Day 5 The Cabot Trail!
(see map above)
What can you say about the Cabot Trail - it is beautiful, wild, has great sweepers and long scenic straight roads. It has a few sections of road that are terrible, but most of it is excellent. We saw moose AND whales. There was one pull off that had a tiny triangle of beach way-y-y down there, and you could suddenly see whales spouting (?) and then they were just as suddenly gone. Around the next bend high up on a mountain there was the only live moose we saw.
We travelled in the anti-clockwise direction from Baddeck. Worth the trip. Just be slow on the rough sections, one big bump bounced Mitch into the opposite lane.
Leaving Baddeck, we stopped briefly at the Alexander Graham Bell Museum then off we went.
You don't starve on the Cabot Trail:
Hannah's BIG breakfast.
Tracy digging in.
Never enough scenic photos, but here are some:
Ralph and Tracy, Mitch and Hannah, and Brent are down there...
Typical view of the ocean with a twisty section of road:
Rustic Gas stop, run by a nice Arcadian gentleman:
Typical rustic restaurant on the Trail:
Saw thousands of these signs all over northern New England and the provinces:
But we only saw one of these:
We took the Pictou Ferry to cross to Prince Edward Island.
Mitch and Hannah
Sally with Brent
They require you to strap the bikes down, but they don't hand you straps, you have to hunt for them, usually finding them piled in a dirty corner... The ride was very smooth anyway, the straps were mostly decoration.
Getting ready to disembark:
Another province collected!
We arrive at Prince Edward Island:
Our motel was in Cavendish, reported to have world class sunsets and beaches. We caught a sunset as we pulled into the PEI Preserve Co. for an excellent supper:
We'll check the beach tomorrow.
(see map above)
What can you say about the Cabot Trail - it is beautiful, wild, has great sweepers and long scenic straight roads. It has a few sections of road that are terrible, but most of it is excellent. We saw moose AND whales. There was one pull off that had a tiny triangle of beach way-y-y down there, and you could suddenly see whales spouting (?) and then they were just as suddenly gone. Around the next bend high up on a mountain there was the only live moose we saw.
We travelled in the anti-clockwise direction from Baddeck. Worth the trip. Just be slow on the rough sections, one big bump bounced Mitch into the opposite lane.
Leaving Baddeck, we stopped briefly at the Alexander Graham Bell Museum then off we went.
You don't starve on the Cabot Trail:
Hannah's BIG breakfast.
Tracy digging in.
Never enough scenic photos, but here are some:
Ralph and Tracy, Mitch and Hannah, and Brent are down there...
Typical view of the ocean with a twisty section of road:
Rustic Gas stop, run by a nice Arcadian gentleman:
Typical rustic restaurant on the Trail:
Saw thousands of these signs all over northern New England and the provinces:
But we only saw one of these:
We took the Pictou Ferry to cross to Prince Edward Island.
Mitch and Hannah
Sally with Brent
They require you to strap the bikes down, but they don't hand you straps, you have to hunt for them, usually finding them piled in a dirty corner... The ride was very smooth anyway, the straps were mostly decoration.
Getting ready to disembark:
Another province collected!
We arrive at Prince Edward Island:
Our motel was in Cavendish, reported to have world class sunsets and beaches. We caught a sunset as we pulled into the PEI Preserve Co. for an excellent supper:
We'll check the beach tomorrow.
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