Everybody is soaking wet and screaming. Only your guide remains calm. No water park can match the thrills of riding Canada's surging, churning waters in what's known as "tidal bore rafting". In Nova ...
The world’s highest tides, reaching up to 53 feet, were measured in Nova Scotia’s Bay of Fundy. Did you know these tides set the stage for epic adventures like kayaking, tidal bore rafting, fossil ...
Off the Eastern Coast of Canada, the Bay of Fundy boasts the greatest tidal fluctuations in the world. Here, visitors can watch the water levels rise and lower up to 40 feet in a single day. With two ...
(via PBS Terra) Where typical ocean tides average about three feet, the Bay of Fundy’s record-setting tides soar over 50. This means 160 billion tons of water rush through the bay twice every day, ...
The Bay of Fundy, between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, has one of the world’s most powerful tides. Now, engineers and scientists hope to finally turn it into a clean energy source. By Ian Austen ...
At the head of New Brunswick’s Bay of Fundy, the tides average 35 ft. Twice a day a wall of roaring white water, called the “bore,” rushes up the winding Petitcodiac River, then ebbs lazily back to ...
Swept twice daily by the world's highest tides, the Bay of Fundy is home to a host of only-here experiences for adventurous travellers willing to venture off the beaten path. Racing tides and time, I ...
The Bay of Fundy's extreme 50 foot tides carry enough potential energy to power a small city. Where typical ocean tides average about three feet, the Bay of Fundy’s record-setting tides soar over 50.
The Bay of Fundy's extreme tides transform landscapes, notably Ministers Island, accessible only at low tide. This historic retreat, once Sir William Van Horne's summer home, showcases the dramatic ...
If you want to see where dinosaurs walked and giant, ancient centipedes crawled, just follow their footprints. That’s what scientists are doing in New Brunswick, Canada, where the world’s highest ...
Where typical ocean tides average about three feet, the Bay of Fundy’s record-setting tides soar over 50. This means 160 billion tons of water rush through the bay twice every day, generating enough ...