Bonnechere River create Ontario’s coolest natural cathedral.


Visitor Experience

📍 Location 1247 Fourth Chute Rd., 8 km east of Eganville
📅 Season / Best Time Victoria Day – Thanksgiving • Coolest on hot summer afternoons
⏰ Hours Daily 10 am–4:30 pm • Guided tours on the half-hour (45 min)
💲 Admission $23 adult • $20 senior • $17 youth (6-17) • Kids ≤ 5 free
♿ Accessibility Visitor centre & deck accessible • Cave trail has stairs & low ceilings
🅿️🚻 Amenities Free parking • Flush washrooms • Picnic shelter • Snack bar & fossil shop
🕒 Recommended Time 90 min (tour + riverside walk)
🌐 Contact bonnecherecaves.com • 613-628-2283

What You Need to Know

Cave temperature hovers around 10 °C, pack a sweater. Waterproof shoes help on damp walkways, and flash photography is welcome (no tripods).

Why Bonnechere Caves Belong on Your Road-Trip Map

Slip through barn-red doors and descend into a subterranean landscape chiselled when Ontario lay beneath a tropical sea. Guides point out crinoid stems, gastropods, and a metre-long cephalopod fossil glinting in flashlight beams, then douse all light so you can hear nothing but water droplets in total darkness, a spine-tingling moment kids never forget. After the tour, follow a short trail to see the Bonnechere River plunge through Fourth Chute gorge, or spread lunch at a cedar-shaded picnic table while turkey vultures wheel overhead.

Fun Fact:

The caves sit in the Trenton Group limestone, the same rock used to build Parliament’s original Centre Block in 1865.

 

Bonnechere Caves

Bonnechere River

Beyond guided tours, the site doubles as an outdoor classroom: summer evenings host “Bat & Fossil” nights with local naturalists, and geology students from universities across Canada conduct mapping exercises here each June. Fossil hunters can legally collect weathered specimens from a designated riverbank sluice pile, an interactive souvenir no other Ontario cave attraction offers.

Bonnechere Caves

Inside the Caves

Behind the Story

Discovered in 1955 by farm owner Tom Woodward, the caves were formed when post-glacial melt-water carved joints in Ordovician limestone. Woodward blasted debris, installed wooden steps, and opened for tours in 1958—one of Canada’s earliest show-caves. Family-run ever since, Bonnechere Caves have survived ice jams, pandemic shutdowns, and a dramatic 2013 spring flood that filled the passages waist-deep, proving the resilience of both rock and operators.

Bonnechere Caves

Cave Tour

Explore Other Hidden Gems

Distance Detour Idea Why Go
4 km Fourth Chute Falls Lookout Wooden platform over river rapids—prime long-exposure photo spot
8 km Bonnechere Museum (Eganville) Tiny log building with world-class Ordovician fossil display
21 km Logos Land Resort (Cobden) Zip-line, giant waterslides & replica Noah’s Ark café for family downtime
32 km Ottawa Valley Rail Trail – Renfrew Segment Scenic cycling on crushed-stone bed through maple bush & farm fields

 

Bonnechere Caves

Bonnechere Museum Fossil