Canadian Roadstories

Stories & Pictures about Canadian People, Places and Things

Social

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Home
  • Canadian People
  • Canadian Places
  • Canadian Things
  • Canada’s First Peoples
  • About

St. Andrews by-the-Sea

May 1, 2013 by Glenn 14 Comments

wooden deck behind Seaside Beach Resort cottage in St. Andrews by-the-Sea

The tides in St. Andrews by-the-Sea are about 25 feet at this time of year, not the highest on the bay, but still, twice a day the sea sneaks up to lap at the wooden posts of our little deck. She surrounds us closely and makes us a little nervous and wary of her size and power. Then she gently retreats as if to remind us that she’s still close by, playing with somebody else for a time.

St. Andrews is a seaside resort town at the southern tip of the province of New Brunswick. It was founded by United Empire Loyalists in the 18th century and shares much of its history with Americans in the nearby state of Maine, just across Passamaquoddy Bay. Today it’s a picturesque tourist destination and a great place to relax. The main street offers fresh seafood restaurants, historic buildings, artisan shops, whale-watching outfits, cottage rentals and the usual laid-back pace of life common in Canada’s Maritime provinces.

sunset over the beach on Passamaquoddy Bay

We like to travel a little “off season” (November to April), especially to a popular tourist destination like St. Andrews. Just before everything revs up for the busy months, the locals are a little more talkative and ready to take a minute in conversation. The restaurants and bars are painting their patios and training new seasonal staff. Artisans are carefully displaying a winter’s worth of work. Handfuls of friends gather on the wharf in their cars, leaning on the bumpers, smoking, trading gossip and small talk while enjoying the warmer breezes and the longer days.

At the Seaside Beach Resort we rented part of a small, wooden house right on the bay. Perfect. Not the concierge luxury of the nearby Algonquin Hotel, but, literaly, more seaside. We packed in a few groceries but spent most of our meals in town are over great take-out pizza and lobster rolls. We considered the legendary cuisine at the Rossmount Inn up the road but it just didn’t seem right at the time.

The smells of the ocean are refreshing after a drive through the New Brunswick forests from Fredericton. Seaweed and salt air mingle with the cries of gulls and the ocean herself. Ever present, she touches all of our senses.

Filed Under: Canadian Places Tagged With: artisan’s shops, cottage rentals, historic buildings, New Brunswick, Passamaquoddy Bay, seafood restaurants, Seaside Beach Resort, St. Andrews by-the-Sea, tide, whale watching outfits

Trackbacks

  1. Seal Cove says:
    March 20, 2023 at 11:06 am

    […] Other great spots on the Bay of Fundy include Minister’s Island and St. Andrews by-the-Sea. […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Seal Cove Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RANDOM ROADstories

First Light at Sainte-Marie among the Hurons baskets

First Light at Sainte-Marie among the Hurons

2019 International Indigenous Tourism Conference in Kelowna B.C.

Indigenous Tourism Conference Signals Success

dogs and barns

Prince Edward County

Knit one, pearl two

cover of Backroads of Ontario by Ron Brown

Ron Brown’s Backroads of Ontario

Cape Forchu lighthouse - Yarmouth Nova Scotia by Pat Brennan

Yarmouth Pleasant

travelosophy website visits the Siksika Nation

Vintage and Retro Ontario TV broadcasts from the 1970s, 1980s & 1990s

The Robin’s Nest Bed & Breakfast

Bob Cromwell

Dooher's Bakery in Campbellford, Ontario

Doughnuts are hot at Dooher’s

What’s going on in Thunder Bay?

AsianPacificPost.com … interesting newspaper …

Skwachàys Lodge

Skwachàys Lodge — An Innovative Mix of Native Culture and Social Good

Toronto: a fascinatingly boring city in mid-puberty…

Canada's First Peoples
Previous
Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame
Next
Minister’s Island
  • Home
  • Canadian People
  • Canadian Places
  • Canadian Things
  • Canada’s First Peoples
  • About