Grand Pré is located in a vibrant natural environment which includes Evangeline Beach, part of the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network, where you can witness the massive summer migrations of semi-palmated sandpipers, the huge tides of the Bay of Fundy, the Guzzle and Boot Island (a National Wildlife Area). The Minas Basin is part of a Wetland of International Importance.
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Evangeline Beach
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Watch the Tides |
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Spend a beautiful summers day watching the highest tides in the world come in from the Bay of Fundy, watching the Evangeline Beach disappear in to the tide, bringing a fresh new stock of fish for the fishermen to enjoy.
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The Highest Tides in the World |
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Following the retreat of the glaciers after the last Ice Age about 14 000 years ago, sea levels around the planet rose. Rivers draining from the newly deglaciated land began to wash away sediment. In Eastern Canada, these sediments came to line the bottom of the Bay of Fundy. At this time, the Minas Basin was a shallow freshwater or brackish lake, and Georges and Browns Banks at the entrance to the Bay of Fundy were dry land. As sea levels continued to rise, and Georges Bank became submerged, more sea water entered the Bay. By 4000 years ago, the tidal range in the Minas Basin was only about 1 to 1.5 metres (3.2–4.9 feet), but this range has steadily increased over time to an average of 12 metres (39 feet) in the Minas Basin, 11.61 metres (38 feet) at Grand Pré and a maximum in excess of 16 metres (52.5 feet)
The greatest ranges and the greatest extent of an intertidal zone occur today in the Minas Basin. As part of the tidal cycle – two high tides and two low tides daily–100 billion tonnes of sea water flow in and out of the Minas Basin twice each day. That is more water than the combined daily flow of all the world’s rivers.









