Rules & Licenses · Southern Tier
Canacadea Camping Starts With the 150-Foot Rule
Canacadea campers should know DEC's primitive-camping distance rule, three-night threshold, group-size permit trigger, and winter road caveat before going.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Canacadea State Forest looks like the kind of low-key place where camping might be simple, and DEC does allow primitive camping there. Primitive still has rules. Campsites must be at least 150 feet from the nearest road, trail, or body of water, and camping for more than three nights or with a group of ten or more requires a Forest Ranger permit.
Access can be the other surprise. Canacadea is lightly developed, and the public access road is unpaved and not plowed in winter. That can turn a last-minute overnight idea into a wrong-road problem, especially if someone is arriving late from Hornell, Canisteo, Almond, or Arkport after buying supplies.
Use the DEC map before packing the car. Count the group, count the nights, and decide where a legal 150-foot site would actually be. If the road, weather, distance, or permit threshold is unclear, contact the Region 8 Bath office or a local Forest Ranger while you still have time to change the plan.
That is still a friendly kind of outdoors planning. Canacadea can work well for a quiet Steuben County woods trip, especially for people already near Hornell or the Canisteo valley. The trick is matching the low-key setting with the DEC distance, permit, and road-access rules.