The Saint John River Valley in New Brunswick, Canada, follows the Saint John River along the western border with Maine. The valley features historic wooden covered bridges, river ferries, falls, artist studios, and historic sites.
Cities
- 1 Cambridge Narrows — a vacation and summer destination, with numerous cottages up and down the shores of the lake
- 2 Edmundston — 95% francophone, and centre of the Brayon culture, which many consider to be neither Acadian nor Québécois, and home of the New Brunswick Botanical Garden
- 3 Florenceville-Bristol — home of a 2/3-scale model of Noah's Ark
- 4 Fredericton — capital city and the cultural, artistic and educational centre of the province
- 5 Gagetown — many studios featuring pottery, weaving and art
- 6 Grand Falls — named for a waterfall created by a series of rock ledges over which the river drops 23 m
- 7 Hartland — home of the world's longest wooden covered bridge
- 8 Nackawic — home of the world's largest axe
- 9 Oromocto — home of Canadian Forces Base Gagetown
- 10 Perth-Andover — at the Gathering of the Scots at the end of May, you can watch some of the finest Ancient Scottish Heavy Events athletes
- 11 Plaster Rock — come in February for the annual World Pond Hockey Championships
- 12 Saint-Léonard — it has it all: a sawmill and potato farms
- 13 Saint-Quentin — gateway to Mount Carleton Provincial Park
- 14 Woodstock — the oldest incorporated town in New Brunswick preserves its many Victorian buildings
Other destinations
Understand
The Saint John River is a 673-km-long river that flows from Northern Maine into Canada, and runs south along the western side of New Brunswick, emptying into the Atlantic Ocean in the Bay of Fundy. Eastern Canada's longest river,[ its drainage basin is one of the largest on the east coast.
With the water flow in the spring being six times the average rate, the valley has always been prone to flooding in the spring. Surface runoff from heavy rainfall is the main cause of flooding, and can be exacerbated by ice jams, high tides, and rapid snowmelt. Flooding has occurred in Edmundston, Grand Falls, Perth-Andover, Hartland, and Woodstock, and most severely around Fredericton. The severity and frequency of flooding is increasing with climate change.
When the Europeans arrived, they found that the Saint John River basin was the homeland of the Maliseet tribes, who practised hunting and gathering and farmed near the banks of the river. During the 1600 and 1700s, French colonists populated the lower river valley as part of Acadia. Decades of warfare between the British colonies in what is now New England and Acadia, led to the expulsion of the Acadians in 1784. Following the American Revolutionary War, United Empire Loyalists settled the area. Returning Acadians settled the upper valley.
Large numbers of people began settling the area in the early 1800s, mostly Scottish and Irish, and by the end of the 1850s much of the central Saint John valley had been cleared of old-growth forest for farming. Francophone Quebecers moved into the northern areas. In the interwar period, many of these farms were abandoned due to urbanization, and allowed to reforest.
Get in
By car
Edmundston is on Trans-Canada Highway 2 between Fredericton and the Quebec border. It is across the river from and has an international border crossing with Madawaska, Maine.
Fredericton is 180 km from Moncton on the Trans-Canada Highway (#2), and 120 km from Saint John on Route 7 (turn west on #2 at Oromocto).
By bus
Maritime Bus runs buses between Fredericton and Edmundston daily. Service available from Moncton, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island.
By plane
- 1 Fredericton Airport (YFC IATA), fax: +1 506-460-0938. Flights from Halifax, Montreal–Trudeau, Ottawa, Toronto–Pearson, St. John's (Newfoundland).
Get around
The Trans-Canada Highway (#2) provides the most direct route through the valley, from the Quebec border all the way to Moncton.
Route 105 is a slower, more scenic route that follows the river closely from Grand Falls to Fredericton.
Maritime Bus runs buses between Edmundston and Fredericton twice a day with stops at the towns along the Trans-Canada Highway, including Woodstock, Florenceville, Perth-Andover, Grand Falls and St.-Leonard.
See
- The Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton is New Brunswick's provincial art gallery. William Maxwell "Max" Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, funded the building of the gallery and assembled the original collection. It has over 300 works, including paintings by J.M.W. Turner and Salvador Dalí.
- The King's Landing is a historical settlement near Fredericton north. It is an outdoor living history museum that recreates the sights, sounds and feel of rural New Brunswick in the 1800s.
- The Hartland Covered Bridge is the longest covered bridge in the world at 391 m. You can still drive across, or walk across on the sidewalk. The bridge is a National Historic Site.
- The Grand Falls Gorge includes a waterfall with a series of rock ledges over which the river drops 23 metres (75 ft).
- The World Pond Hockey Championships are held in Plaster Rock in mid-February. The 4-day event has been held annually since 2002. It attracts 120 teams from every province in Canada, 35 American states, and 15 other countries at a variety of competitive levels. Its emphasis is on camaraderie instead of competition. Over 8000 spectators enjoy games on 20 rinks.
- The New Brunswick Botanical Garden in Edmunston has themed gardens including annuals, perennials, rhododendrons, an alpine garden and a rose garden.
- 1 Blue Bell Tunnel. An abandoned train tunnel that was once the largest tunnel in the province. Due to its size, it was able to take on the largest rail freight shipment ever handled in North America. While you can explore the entrance of the tunnel, do not enter inside due to falling rocks.
Do
- Zipline over the valley at Grand Falls.
- Hike the NB Trail on the old railway line and bridges on both sides of the St. John River. It is part of the Trans-Canada Trail.
- Mont Farlagne near Edmunston offers skiing, tubing, snowshoeing, fat biking.
- Mount Carleton Provincial Park, near Plaster Rock, has several significant peaks, all of which have trails around or over them. At 820 m, Mount Carleton is the highest peak in the Maritime provinces. The park is in the northern extension of the Appalachian Mountains.
Eat
- Fiddlehead ferns are a local specialty
- Tarte au sucre is a Brayon sugar pie
- River salmon are abundant in rivers and on menus
- French fries, Florenceville-Bristol. Gourmet French fry cafe and potato museum (summer only) in the town that hosts the world headquarters of McCain's.
Stay safe
Go next
- Head down to Saint John and Bay of Fundy