New Brunswick’s St. Andrews by-the-Sea also has plenty to see for visitors

From whales to ales, one of the prettiest towns in Canada offers history on the water and the shore

Surf ‘n’ turf are on the menu in St. Andrews by-the-Sea, New Brunswick — long before you even think of dining.

The appetizer is the unique chance to drive, cycle or even walk across the exposed ocean floor to Ministers Island, courtesy of the highest tides in the world in the Bay of Fundy. Dramatic as the water levels are — rushing torrents quickly drop a third of a metre per minute to reveal a half-kilometre gravel-like causeway — the tides can reach 10 to 15-plus metres elsewhere in the bay due to its “sloshing bathtub” effect.

From the circular observation bathhouse tower built by railway visionary William Van Horne at his summer residence of Covenhoven, both the Atlantic and our greenest province, 85% of it untouched trees and wilderness, begin to unfold.

Ministers Island and the Van Horne Estate are only reachable by land about every six hours with the receding tides of Passamaquody Bay.
Ministers Island and the Van Horne Estate are only reachable by land about every six hours with the receding tides of Passamaquody Bay. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

MINISTERS ISLAND

Reverend Samuel Andrews preferred the seclusion when settling here in 1790, among hundreds of British Loyalists who’d crossed the newly defined border with Maine after the American Revolution. While challenged to visit his flock in the town (named for St. Andrews, Scotland) with his home cut off every six hours and 13 minutes on average, Van Horne came from Montreal each year and stayed put, hauling rocks at low tide to build a two-storey 50-room mansion, now a 200-hectare National Historic Site.

When not away linking Canada by rail — the iconic Last Spike photo of his team completing the Canadian Pacific dominates first-floor reception above the first of 11 fireplaces — Chicago-born Van Horne engaged in livestock, horse breeding (a three-storey 1898 barn is also on the self-guided tour), geology, painting and music. Such boundless energy to get up and see the world each day required just four hours sleep and so not to disturb his wife, kids and 33 servants, his private bedroom is a main floor anomaly.

Van Horne built an impressive bathhouse and viewing tower from the rocks collected below his property.
Van Horne built an impressive bathhouse and viewing tower from the rocks collected below his property. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

Paintings by Van Horne, whose famous friends included Rudyard Kipling, and artifacts saved from renovations to the Algonquin Resort in St. Andrews are displayed with late 18th-century furnishings throughout Covenhoven. One staircase in the mansion is among the first to have glass steps to allow natural light, while the winding stone staircase from the tower to shore leads to remnants of a pool Van Horne had carved to catch and heat warm tidal waters.

East Coast humour on Water Street in the heart of St. Andrews by-the-Sea. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN
East Coast humour on Water Street in the heart of St. Andrews by-the-Sea. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

A TASTE OF THE TOWN

Leaving the Algonquin lobby, its conical red Tudor roof is where vacationing Maine writer Stephen King conceived the Overlook Hotel in The Shining, stroll 15 minutes downhill past clapboard churches and homes with Royal British street names and lawn-munching deer to Water Street in St. Andrews.

On the tiny peninsula’s north shore is the War of 1812-era Blockhouse with waterfront cannons that deterred Americans and pirates. It’s now preserved by Parks Canada as a small military museum, a great photo op of the harbour, capped by afternoon tea at the Niger Reef, one of many tasty restaurants that quickly fill for lunch and dinner on Water St.

After a wonderful bike ride and self-guided tour of the town and area, reward yourself with a pint on Market Wharf at cozy St. Andrew’s Brewery.
After a wonderful bike ride and self-guided tour of the town and area, reward yourself with a pint on Market Wharf at cozy Saint Andrews Brewing Company. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

After perusing shops and galleries, Water Street leads to Pendleton Lighthouse on the tip of Passamaquoddy Bay, where there’s a beach, oceanfront camping, the Pagan Point Nature Reserve and bike trails to Kingsbrae Gardens and the Bar Road to Ministers Island.

Lobster, seafood and pasta are a specialty at the Kennedy House, one of a cluster of fine New Brunswick fare on Water Street.
Lobster, seafood and pasta are a specialty at the Kennedy House, one of a cluster of fine New Brunswick fare on Water Street. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

WHALE OF A TIME

“How’s this compared to city noise?” teased Captain Chris Leavitt, cutting the engine near the lighthouse at Campobello Island for open water silence, broken only by sea birds and the far-off exhale of a humpback.

It was a little break in our two-and-a-half hour Island Quest Marine whale watching cruise with Chris and biologist daughter Nicole providing expert commentary for 10 guests. Sharp-eyed Nicole is also handy with her camera to snap bald eagles, seals and porpoises for us before the real stars of the show — humpbacks and their smaller cousins, finbacks and minkes.

Chris was a seventh-generation lobster, herring, scallops fisherman before his tour business and with his on-board depth sounder knows where whales gather for their favourite sardine feast. Nicole times the 100-metre dive of two playful humpbacks we’ve tracked, Chris brings us in behind from a safe distance and almost on cue about five minutes later, 30-plus metric tons surfaces to flash its fluke in the Fundy sun.

Whale watching on the Bay of Fundy with Island Quest Marine. Catch the distinctive tails of the humpbacks as they surface.
Whale watching on the Bay of Fundy with Island Quest Marine. Catch the distinctive tails of the humpbacks as they surface.Photo by Nicole Leavitt

Nicole explained one of our humpbacks was untangled from a fishnet just a day before by the Campobello Whale Rescue Team, who zip in close in their Zodiac with special gear. While some of the returning whales are nicknamed based on their tail patterns, others are newcomers, with Nicole sharing any pics and info with the Atlantic Humpback Whale Catalogue. Her Canadian and American colleagues on the bay always hope to spot the endangered right whale as its numbers dip and some bypass Fundy for the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

The Leavitts’ whale tour generally runs June 10-Oct. 10, weather permitting. As Chris began encountering more sharks on his trips, he added them to both his fishing charters and research work, helping Nicole and the University of New Brunswick tag them.

Ministers Island and the Van Horne Estate are only reachable by land about every six hours with the receding tides of Passamaquody Bay.
This lighthouse of Campobello Island on the U.S. border is one of many sights on the Island Quest Marine tour. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

We were on the water the day of a “super” tide, from a full moon that increases gravitational pull on Fundy and gives the Old Sow whirlpool near Deer Island, second largest in the world, an even more dramatic churn. We got a closeup of its immense power before Chris’ 400-horsepower engine cut through on to picturesque Head Harbour lighthouse on Campobello and the rocky outcrop of White Horse Island’s rare bird sanctuary.

Feeding time at the Huntsman Fundy Discovery Aquarium where the story of wildlife and the tides are told.
Feeding time at the Fundy Discovery Aquarium where the story of wildlife and the tides are told. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

HUNTSMAN MARINE SCIENCE CENTRE/AQUARIUM

Once we’d been informed a single tide change in Fundy can fill the Grand Canyon twice, it piqued interest to learn more of this natural wonder and the ecosystem that creates “places with two faces,” as our expert New Brunswick guide Neil kept reminding us.

Low tide reveals plenty on the Bay of Fundy, including green rockweed, a cosmetic and cleansing agent.
Low tide reveals plenty on the Bay of Fundy, including green rockweed, a cosmetic and cleansing agent. LANCE HORNBY/TORONTO SUN

IF YOU GO

Saint John is the closest city airport to St. Andrews by-the-Sea, a bit more than an hour west, with daily flights from Toronto and Montreal. If exploring the Maritimes by car, it’s about five hours west from Halifax, N.S. and six and a half hours east from Quebec City.

X: @sunhornby

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