^-i'KCiAL ADVERTISING l S\:< 1 [Q N 



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NEW BRUNSWICK A WORLD OF WONDER! 



IT HAPPENS HERE IN NEW BRUNSWICK, CANADA'S BAY OF FUNDY, 

 ONE OF THE MARINE WONDERS OF THE WORLD. 



FIND YOURSELF AMONG THREE-HUNDRED- 

 million-year-old plant fossils embedded in some of the 

 oldest visible rock on Earth. The natural wonders here 

 are like nothing you've seen before. The world's highest 

 tides . . . they rise to over 48ft. (14 m) in some places. 

 Falls reverse themselves and start to flow backward, and 



powerful tides sculpt 

 the landscape. At low 

 tide, spelunk through 



the province lies the Baie des Chaleurs, named one of 

 the world's most beautiful bays. 



Along the interior of the province, rivers and waterways 

 account for some of the best canoeing and kayaking to 

 be had. Tour the St. John River Valley for 400 km (248 

 mi.) of pure inspiration. Witness the change in land- 

 scape from the calm of lush, green valleys to the 

 whitewater rush of the Grand Falls Gorge. The world- 

 renowned Miramichi River beckons you to cast a line 

 with some of Canada's best 

 With 100 billiOll tons Of salmon fishing, and the beautiful 



Restigouche, St. Croix, and 

 Kedgwick rivers will let you 



seawater rushing in and 



out of the bay twice a day, 

 bizarre things happen. 



caves and touch the 

 base of giant rocks 

 reaching up from the ocean floor; at high tide, kayak 

 around miniature islands. That's just the tip of the many 

 natural wonders in New Brunswick. 



There's diverse landscape here. Extending northeast 

 from the Bay of Fundy are some of Canada's most 

 popular swimming beaches with some of the warmest 

 salt water north of Virginia. Here you'll find the world's 

 second longest sandbar, and one of the continent's last 

 remaining white sand dunes at the Irving Eco-Ccntre, 

 La Dune de Bouctouche. On the northern portion of 



canoe for endless days along 

 unspoiled wilderness. Be awed by 

 the untouched vastness of some 

 of the oldest mountains on the planet. Hiking possibilities 

 abound throughout the province; for a spectacular view, 

 climb some of the mountains, which are part of the 

 Appalachian Range. 



With waterfowl parks and designated wetlands, New 

 Brunswick is a true birdwatching paradise. Up to 95 

 percent of the world's sandpipers depend upon the Bay 

 of Fundy mudflats for their survival. Prepare to be 

 awestruck when they are airborne; coordinating their 

 movements, the birds resemble a school of fish in flight. 

 Not to be missed is the Grand Manan archipelago w ith 

 eagles, puffins, and osprcys. On the eastern tip of the 



