Cape Breton Places & Foods

Nova Scotia Nova Scotia stretches 500 kilometres on a southwest-northeast axis from Cape Sable to Cape North, the shape of the province is often compared to that native delicacy, the lobster, with Cape Breton Island representing the outstretched claws, preparing to nip unsuspecting Newfoundland across the Cabot Strait.

The outstanding geographical fact about Nova Scotia is not the land, but the sea. The province is virtually an island connected to the rest of Canada by the narrow Isthmus of Chignecto. No point of land is more than 55 kilometres from the coastline. Cape Breton is an island joined to the mainland by the Canso Causeway. It is the sea that has carved the wild and ragged shoreline of the Atlantic coast and the sea that creates the wondrous tides of the Bay of Fundy. It is the sea upon which the first European settlers arrived and the sea from which they pulled their livelihood in once bursting nets. It is the sea for which they built ships to sail to other seas, bringing back goods rare and precious and tales even stranger. Not surprisingly, it is to the sea that Nova Scotians today are looking for new sources of wealth from offshore oil and gas.

The province can be divided into three distinct physiographic regions - the lowlands, the uplands and the highlands, which in tum may be subdivided into distinct sub-regions. The lowlands include the fertile Annapolis Valley, the low-lying areas around the Northumberland Strait and large parts of Cape Breton Island. The geology is primarily sedimentary and it is in these areas that most of Nova Scotia's rich coal seams are located. These coasts tend to be low and flat, and there are few good harbours. The shoreline is characterized by sandbars and occasional dunes. Bathers can often wade many hundreds of metres on these sandbars when the tide is out.

The Atlantic uplands comprise an area equal to half the province, running from Cape Canso, Guysborough County, to the extreme southern tip, including all of Yarmouth, Shelburne, Queens and Lunenburg counties, and most of Digby, Halifax and Guysborough counties. The uplands are a mass of Pre-Cambrian hard granite and quartzite, interspersed with belts of weaker slate. l'he area has been heavily glaciated with the result that much of the soil has been scraped away and redeposited in numerous glacial formations, the most famous of which is the drumlin that forms Halifax's Citadel Hill.

Nova Scotia The coastline of the uplands region is deeply indented, forming many good harbours, some of which are considered outstanding. Hundreds of islands dot the landscape along the entire Atlantic coast, most notably at St. Margarets Bay and Mahone Bay. Reefs and shoals abound, accounting for the many lighthouses erected along this coast. In many ways the Atlantic uplands coast epitomizes the North Atlantic coastline with its bare granite sheets plunging headlong into the raging surf to produce an awesome cataclysm between land and sea. When people think of Nova Scotia, they usually envisage the rocky granite shores of the uplands.

The highlands are those parts of the province where metamorphosed igneous and sedimentary rocks have either intruded through the preexisting lowland sediments or resisted erosion to a better degree than the surrounding softer rock. The Cape Breton Highlands are the most notable example. The Cobequid Mountains of Cumberland and Colchester counties, the Antigonish highlands, and the North Mountain, which runs parallel with the Fundy shore from Cape Blomidon to Digby Neck, are the other Nova Scotia highlands. Appearing as sharp ridges when viewed from below, the highlands are actually flat tablelands. This may be observed first hand in the Cape Breton Highlands National Park. At Ingonish, and at Cheticamp, the Cabot Trail rises to the tablelands, several hundred metres above the sea level.

The outstanding feature of the highlands is rectilinear coastlines. In contrast with the hundreds of bays and peninsulas of the Atlantic coast, the shoreline of the Bay of Fundy and western Cape Breton are virtually straight. Here, uplifted highland cliffs that soar up hundreds of metres directly from the ocean create stretches of spectacular landscapes. Less well known, but no less spectacular, are the cliffs of the Bay of Fundy coast, which are interspersed with fossils and unusual minerals.


Lobsters

Filed under: Cape Breton — admin @ 3:36 pm

Lobsters are most abundant off the coasts of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Gulf of Maine. They’re harvested and processed in the three Maritime provinces, Newfoundland and Quebec. Landings peak twice a year, once from April to June, when the spring season opens, and again in December, after the winter fishery starts in southwestern Nova Scotia.

Atlantic Canada’s staggered fishing seasons are designed to protect the stock, and the waters are divided into 41 lobster fishing areas, each with its own season varying in length from eight weeks to eight months. This seasonal effort is complemented by new and innovative holding and processing techniques. Most of the lobster fishery takes place fairly close to shore, but a few vessels fish the deep basins and outer banks off southwestern Nova Scotia. Five provinces participate in the catch, with Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island accounting for 90 per cent of lobster landings and Quebec and Newfoundland making up the remaining 10 per cent. Currently, there are about 9,000 licensed lobster fishermen, of which nearly 3,000 are in Nova Scotia.

Licensed lobster fishermen-usually a captain and two or three crew members-set their traps from small boats, heading out on the water in the early hours of the morning and staying out for up to 12 hours. The brightly coloured buoys mark the areas where they leave their traps. They return several hours later to haul up the wooden-frame or plastic-coated steel-mesh traps from the sea floor.

In Prince Edward Island, lobster has been the mainstay of the economy since the fishery began in the mid-1870s, although it almost died in its infancy. In the mid-1880s-only 10 years after the boom began-over-fishing drove the stocks to dangerously low levels, and the fishery faced ruin. It was saved by a combination of regulation, co-operation and luck.

Commercial canning helped the lobster fishery flourish in all parts of the Maritimes. The first known cannery opened on Prince Edward Island in 1858. Within 25 years, thanks to the lobster fishery, the number of Island canneries had risen to more than 100, and the lobster fishery accounted for 25 per cent of the province’s income. Without canning, the lobster would never have found its way to lucrative markets in Great Britain and the United States, where it was considered a delicacy.

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