Review of Freedom Fields Naturist Ranch in Ontario, Canada by KFFBS

The launch of a fresh naturist place is a rare and exciting occasion. Four years later, the ranch is seeing its stride, and – after a couple of great visits – we felt the need to tell all of you about it.
Naturist Ranch Location

Freedom Fields is near Tamworth, a small town in eastern Ontario about an hour’s drive from Kingston or Belleville. This really is farm country; the environment are a combination of cash crops, ranches and hobby farms with lots of woods in between.
Airborne view of Freedom Fields Naturist Ranch
The park is accessed from 592 Carroll Road, but do not place too much trust in auto-navigation; this part of Ontario is badly charted in many map databases. If you’re browsing by GPS, enter the co-ordinates directly: 44.501N by 76.917W.
The price, by August 2015, is $30/individual or $40/couple each day. Overnight camping is an additional $20. https://google.com -and-breakfast can be on offer, for those with more luxury tastes.
Rental suite A at the Freedom Fields Bed & Breakfast
Naturist Club Culture at Freedom Fields
The core rule at Freedom Fields is “Your behaviour is the passport,” and anyone who can live by that’s welcome. This can be a friendly, inclusive environment. Have you got piercings? Tats? A non monogamous or polyamorous relationship? Are you really a man with no female partner? None of that really matters here.
The park’s visitors come from all walks of life. The majority are middle class, middle-age, but there are frequently a few people in their 20’s and one or two in their 80’s. Obviously, we have also encountered a few who desire to see but can’t (a couple of bored constables on grass patrol, clearly getting very envious from inside their sweltering chopper) and a few who did not recognize what they were in for (a carload of conservative evangelists, who set a new speed record for reversing out of the drive)!
Compared to more conventional parks, there is a lot more energy, a lot more vibrance, to the culture. Individuals are generally friendlier and more outgoing than we are used to seeing at other parks. The large saltwater hot tub is usually filled with smiles and laughter. On summer holiday evenings, live cover bands rock out in the barn, which is fully decked out for drinks and dancing. At the last concert we attended, the music skewed heavily towards the ’60s and ’70s – likely a reflection of the late-mid-age demographic that formed the bulk of the crowd. Their “oldies” status however, these songs have aged nicely and create just as great a party vibe now as they likely did back then.
The hot tub at Freedom Fields
The Traveling Beer Bellies Band performing at the barn
Barn bar