I FOUND 30 Places in New Brunswick You'll Wish You Found Sooner

There's a Canadian island five kilometres off the New Brunswick coast that you can see from shore — but the only road to reach it runs through the United States. That's just the beginning. New Brunswick has been quietly sitting on the world's longest covered bridge, the Western Hemisphere's largest whirlpool, North America's first UNESCO Geopark, and beaches warmer than the Caribbean — while the rest of Canada drives straight through it on the way to PEI. In this video, we explore: → Grand Falls, a 23-metre gorge waterfall ranked among the largest east of Niagara — and most drivers pass within ten minutes of it without ever stopping → Parlee Beach near Shediac, where the saltwater hits 22°C in summer while Nova Scotia's South Shore sits at 14°C — the warmest swimming in Canada, hiding in plain sight → The Petitcodiac in Moncton, where a wall of water surges upstream against the current twice a day — and a 2010 redesign brought the tidal bore back from near-extinction → Miscou Island at the easternmost edge of the province — wild cranberry bogs, a 19th-century wooden lighthouse, and carnivorous pitcher plants growing in the open ground → The Old Sow off Deer Island — a tidal whirlpool that reaches 76 metres across, the largest in the Western Hemisphere, with smaller "piglet" whirlpools spinning around it → Cape Enrage, where a group of Sussex high school students rescued a collapsing 19th-century lighthouse in 1993 and have been running zip-line and rappelling tours off the cliffs ever since → Kings Landing, a living history settlement built from 100+ original heritage buildings physically moved to higher ground before the Mactaquac Dam flooded the valley → Hartland's covered bridge — 391 metres of 120-year-old wood, the longest in the world, a record nobody will ever break because no one builds wooden covered bridges anymore → Magnetic Hill in Moncton, an optical illusion so complete that cars appear to roll uphill in neutral — Guinness-listed, and convincing even to visitors who know exactly what's happening → The Acadian story — 10,000 to 18,000 people deported in 1755, families separated onto different ships, and a culture that came back, rebuilt, and refused to disappear And at number one: a Canadian island where about 900 residents live with the strangest geographic arrangement in the country — visible from the New Brunswick shore, jointly administered by two nations, and unreachable by Canadian road without leaving Canada first. This is where Roosevelt spent every summer of his childhood, and where his life changed in 1921. Subscribe so you don't miss the next province we uncover. #GhostCanada #NewBrunswick #HiddenCanada #Maritimes #BayOfFundy #CanadianHistory #Acadian #CampobelloIsland #HiddenGems #ExploreCanada