Nova Scotia and the Maritimes
Enjoy Acadian Evangeline Trial, Halifax Harbor, Peggy’s Cove, Prince Edward Island (Anne of Green Gables land), New Brunswick, Campobello, and more.
Nova Scotia and the Maritimes are provinces on the Canadian Atlantic Coast, the smallest in Canada. They are very distinct and compact.
Their lush landscapes are pint size replicas of every region in Canada. Besides thousands of miles forest, the mountain clefts on Cape Breton rival the crannies in British Columbia. Apple blossoms in New Brunswick and Annapolis Valley are as pretty as those in Chelan by the Columbia River. The sandy beaches of beautiful Prince Edward Island can also be found in North Cumberland.
Its people have counterparts in ancestral stock. The Micmak Indians in Nova Scotia parallel the Shushwaps in British Columbia. Nova Scotia’s immigrants, just like those in the various regions of Canada, came from France, England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany, Switzerland, Poland, Ukraine and the Middle East.
Before Canada was formed in 1867, Maritimers were already rich merchants, fishermen and shipwrights, trading in many parts of the world. Those prosperous days brought lovely Victorian mansions to the little port towns, along with a high standard living.
Halifax, capital of Nova Scotia, is salty, yet sophisticated. With all the trappings of a big city, it retains the warmth of a small town, just like the rest Nova Scotia.
You will be surprised to meet great people on this trip; Alexander Graham Bell, George Bush, Cornwallace, Longfellow, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lucy Maude Montgomery, author of (Anne of Green Gables).
Discover a land and history that surprises and delights those who visit.









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