Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia (IPA/ˌnoʊvəˈskoʊʃə/) (Latin for New Scotland; Scottish GaelicAlba NuadhFrenchNouvelle-Écosse) is a Canadian province located on Canada's southeastern coast. It is the most populous province in the Maritimes. Its capital, Halifax, is a major economic centre of the region. Nova Scotia is the second smallest province in Canada, with an area of 55,284 km². Its population of 935,573 makes it the fourth least populous province of the country, though second most densely populated.340px-nova_scotia-map-2_textmedium

Nova Scotia's economy is traditionally largely resource-based, but has in the 20th and 21st centuries become more diverse. Industries such as fishingmining,forestry and agriculture remain very important, and have been joined by tourismtechnologyfilmmusic, and finance.

The province includes several regions of the Mi'kmaq nation of Mi'gma'gi, which covered all of the Maritimes, as well as parts of MaineNewfoundland and theGaspé. Nova Scotia was already home to the Mi'kmaq people when the first European colonists arrived. In 1604, French colonists established the first permanent European settlement north of Florida at Port Royal, founding what would become known as Acadia. The British Empire obtained control of the region between 1713 and 1760, and established a new capital at Halifax in 1749. In 1867 Nova Scotia was one of the founding provinces of the Canadian Confederation, along with New Brunswick, and the Province of Canada (which became the separate provinces of Quebec and Ontario).

Narrowing the search?

More and more narrowing search towards Chester :-), meaning the The Aspotogan Peninsula is getting more attention. Great place to be, was there, but it is also not the cheapest place as in Chester BTW.

See Ocean Point Estates for interesting but pricey lots.

Sawmill Landing

The inlets

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From above

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This is until now one of the nicest waterfront real estate possibilities I have seen so far.


Waterfront estate properties at Sawmill Landing are a short boat ride from the village wharf in Sherbrooke.This charming community has a colorful, interesting history dating back to 1655. Named in 1855, in honor of Sir John Coape Sherbrooke (Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia), Sherbrooke prospered, supported by farming, fishing and the timber trade. Gold was discovered in 1861 and the village became a lively mining camp. Today this historic village is Nova Scotia's largest museum site.

White Point Estates

Ocean Club Design 2 levels

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Ocean Club Design 1 level

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At the White Point Estates website a lot of information is available but today I got more info about another project at the same site. There are several smaller ocean front lots in the Ocean Club with turnkey furnished homes.


About White Point Estates, some marketing talk :-).


White Point Estates is an oceanside community offering all the privacy and beauty you want in a seaside home, with the value-added benefit of close and easy year-round access to White Point Beach Resort amenities and facilities including a 1km white sand beach and CPGA golf course.

Established in 1928 by Howard Elliot, White Point began as a private oceanside hunting and fishing lodge that was enjoyed by many guests. With a few cabins on the beach, an eight-room main lodge and a dining room, guests enjoyed their experience so much that they returned year after year, often staying for a month or more at a time. 


As a place where families escaped for vacations, days were filled with games and competitions on the beach and swimming of course. Recreational activities here at White Point expanded to include a tennis court that was constructed on site in 1931. A Golf Course came close behind opening in 1932. In the '30s a fascination with tuna fishing peaked and became a significant sporting activity and attraction for many.   


Over the years, White Point has continued to expand and enhance the resort facilities. The original buildings were of split log construction. The rustic charm that had been afforded in the original buildings has been maintained and continues to be evident in the accommodations and amenities that have since been added. We pride ourselves on keeping the original look and feel of the Resort that was created by our founders and since been cherished by our guests. 


For nearly 80 years, generations of families have made White Point Beach Resort their Nova Scotia Oceanside Beach Resort getaway. Together we made memories that will outlive a lifetime. Many guests find it difficult to put into words what White Point means to them – it's more a of feeling that washes over you when you arrive and stays with you long after you return home. At White Point, we know you and your children by name, we know your favourite dessert, even recall your birthday! At White Point, you are always at home.


We're proud of our history. You will notice evidence of our past all around you during your stay with us. Just take a look at the many photographs and artifacts that decorate the walls of the Main Lodge and many of our accommodations. 


Building on our past, we continue to look forward. While you can still enjoy White Point as a guest, we have diversified and expanded the programs and services within our Oceanside Beach Resort Community to bring you so much more. White Point Vacation Club, White Point Residence Club, White Point Vacations, Ocean Club and now White Point Estates have all been introduced within our Resort Community.

Sherbrooke

Sherbrooke Village

Sherbrooke Village
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Sherbrooke, Nova Scotia (population ~400) is a Canadian rural community in Guysborough County Nova Scotia.

It is famous regionally for being the home of Sherbrooke Village, the largest museum in the province.

The community takes its name from Sir John Coape Sherbrooke a colonial era Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia.

Sherbrooke is the administrative seat for the Municipality of the District of St. Mary's.

Mahone Bay

Chester Harbour

Chester harbour
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Info from Wikipedia


Mahone Bay is a bay located on the Atlantic coast of Nova ScotiaCanada along the eastern end of Lunenburg County.

Opening south directly onto the Atlantic, its eastern shore is formed by the Aspotogan Peninsula and its western shore is formed by the First Peninsula (of Lunenburg) and its landlocked extension named 'Heckmans Island'. The 'Chester Peninsula' juts several kilometres into Mahone Bay at roughly its midpoint.

The bay's geological history differs from its eastern neighbour, St. Margarets Bay, in that Mahone Bay shows a greater variety of soils and bedrock. Numerous glacial drumlinson the western shore near the towns of Mahone Bay and Lunenburg have resulted in small-scale farming operations.

Mahone Bay also differs from St. Margarets Bay in that it is dotted with innumerable small and medium-sized islands throughout its waters. The shelter provided by these islands, along with the summer southwesterly flow, led to the scenery around Mahone Bay becoming a tourist attraction in itself. Today the towns of Chester and Mahone Bay have become a destination for cruising in pleasure yachts. A scenic provincial park at Graves Island just east of Chester is a popular camping destination.

Mahone Bay is also home to numerous picturesque working fishing communities, most famous being the community of Tancook Island, located on Big Tancook Island. Other important fishing ports include Blandford and Little Tancook Island.

Cape Breton

Highlands National Park

Cape Breton Highlands National Park

Cabot Trail

Cabot Trail

Info from Wikipedia


Cape Breton Island (French: île du Cap-Breton - formerly île Royale, Scottish Gaelic: Eilean Cheap Breatuinn, Míkmaq: Únamakika, simply: Cape Breton) is an island on the Atlantic coast of North America. It likely corresponds to the European word "Breton", referring to Brittany.

Cape Breton Island is part of the province of Nova ScotiaCanada. Although physically separated from the Nova Scotia peninsula by the Strait of Canso, it is artificially connected to mainland North America by the Canso Causeway. The island is located east-northeast of the mainland with its northern and western coasts fronting on theGulf of St. Lawrence; its western coast also forming the eastern limits of the Northumberland Strait. The eastern and southern coasts front the Atlantic Ocean; its eastern coast also forming the western limits of the Cabot Strait. Its landmass slopes upward from south to north, culminating in the highlands of its northern cape. A saltwater estuary, Bras d'Or Lake, dominates the centre of the island.

The island is divided into four of Nova Scotia's eighteen counties: Cape BretonInvernessRichmond, and Victoria. Their total population as of the 2001 census numbered 147,454 "Cape Bretoners"; this is approximately 16% of the provincial population. Cape Breton Island has experienced a decline in population of approximately 6.8% since the previous census in 1996. Approximately 72% of the island's population is located in the Cape Breton Regional Municipality (CBRM) which includes all of Cape Breton County and is often referred to as Industrial Cape Breton, given the history of coal mining and steel manufacturing in this area.

The island contains five reserves of the Mi'kmaq Nation, these being: EskasoniMembertouWagmatcookWe'kopaq/Waycobah, and Potlotek/Chapel Island. Eskasoni is the largest in both population and land area.


History


Cape Breton Island's first residents were likely Maritime Archaic Indians, ancestors of the Mi'kmaq Nation, the later of whom inhabited the island at the time of European discovery. Giovanni Caboto (John Cabot) reportedly visited the island in 1497 to become the first Renaissance European explorer to visit present-day Canada. However, historians are unclear as to whether Cabot first visited Newfoundland or Cape Breton Island. This discovery is commemorated by Cape Breton's Cabot Trail.

A fishing colony was established on the island about 1521/1522 by the Portuguese under João Alvares Fagundes. As many as 200 settlers lived in the nameless village in what is now present day Ingonish (location according to some historians) on the island's northwestern peninsula. The fate of the colony is unknown, but it is mentioned as late as 1570.[1]

On February 81631Charles I granted Cape Breton Island to Robert Gordon of Lochinvar and his son Robert.

The island saw active settlement by France with the island being included in the colony of Acadia. A French garrison was established in the central eastern part at Ste-Annein the early 18th century, before relocating to a much larger fortification at Louisbourg to improve defences at the entrance to the Gulf of St. Lawrence and defend France's fishing fleet on the Grand Banks. The French named the island "Île Royale." It remained part of colonial France until it was ceded to the Britain under the Treaty of Paris in 1763. Britain merged the island with its adjacent colony of Nova Scotia (present day peninsular Nova Scotia and New Brunswick).

Some of the first British-sanctioned settlers to the island following the Seven Years' War were Irish, although upon settlement, they merged with local French communities to form a culture rich in both music and tradition. From 1763 to 1784 the island was administratively part of the colony of Nova Scotia and governed from Halifax.

The first permanently settled Scottish community on Cape Breton Island was Judique, settled in 1775 by Michael Mor MacDonald. He spent his first winter using his upside-down boat for shelter, which is reflected in the architecture of the village's Community Centre. He composed a song about the area called "O's alainn an t-aite" , or 'Fair is the Place.

In 1784, Britain split the colony of Nova Scotia into three separate colonies: New Brunswick, Cape Breton Island, and present-day peninsular Nova Scotia, in addition to the adjacent colonies of St. John's Island (renamed Prince Edward Island in 1798) and Newfoundland. The colony of Cape Breton Island had its capital at Sydney on its namesake harbour fronting on Spanish Bay and the Cabot Strait. Its first Lieutenant-Governor was Joseph Frederick Wallet DesBarres (1784–1787) and his successor wasWilliam Macarmick (1787). From 1799 to 1807 the military commandant was John Despard, brother of Edward.[2]

An order forbidding the granting of land in Cape Breton, issued in 1763, was removed in 1784. The mineral rights to the island were given over to the Crown by an order-in-council. The British government had intended that the Crown take over the operation of the mines when Cape Breton was made a colony, but this was never done, probably because of the rehabilitation cost of the mines. The mines were in a neglected state, caused by careless operations dating back at least to the time of the final fall of Louisbourg.

In 1820, the colony of Cape Breton Island was merged for the second time with Nova Scotia, this being present-day peninsular Nova Scotia. This development is one of the factors which led to large-scale industrial development in the Sydney Coal Field of eastern Cape Breton County (see Industrial Cape Breton). By the late 19th century, as a result of the faster shipping, expanding fishery and industrialization of the island, exchanges of people between the island of Newfoundland and Cape Breton increased beginning a cultural exchange that continues to this day.

During the first half of the 19th century, Cape Breton Island experienced an influx of Highland Scots numbering approximately 50,000 as a result of the Highland Clearances. Today, the descendants of the Highland Scots dominate Cape Breton Island's culture, particularly in rural communities. To this day Gaelic is still the first language of a number of elderly Cape Bretoners. A campaign by the provincial government during the 19th and early 20th centuries aimed to eradicate the use of Gaelic among school children. The growing influence of English-dominated media from outside the Scottish communities saw the use of this language erode quickly during the 20th century. Many of the Scots who immigrated there were either Roman Catholics or Presbyterians.

Tourism promotions beginning in the 1950s recognized the importance of the Scottish culture to the province, and the provincial government started encouraging the use of Gaelic once again. The establishment of funding for the Gaelic College of Celtic Arts and Crafts and formal Gaelic language instruction in public schools are intended to address the near-loss of this culture to English assimilation.

The turn of the 20th century saw Cape Breton Island at the forefront of scientific achievement with the now-famous activities launched by inventors Alexander Graham Belland Guglielmo Marconi.

Following his successful invention of the telephone and being relatively wealthy, Bell acquired land near Baddeck in 1885, largely due to surroundings reminiscent of his early years in Scotland. He established a summer estate complete with research laboratories, working with deaf people - including Helen Keller - and continued to invent. Baddeck would be the site of his experiments with hydrofoil technologies as well as the Aerial Experiment Association, financed by his wife, which saw the first powered flight in the British Empire when the AEA Silver Dart took off from the ice-covered waters of Bras d'Or Lake. Bell also built the forerunner to the iron lung and he experimented with breeding sheep.

Marconi's contributions to Cape Breton Island were somewhat less than Bell's as he merely used the island's geography to his advantage in transmitting the first trans-Atlantic radio message from a station constructed at Table Head in Glace Bay to a receiving station at Poldhu in CornwallEngland.

Regions

There are several regions in Nova Scotia that I like most, Mahone Bay area, the North near Sherbrooke and Cape Breton. Although the last I do not really know as I have not been there yet, but all info available, the scenery and and the emptiness makes it already one of my favorites. 

Realtors

Well there are many in Nova Scotia as there are many houses for sale. The ones I check regularly are:


Claussen Walters & Associates

Tradeswind Realty


There are also many lots for sale, interesting ones:


Lloyd's Landing

Sawmill Landing

Shorefront Estates

St. Mary's Riverside

The Anchorage at Deep Cove


And some resort development:


Abbecombec Ocean Village

Louisbourg Resort Golf & Spa

White Point Estates

Copyright, Hans Peter Kok, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
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