Travel Guides to Canada

2023-24 Travel Guide to Canada

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NS 84 BY HELEN EARLEY Explore Nova Scotia's South Shore PEGGY'S COVE • TOURISM NS/PATRICK ROJO���� Nova Sco a's South Shore region hugs the Atlan c coastline, offering quaint mari me towns, stunning mari me scenery, and endless beaches (www.visitsouthshore.ca). There's something immediately iconic about Peggy's Point Lighthouse. Constructed in 1915, the elegant octagonal concrete tower with a cheerful red crown sits alone atop a vast bed of sparkling granite boulders at the entrance to St. Margaret's Bay. Peggy's Cove is one of the most visited places in Nova Sco a, now more than ever since the addi on of a new accessible viewing deck. Along Highway 3, also known as the Lighthouse Route, explore the antique shops, boutiques, and bakeries of Hubbards, Chester, and Mahone Bay. In Hubbards, enjoy a traditional lobster supper at the Shore Club before the tables are folded away for Saturday night parties at "Nova Scotia's last great dance hall" (www.shoreclub.ca). There's excite- ment of a different sort in the waters around Oak Island, which hold one of the world's great mysteries: could this be the location of buried treasure (www.saltydogtours.com)? Colourful old-town Lunenburg is a UNESCO World Heritage site because of its architecture, including a distinctive bay window called the "Lunenburg bump" (www.lunenburgregion.ca). Occupying the original Highliner fish plant, the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic is an essential place to learn about life on the sea (fisheriesmuseum.novascotia.ca), including the story of the Bluenose schooner which, since 1937, has graced the flip side of the Canadian dime (bluenose.novascotia.ca). In nearby Blue Rocks, there are dozens of beautiful, uninhabited islands, coves, and seal colonies to explore by kayak (www.pleasantpaddling.com). Long stretches of unspoiled white-sand beaches are the jewels of the south shore (www.visitsouthshore.ca/see-and-do/ beaches). Among them, Kejimkujik National Park Seaside stands out as an area of natural beauty, with sparkling sand, crystal clear turquoise water, delicate piping plovers and playful seals. Inland, Kejimkujik National Park is a paradise for campers, stargazers, and canoeists (www.parkscanada.gc.ca/ kejimkujik). There's no need to pack your own gear with Whynot Adventure's equipped tours (www.whynotadventure.ca). At the time of the American Revolution, the town of Shelburne was larger than Halifax or Montréal (www.visitshelburne county.ca). Among the town's many museums and experiences, the Black Loyalist Heritage Centre tells the fascinating story of what was once the largest settlement of free Blacks outside Africa (www.black loyalist.com). Another of the beautiful beaches is White Point, with silver-white pebbles, powder- grey sand, and surf-perfect waves. What was once a grand but rustic camping lodge has evolved into the exceptional White Point Beach Resort, with an indoor swimming pool, games room, boathouse, and activity schedule to delight every traveller. For by- the-sea romance, book one of the new, intimate Lakeside Glomes or Oceanfront Treehouses, each with its own cosy woodstove and breathtaking view (www.whitepoint.com). Day trip, road trip, or extended staycation, nothing compares to spending a few days on Nova Scotia's welcoming, sunny South Shore.

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