Travel Guides to Canada

2023-24 Travel Guide to Canada

Issue link: http://read.canadatravelguides.ca/i/1499370

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 79 of 115

Yet this small but mighty spot—the most populous and prosperous of the four sister provinces—offers travellers within the region far more than a convenient location. Its sensational sites are must-sees in their own right. A SEA-BOUND COAST The scenery alone can make you want to linger indefinitely. After all, Nova Scotia is essentially surrounded by water, and every stretch of its 7,600-km (4,722-mi.) coastline promises adventure opportunities as well as oh-so-fresh seafood. Yet each also has its own distinctive character. The Minas Basin, for one, is a magnet for migrating shorebirds, hundreds of thousands of which descend each summer to dine on its mud flats before flying to South America. Nearby, the constant beating of the Bay of Fundy tides uncovers 300-million-year-old fossils in Joggins' UNESCO-designated cliffs. The South Shore, conversely, is dotted with centuries-old towns and sheltered coves once frequented by privateers; the Eastern Shore boasts pounding surf; and between them is Halifax, home to one of the world's largest natural harbours. Northumberland Strait, meanwhile, is notable for warm, sandy strands, whereas much of Cape Breton is BY SUSAN MACCALLUM-WHITCOMB NOVA SCOTIA Tenuously connected to New Brunswick by a slim sliver of land, then tethered by ferries to P.E.I. and Newfoundland, Nova Scotia acts as Atlantic Canada's anchor. 1,037,782 Halifax www.novascotia.com Halifax Stanfield International Airport, 35 km (22 mi.) from downtown NS 78 PEGGY'S COVE LIGHTHOUSE AT DAWN • SHUTTERSTOCK/SHAWN M. KENT Where Mother Nature Meets Father Time

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Travel Guides to Canada - 2023-24 Travel Guide to Canada