Hotels & Lodging Restaurants Travel: best seafood Digby Pines ferry to Canada Halifax Marriott Harbourfront Hotel Inverary Resort Liscombe Lodge MacKinnon-Cann Inn maritime vacation Nova Scotia Nova Star
by maribeth
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Nova Scotia Highlights
I’m high on Nova Scotia. Really. I recently spent seven days and seven nights in this Maritime province of Canada and I’m busting to tell the whole world about it. Really.
If you follow this blog, you know that I’m a big storyteller. And I can’t wait to share my travels in Nova Scotia with you. For now though, I’ll keep the words to a minimum and let my pictures tell the story. Hopefully they will be enough to entice you to begin pondering a trip to this charming destination. Spring, summer and fall rank as the best times to go although I’d love to see this endearing land beneath a blanket of snow as fierce gale winds blow in from the Atlantic.
“We have the same weather as Massachusetts, only a day late,” one kind Nova Scotian told me on the Nova Star crossing as I gazed out upon the sun rising above the cruise ship’s bow. “And in terms of snow and rain, we get about the same as the northeast of the U.S., only less,” she continued. Indeed, I was amazed by the glorious warm, sunny weather I experienced throughout my stay and fortunately I experienced Nova Scotia beneath a shroud of fog and rain as well. (Isn’t that the sort of weather you expect from this peninsula that reaches far out into the ocean?)
This lady’s report was followed by a heartfelt “Good morning,” as I stood on the Nova Star marveling at the big ball of red slowly rising up on the horizon. Totally unsolicited, I had to look around me to see if she was addressing me.
“Oh, good morning,” I answered back, somewhat bothered that it took me about five seconds–a very long period of time for an encounter between fellow shipmates–before I realized she was greeting me. By the time I left the Nova Star, I discovered that there are people out there even more friendly than Americans. Then everywhere I went across this province, roughly the size of Florida, I discovered that Nova Scotians went above and beyond to say hello to me, offer help or provide some tidbit of information about their land that they were eager to share.
Yes, the weather and the welcome amazed me at every turn. I knew the scenery would be lovely because so many had boasted about it long before I pondered this trip and indeed the coastal views delighted me as I contoured the province. Inland I was happy to discover sweet, fertile lands such as the Annapolis Valley, the heart of Nova Scotia’s wine and farming region, and also a bastion of history for all of Canada. And don’t let me get started about the seafood for this is supposed to be just a quick little post. Let my pictures whet your appetite and rest assured that all tasted even better than it looks.
I do want to add that perhaps what I enjoyed the most was the innocence of this land. To me, Nova Scotia represents a simpler way of life. There are no mega-homes, nor crowds of people or obvious signs of ubiquitous consumption. It’s how I’m sure many parts of America looked over fifty years ago, it’s how I think many of us would like to live and most of all, vacation.
For a truly memorable trip, take the ten-hour cruise on the Nova Star from Portland, Maine to Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. Your NS adventure begins as soon as the ship sails and lasts until you return to the port in Maine. It’s fun and beautiful.
Whale watching is a must and I had a helluva time with Freeport Whale & Seabird Tours.
Here are the places I stayed during my travels in Nova Scotia, all of which I recommend. I’ll be writing more about them and this maritime province in Canada in the months to come.
Halifax Marriott Harbourfront Hotel in Halifax
Liscombe Lodge in Liscomb Mills
Inverary Resort in Beddeck on Cape Breton Island
Digby Pines Golf Resort & Spa in Digby
MacKinnon-Cann Inn in Yarmouth