8 Best Sights in The Acadian Coast, New Brunswick

Background Illustration for Sights

We've compiled the best of the best in The Acadian Coast - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Parlee Beach Provincial Park

Fodor's Choice

The warmest salt water in Canada and a 3-km (2-mile) stretch of glistening sand has earned Parlee Beach the title of the best beach in Canada by several surveys, and it has a Blue Flag international eco-certification. It is a popular vacation spot for families, with a campground, and plays host to beach-volleyball and touch-football tournaments; an annual sand-sculpture contest and a triathlon are among a schedule of summer events. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; parking (fee 9 am–5 pm); showers; toilets. Best for: sunrise; swimming; walking.

Cape Jourimain Nature Centre

The National Wildlife Area here covers 1,800 acres of salt and brackish marshes, and large numbers of waterfowl, shorebirds, and other species can be seen. The outstanding interpretive center includes a museum and exhibit hall with displays on natural and human history, a restaurant specializing in local fare, and a boutique with nature art and fine crafts. You will also find a viewing tower, 11 km (6.8 miles) of trails (come prepared to deal with insects, and wear long pants and enclosed footwear), and daily guided tours in July and August. This is the best location to photograph the striking architecture of the 13-km (8-mile) Confederation Bridge that links New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island.

5039 Rte. 16, at Exit 51, Bayfield, NB, E4M 3Z8, Canada
506-538–2336
Sight Details
Free
Closed mid-Oct.–mid-May

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Irving Eco-Centre: La Dune de Bouctouche

The center preserves a superb example of a coastal ecosystem that protects the exceptionally fertile oyster beds in Bouctouche Bay, a salt marsh, and an important 12-km (7½-mile) sand dune. Hiking trails and an 800-meter (½-mile) boardwalk with ramps and stairs to the beach make it possible to explore sensitive areas without disrupting the environment of one of the few remaining great dunes on the northwest coast of the Atlantic Ocean, and electric vehicles provide tours for visitors with mobility issues. An outstanding interpretive center puts the ecosystem in perspective with nature exhibits, a film presentation, a saltwater aquarium, and seasonal special events. The staff regularly conducts guided walks. Swimming is allowed.

Recommended Fodor's Video

The Olivier Soapery

A working artisan soapery, Olivier includes a museum with a fascinating array of bathtime memorabilia, from old bars of soap and soap-making equipment to tubs and basins. There's a skin-care art gallery, featuring paintings commissioned for soap labels throughout the years, and, naturally, plenty of soap and other skin-care products are for sale. You can book a tour to learn how the soap is made.

851 Rte. 505, Ste.-Anne-de-Kent, NB, E4S 1K1, Canada
506-743–8938
Sight Details
Free

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Owens Art Gallery

The oldest art gallery in Canada, first opened to the public in 1895, is on the Mount Allison University campus. It houses nearly 4,000 works of 19th- and 20th-century European, American, and Canadian artwork in its permanent collection, and there are usually rotating exhibits as well.

61 York St., Sackville, NB, E4L 1E1, Canada
506-364–2574
Sight Details
Free

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Ritchie Wharf Park

Newcastle

This waterside public park recalls the area's former shipbuilding industry. It has a nautical-theme playground complete with a "Splash Pad" that sprays water from below and dumps it from buckets above. Shops sell local crafts, and there are several restaurants and docking facilities. An amphitheater showcases local entertainers most evenings and on Sunday afternoon in summer.

84 Norton's La., Miramichi, NB, E1V 2G7, Canada
Sight Details
Free

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Sackville Waterfowl Park

Home to some 160 species of birds and 200 species of plants, this park has more than 3½ km (2 miles) of boardwalk and trails through 55 acres of wetlands. Throughout the marsh, viewing areas and interpretive signs reveal the rare waterfowl species that nest here. There's an interpretive center, and guided tours (C$6, including info kit and a snack at the end) are available in French and English mid-May through late August. A self-guided tour is also available at the visitor center and some stores in downtown Sackville.

Ste-Cécile Church

Across a causeway from Shippagan is Île Lamèque and Ste-Cécile Church. Although the church is plain on the outside, every inch of its interior is decorated with folk art, painted in the late 1960s by the priest and two students. Each July, the International Festival of Baroque Music takes place here.

8166 Rte. 313, Petite-Rivière-de-l'Île, Shippagan, NB, E8T 1C3, Canada
506-344–5626

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