Explore the past in historic cities, sample seasonal food and take in epic landscapes, eastern Canada is the place to be.
As vast as it is beautiful, Canada offers spectacular landscapes, from mountains to forests, and far-reaching lakes – and that’s before we even mention Niagara Falls, dramatic at any time of the year. You could spend a lifetime in this country – the second largest on the planet – and still only scratch the surface wandering the wilderness looking for grizzly bears and whales. But it would be a mistake to think that the epic scenery and never-ending vistas are where it ends.
History is at the core of the cities of Eastern Canada, found along the cobblestone streets of Old Quebec and Montreal, and inside grand buildings such as the Fairmont Chateau Laurier hotel in Ottawa. These are where you’ll find captivating culture, cool cuisines at pavement cafés, and some of the best food markets in the world – with that cinematic countryside always at your doorstep.
Montreal - As Far as The Eye Can See.
Cosmopolitan Montreal pre-dates the birth of Canada by almost 200 years, and a fitting place to explore the city’s history are the lanes of Vieux-Montréal. Many of the buildings here date back to the 1600s, about a century after Jacques Cartier travelled up the Saint Lawrence River and established New France. If you head to Pointe-à-Callière you’ll be on the exact spot where the city was founded in 1642 by Paul de Chomedey de Maisonneuve and Jeanne Mance. The permanent exhibits in the museum include the remains of Fort Ville-Marie revealed through a glass floor.
How the French introduced Christianity to the First Nations people is told in the stunning stained-glass windows of Notre-Dame Basilica, a masterpiece of Gothic Revival architecture and considered one of the most dramatic cathedrals in the world. Back on the streets, the pavement cafés serving croissants and tartines reveal how much of the French influence survives in the food.
More history – and a French colonial-style garden – awaits you in the early 18th century Château Ramezay. But walk, or travel by taxi, to the top of Mont Royal and it’s the history of the land that will greet you through the staggering views from the top of the extinct volcano. On a clear day, you can see as far as Vermont.