The Bay of Fundy, which touches the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, has one of the highest tidal ranges in the world. This timelapse, captured at Hall's Harbour, Nova Scotia ...
Winding its way between the Maritime provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, the Bay of Fundy is 170 miles of ... of seawater crash into the shore. Low tide reveals boulders carved into ...
Embark on an action-packed adventure along New Brunswick’s stunningly scenic Bay of Fundy Coast. Drive across the ocean floor at low tide to Ministers Island to reach beautiful nature trails to ...
The road trip adventure continues in Nova Scotia at the Bay of Fundy, home to the world's largest ocean tides. Walking along the dry bed of the Shubenacadie River, it is hard to believe that in a ...
The Bay of Fundy is a rift valley that sits between the ... the combined flow of all of the Earth’s freshwater rivers! The tides reach an average height of 3.5 metres, but in some places ...
The park's 50,900 acres sprawl out along the Bay ... low tide, the park's massive red boulders and muddy crimson beaches are exposed, offering colorful photo ops. Even when the tide is high, Fundy ...
The Bay of Fundy is a magical body of water between ... The name stuck. During low tide, the ocean retreats so far that vast crevices appear in the mud flats that were recently beneath water.