We are off on a lobster cruise.

We leave the port to hunt for lobster.


Fresh faced volunteers pull in the catch, which strangely enough was a male and a female lobster.
 

Here I am on in Shediac Bay on the boat. Someone at our table did not want their lobster, so I had two.



My first view of Bay of Fundy

 



A view of one of the strange Hopewell Rocks from above.



We are down on the beach now and you can see a group of strangely erroded rocks. The sea eats away at the cliff to form the rock pillars
 



A particularly thin pillar of rock.


As you can see the tide is out, but when it comes in, all this red gritty sand is covered. Bay of Fundy has the highest rise and fall of tides in the world. The local guide here said that another place in Canada claims to have the second highest rise and fall of tide in the world. I told him that Clevedon, a town near where I live also claims that.

A trilobite fossil in the Hopewell Rocks visitor place.


Nova Scotia Prince Edward IslandHalifaxMontreal