Charlottetown Tourist Attractions: 15 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Charlottetown? Check out our Charlottetown Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Charlottetown.
Top Places to visit in Charlottetown:
Confederation Centre of the Arts, St. Dunstan's Basilica, Victoria Park, Government House, Beaconsfield Historic House, Peake's Wharf, Victoria Row, Confederation Landing Park, The Mack, Charlottetown Farmers Market, Province House National Historic Site of Canada, Great George Street Historic District, St. Peter's Anglican Cathedral, Prince Edward Battery, The Prince Edward Island Regiment Museum
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Top 10 New England / Canada Shore Excursions
In this video ( ) we compiled our favorites, along with a few highly recommended from family, friends and clients who are avid cruisers!! We picked the best one from each port that you might visit on a New England / Canada cruise!!! So sit back and relax while we take you on a journey through some of the most beautiful parts of the North East!!!!!
Boston -
Boston By Duck -
Swan Boats -
Freedom Trail -
U.S.S. Constitution -
Portland, Maine
L.L. Bean Kayak Adventure -
L.L.Bean Store -
Bar, Harbor, Maine
Whale Watch -
Friendship V Catamaran -
Halifax, Nova Scotia (Canada)
Treasures Of The RMS Titanic -
St. George Church -
Fairview Cemetery -
Newport, Rhode Island
Green Animals Tour -
St. John, New Brunswick (Canada)
Reversing Rapids Jet Boat -
Sydney, Nova Scotia (Canada)
Bird Island Boat Tour -
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
Anne of Green Gables & Dalvay by the sea -
DalVay by the sea -
Quebec, Canada
Sugar Shack Tours -
Don't forget to email us a picture of you on your latest cruise along with the ship name to be featured in an upcoming video!!!
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Rochester NY 14609
Montreal Attractions and Tourism
Montreal Attractions and Tourism
World Travel
Montreal - Quebec - Canada
Notre-Dame Basilica of Montreal
Dating back to 1829, this cathedral is the city's most iconic building. It was the first gothic-revival church to be built in Canada and its handsome twin towers house an 11 tonne bell nicknamed Jean-Baptiste. Adding to local lore, French-Canadian chanteuse, Celine Dion was married here in 1994. The Basilica's vast size, its extraordinary craftsmanship, fine works of art and chapel are impressive, particularly the latter considering the fact it had to be rebuilt after a fire in 1978. With over 350 years of history, the Parish of Notre-Dame boasts a wealth of trivia, tales and urban legends.
Opening Times: Mon-Fri 0900-1600, Sat 0900-1530, Sun 1300-1530.
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
Unesco: No
Address: 110 Notre-Dame Street West, Montreal, Quebec, H2Y 1T2, Canada
Space for Life
Canada's largest natural science museum complex, Space for Life, offers four different attractions. The newest opened in spring 2013; the Rio Tinto Alcan Planetarium housed in a $48million building featuring two silver cones pointing skywards like telescopes. Inside, in the Chaos Theatre, visitors can journey into space against the backdrop of a Philip Glass symphony soundtrack. The planetarium also contains a permanent exhibition of meteorites and interactive terminals, videos and multimedia games. Also on the site is a Biodôme where you can learn about flora and fauna in five different ecosystems, an Insectarium offering a diverse and colourful collection of insects, butterflies, moths and spiders, and the Botanical Garden covering 73 hectares (180 acres), which includes a Chinese garden, Japanese garden and a Tree House displaying information on Quebec's forests.
Opening Times: Varies.
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
Unesco: No
Address: 4581, rue Sherbrooke Est, Montreal, Canada
Vieux-Montréal (Old Montreal)
Located near the St Lawrence River, Old Montreal is the site of the original fortified city. The buildings and streets date from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries and have been carefully restored. The area is filled, throughout the summer, with tourists who come to stroll along the cobblestone streets, visit the boutiques and restaurants or simply soak up the joie de vivre among the street entertainers and pavement cafes in the former marketplace of place Jacques-Cartier. A tour on a horse-drawn calèche makes for an especially romantic way to see the sights.
Opening Times: Daily 24 hours.
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
Unesco: No
Address: 110 rue Notre-Dame West, Montreal, Canada
Vieux-Port (Old Port)
The Old Port was once one of the most important trading ports in North America. With most shipping activity now taking place downriver, this area has been transformed into an excellent recreation and exhibition area, filled with walkers, cyclists and rollerbladers on the riverside promenades between the Clock Tower and the locks at Parc des Écluses. The Montreal Science Centre , on King Edward Pier, is a science and entertainment centre geared towards a family experience, with exhibitions, the Immersion Movie Game (interactive video game on a giant screen) and an IMAX cinema.
Opening Times: Daily 1000-1700 (early Jun-early Sep); daily 0930-1600 (early Sep-early Jun), IMAX daily until 2200.
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: No
Unesco: No
Address: Quai King Edward, 2 rue de la Commune, Montreal, Canada
Centre Canadien d'Architecture (CCA)
The Canadian Centre for Architecture should be seen as much for its own architecture as for the fascinating temporary exhibitions on buildings, architects and architectural movements inside. Peter Rose designed the modern building, whose austere limestone facade contrasts with the adjoining Shaughnessy House typical of the residences of Montreal's wealthy elite at the turn of the century. The area behind the museum is the CCA sculpture garden, designed by Melvin Charney.
Opening Times: Wed-Sun 1000-1700; Thurs until 2100.
Admission Fees: Yes (except for Thursdays after 1730).
Disabled Access: No
Unesco: No
Address: 1920 rue Baile, Montreal, Canada
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts)
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14 Top Tourist Attractions in Nova Scotia (Canada)
HOTELS -
Top Tourist Attractions in Nova Scotia:
Cabot Trail, Cape Breton Highlands National Park, Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site, Grand Pre National Historic Site, Halifax Harbour, Hall's Harbour, Kejimkujik National Park, Lunenburg, Peggy's Cove, Port-Royal National Historic Site, Ross Farm Museum, Sherbrooke Village, Shubenacadie Provincial Wildlife Park, Halifax Citadel National Historic Site
Top 12. Best Tourist Attractions in Cape Breton Island, Canada
group facebook -
The most beautiful places and sight in Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia.
Top 12. Best Tourist Attractions in Cape Breton Island, Canada: Cape Breton Highlands National Park, Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site, Cabot Trail, Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site, Skyline Trail, Cape Breton Miners' Museum, Highland Village, Middle Head Trail, Uisge Ban Falls, The Big Fiddle, Louisbourg Lighthouse , Ingonish Beach
SAGUENAY Cruise Port: What's There To Do? l CRUISE VLOG l Ep. 11
Now that we are back from our shore excursion, it is time for us to explore the city of La Baie, Saguenay! This city is super cute though there is not a whole lot to do for tourists in my opinion. I still enjoyed my time there though! As always, make sure to watch in HD for the best video quality! Hope you enjoy! :)
#NorwegianGem #Saguenay #CruiseVlog
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TOP 8 WORST PLACES TO MOVE IN CANADA (2013)
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416-962-2623 / 1-866-760-2623
We’ve told you about some of the underrated immigration destinations in Canada, now check out our list of places prospective Canadians should avoid: the poor places, the racist places, the isolated places, the depressing places, the worst of the worst! Naturally, the tiny towns in the woods of Northern Ontario or the southern shore of Newfoundland would be the worst of the worst, but let’s be reasonable. Here are list of towns and cities with a substantial population (at least 5000 residents) that might seem like a decent idea to a prospective immigrant interested in a slower pace of living.
Photos Credit to:
1. New Glasgow, Nova Scotia
Photo by Verne Equinox, via Wikimedia Commons
Photo by JBarta via Wikimedia Commons
High crime rate? Check.
High unemployment? Check.
High cost of living? Check.
Limited access to services? Check.
High property taxes? Check.
Bad weather? Check.
Despite being a small, quaint city just a few hours from Halifax, New Glasgow tops polls of the worst places to live in Canada. How could those 10,000 people stand it? They must have all been born there.
In 2009 New Glasgow ranked 36th out of 208 in StatsCan's crime severity index. The crime rate increased from 2011 to 2012, and was significantly higher than the provincial average.
In 2006, New Glasgow had an unemployment rate of 7.7%. It has decreased since then and, as of the 2011 census, it was 5.7%, or slightly lower than the provincial average.
The cost of living in New Glasgow was estimated by one website to be 4% higher than the cost of living in New York City, but only 30.3% of those reporting say their households earn more than $60,000 Canadian per year (after taxes).
Property tax in New Glasgow was higher than the average in Nova Scotia and significantly higher than Halifax up to and including 2013.
Climate
New Glasgow receives 1212 cm of precipitation per year (that's more than Vancouver).
2. Kitchener - Waterloo, Ontario
Photo by Tina, via Wikimedia Commons
Photo by Tyx via Wikimedia
Photo by JustSomePics, via Wikimedia
Congratulations, Kitchener / Waterloo, you are the hate crime capital of Canada! Despite hosting two universities and a massive tech company campus, the Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge tri-city area experiences a high per capita rate of verbal and physical assaults on ethnic, religious and gay minorities. Despite its location in the highly diverse Southern Ontario region, Kitchener has inherited the mantle from the previous main offender, Calgary.
In 2011 Kitchener-Waterloo was surpassed by Peterborough, Hamilton and Ottawa in police-reported hate crimes, however the rate remained at nearly double the national average.
3. Thetford Mines, Quebec
The third of the three rogues’ gallery dwellers is poor Thetford Mines, the heart of Quebec’s asbestos mining region and the winner of the title Most Polluted City in Canada. Despite the overwhelming evidence of the dangerous health effects of asbestos, Canada still mines the dangerous mineral, and the biggest mine in a populated area is in Thetford Mines.
4. Bay Roberts, Newfoundland
Photos by Werner Koehler, via Wikimedia Commons
Many, many other rural communities on the east coast could make this list, but Bay Roberts appears because it has the highest unemployment rate in Canada, at 17%. Despite the oil, gas, mining and hydro-power booms in Newfoundland, Bay Roberts has somehow managed to avoid the job benefits. This wouldn’t seem so peculiar if Bay Roberts wasn’t just an hour’s drive from money-drunk St. John’s and other rapidly expanding bedroom communities like Conception Bay South.
The unemployment rate has improved as it was 20.7% in 2006
5. Sarnia, Ontario
Photo by P199, via Wikimedia
Sarnia itself may not be so bad, but its view of and proximity to American heavy industry helps to reinforce the fact that this border town is polluted. It also has an empty downtown and a shrinking population.
6. Saint John, New Brunswick
Photo by DDD DDD, via Wikimedia
Photo by Shipley07, via Wikimedia
Photo by Michael d40, via Wikimedia
Long known as the unglamourous milltown cousin to its apostrophic neighbour to the east, St. John’s, Saint John is a dirty, stinky pulp and paper port on the Bay of Fundy. Despite the natural beauty nearby, the city has a declining population and few economic opportunities outside of the paper mills, nuclear power plant, and small university satellite campus. Don’t end up in Saint John when you want to live in St. John’s!
7. Nanaimo, BC
Photo by Masterhatch, via Wikimedia
Photo by galina75, via Wikimedia
8. Thunder Bay, Ontario
Photo by Derek Hatfield, via Wikimedia
Photo by P199, via Wikimedia
Quebec City Canada Summer - What to see in a Day | Road Trip
Quebec Canada 2019
Quebec, Canada Travel (HD 1080p)
Quebec, Canada Travel Guide - Quebec tourism & Vacations - Quebec, Canada Trip 2017
Travel Videos HD, World Travel Guide
Quebec is a province located in eastern Canada, the largest in size and second only to Ontario in population. Predominantly French-speaking (French being the provincial government's official language), Quebec is situated east of Ontario; to the west of Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island; to the south of the territory of Nunavut, and finally bordering the U.S. States of New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine to its south. The provincial capital of Quebec is Quebec City, the province's largest city is Montreal, the second largest city in Canada.
Quebec is unique among North American tourist destinations. Its French heritage does not only set the province apart from most of its English speaking neighbors, it is also one of the few historical areas in North America to have fully preserved its Francophone culture. Its European feel and its history, culture and warmth have made Quebec a favourite tourist destination both nationally and internationally.
See in Quebec
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Provincial Parks, Quebec has 22 provincial parks (known as National parks in French and in official English documentation). They vary from smallish, easily accessible preserves to massive tracts of remote near-wildnerness and everything in between.
Jardins de Metis (Reford Gardens), 200, route 132, Grand-Métis (located on route 132 mid-way between Rimouski and Matane), ☎ +1 418-775-2222 (fax: +1 418-775-6201) See Website for hours. An internationally renowned center for garden art and design. $16 Adults, $8 Young Adult.
Montmorency Falls. A beautiful natural waterfall right outside Québec City, taller than Niagra Falls.
Do in Quebec
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Québec offers many activities including sports and outdoor recreation, cultural and natural sites, festivals and events.
Sports and outdoors
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There are many sports and outdoor activities in Québec that can be enjoyed summer and/or winter:
Hunting and fishing
Golf
Snowmobiling
Wildlife observation
National parks
Water sports
ATV riding
Hiking
Skiing
Dogsledding
Cycling
Sites and attractions
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Québec has a number of sites and attractions.
Casinos: Québec has four casinos: Montréal, Charlevoix, Lac-Leamy and Mont-Tremblant(new)
Cruises: Québec offers a variety of cruises, whether for whale watching, travelling the St. Lawrence River or touring the waterways.
Gardens: the Montréal Botanical Garden, the Insectarium, Reford Gardens and the international garden festival in Gaspésie are among Québec’s garden attractions.
Museums: Québec has over 400 museums.
Theme parks: La Ronde, the Old Port of Montréal and of Québec City, the Village québécois d’Antan, Granby Zoo
Religious heritage: St. Joseph’s Oratory, the Basilique Notre-Dame-de-Québec.
Historical sites: the fortifications of Québec City, Old Montréal
Festivals and Events
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Quebecers are known for their festive spirit and taste for celebration. This explains the close to 400 festivals held each year in Québec. Québec’s events are varied, from sports to cultural events and festivals, and attract visitors from around the world.
Québec City
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Québec City Summer Festival [39]: For 40 years, the Québec City Summer Festival has been presenting hundreds of artists from around the world on ten sites around the capital, all easily accessible on foot (beginning of July).
Loto-Québec International Fireworks Competition This international musical fireworks competition takes place at the Montmorency Falls (end of July to beginning of August).
Plein Art Québec Over 100 craftspeople gather at the Plein Art Québec festival to exhibit Québec arts and craft creations in ceramics, textile and jewellery (beginning of August).
SAQ New France Festival A celebration of the history of the first Europeans to arrive in North America, the New France Festival presents over 1,000 artistic events every year in a journey back to the past in the heart of Old Québec (beginning of August).
Quebec City International Festival of Military Bands Since 1998, the Quebec City International Festival of Military Bands is the place to go at the end of August if we like Military Music. Bands from Canada and also from all around the world arrive in Quebec City every year to offer spectacular performances.
Quebec City Winter Carnival is the biggest winter carnival in the world. The festival typically starts on the last Friday of January or the first Friday of February and it continues for 17 days, usually with close to one million participants every year.
Road to 150: The Best Things To Do In Newfoundland
Special Note: We just released the Canada Saver Card, a physical discount card that gets you discounts at a variety of attractions, adventures, and activities across Canada! From helicopter tours to rafting, fishing, museums, and horseback rides, save money on all of them for less than $30! -
Ladies and Gentlemen, Welcome to Newfoundland!
Newfoundland was our first province on the Road to 150 project. We experienced icebergs, fjords, the Earth's mantle, whales, kitchen parties, and swimming in the Atlantic Ocean. But most of all, we fell in the love with people, which is a big part of what makes Newfoundland so special.
Canada's Road to 150 is a 150-day Canada-wide multimedia road trip celebrating Canada's 150th birthday by exploring the uniqueness of this country provincially and collectively while answering the question; What makes Canada special?
We will drive to and through every driveable province and territory, showcasing Canada's natural beauty and regional attractions while interviewing Canadians of all cultures and backgrounds, including local celebrities, immigrants, refugees, and everyday rural and urban Canadians. Our aim is to dig deep into what makes Canada such an incredibly inspiring country while showing off the best of Canada's tourism to Canadians and to the world.
MATTHEW BAILEY: Host/Producer
Matt's other YouTube channel:
Instagram: @MatthewGBailey and @MustDoCanada
Facebook: @MustDoCanada
Twitter: @MatthewGBailey
LiveLimitless.net
KARLA BAILEY: Host/Co-Producer
Instagram @glamourbohemio
JUSTIN BRUNELLE: Director
Travel videos YouTube Channel:
Instagram - @justinbrunelle
Facebook - MILE30 Adventures
Twitter - @MILE30Adventure
movingartistry.com / mile30adventures.com
Series Production Company: Moving Artistry Productions
movingartistry.com
Also, special thanks to Kody Davidson from who is the king of data, helping is back up all of our footage from his home base!
For a list of the companies that helped with this project in Newfoundland, visit -
Big thanks to Best Western International for helping to sponsor such an incredible journey as well as our smaller local sponsors such as the Luxus Hotel in St. Johns, Artisan Inn in Trinity, Iceberg Quest, O'Brien's Tours, Cod Sounds, Boyle Walking Tour, So-Full Walking Tour, Christian's Pub, O'Reilly's Pub, Bonavista Social House, Port Rexton Brewery, All Season's Bed & Breakfast in Twillingate, Annie's Restaurant, Sheppard's Bed & Breakfast, Blackawten boat tours, and Seaside restaurant.
Music Provided by: Artlist.io