Fortress Of Louisbourg
Sydney, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia
Duration 3 3/4 hrs
- Adult from: $168.14 NZD
- Child from: $134.17 NZD
From | Message | Reservation # | Date | |
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Norwegian Communications Centre | Norwegian Communications Centre Don’t Lose Your Reservation! | 25422881 | Apr 1, 2014 | |
Norwegian Communications Centre | Norwegian Communications Centre Reserve your dining now | 25422881 | Apr 1, 2014 | |
Norwegian Communications Centre | Norwegian Communications Centre Don’t Lose Your Reservation! | 25422881 | Apr 1, 2014 | |
Norwegian Communications Centre | Norwegian Communications Centre Don’t Lose Your Reservation! | 25422881 | Apr 1, 2014 |
*Terms & Conditions
Package not available on sailings less than 5 days or charter sailings.
Duration 3 3/4 hrs
OVERVIEW
Travel back to the 1700s and discover what life was like at the Fortress of Louisbourg, a re-creation of a French colonial fortified town that is so impressive it has become a National Historic Site. The original settlement was founded in 1713 and thrived as a center of fishing and trade until the British destroyed it later that century. After an enlightening guided tour of the town – which archaelogists have painstakingly excavated, yielding literally millions of artifacts – you will be free to explore on your own. The reconstructed site contains period-style houses, a museum, a bakery and all sorts of defensive buildings. Feel free to converse with the costumed characters as they can provide a rare glimpse into the challenges that the residents of the 18th-century town faced. You might also learn about military life at the former home of Captain De Gannes and how the town was laid out and constructed at the Engineer’s Property.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Explore a reconstruction of an 18th-century fortified town that is a National Historic Site.
• See the Louisbourg from the guide’s perspective and while exploring on your own.
• Listen to costumed characters recount the challenges of the harsh conditions centuries ago.
• Visit buildings ranging from officers’ homes to storehouses to a tavern.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 1 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Watch a captivating performance of live music and storytelling while dining on mussels, one of the most characteristic dishes served on Cape Breton Island. The stage is just a few steps away in the Royal Cape Breton Room in the cruise pavilion overlooking the dock. How fitting that Sydney’s iconic 50-foot-high Celtic fiddle is right outside as Buddy MacDonald, a renowned Celtic singer and musician, will provide the entertainment. Sydney is known as a hotbed of Celtic music and Cape Breton Island-born MacDonald one of the genre’s most celebrated artists. He has toured all over the world but performing on the island is among his favorite venues. While listening to his original music and entertaining stories, you will learn about the local history, coal mining and fishing. During the performance, you will dine on steamed mussels and garlic toast accompanied by a flight of local craft beers and hard ciders.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Watch a performance by celebrated Celtic musician and storyteller Buddy MacDonald.
• Gain insight into the local history and culture through MacDonald’s music and stories.
• Dine on native Cape Breton Island mussels and a flight of beers and cider during the show.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 3 hours
OVERVIEW
Sample a beer in three downtown pubs, all of them offering a selection of local brews and imported favorites from Ireland and England. A short walk will bring you to the Old Triangle Irish Alehouse, the first pub where you will sample a beer. It’s only natural that this tour begins at an Irish alehouse, as Sydney has deep Celtic roots. The Old Triangle offers nearly two dozen different brews, ranging from Guinness Irish Stout to an India Pale Ale known simply as Keith’s. Your second stop will be the Crown & Moose Pub. This waterfront pub has an English flair, which is reflected in the selection of beers. The atmosphere is casual and inviting, an ideal setting to sip another brew. Then it’s on to Daniel’s Restaurant & Bar, home to cold beer, great food and good times. Enjoy a beer from a selection of Nova Scotia brews or perhaps one that reminds you of home.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Sample a selection of distinctive beers at three pubs in Sydney.
• Enjoy locally made brews and others from Ireland and England.
• Revel in the pub life, which is similar that in the British Isles.
• Note the 50-foot-high Celtic fiddle at the cruise terminal that honors Nova Scotia’s roots.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 3 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Browse the only living history museum for the Gaelic culture in North America, a setting that captures the spirit of the pioneering Scottish Gaels. The unique Highland Village Museum sprawls across 43 acres in the Bras d’Or Lakes region in the center of Cape Breton Island. You will be free to explore this fascinating folklore center independently, which will allow you to concentrate on the attractions that you find most appealing. The 11 buildings include 18th- and 19th-century farmouses, a period wooden church, a shingle mill and a forge. Costumed guides are in each one, eager to explain the joys and challenges of life for the early Gaelic settlers and how the culture changed over the years. You might watch them weaving, dying wool and working with traditional livestock such as long-haired Highland cattle and rare Soay sheep. The guides will also be happy to teach you some Gaelic phrases.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Get a glimpse of the island’s early Gaelic culture at the outdoor Highland Village Museum.
• Explore independently and focus on the attractions that sound most interesting to you.
• Browse historical buildings with period furnishings for a look at the early Gaelic lifestyle.
• Watch costumed guides perform traditional chores such as tending livestock.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Walk through the historical district of Sydney with a guide dressed in a period costume and see landmarks that reflect how the city has evolved since its founding in 1785. Taking shape around the coal & steel industries, many buildings from that time still remain, although they serve different purposes. See the oldest church in town, St. Patrick’s Church, which is now a museum,housing artifacts from Sydney’s earliest years. You will visit & browse Jost House – the town’s oldest wooden building – which now holds a museum with items such as a beehive bake oven, models of ships and an apothecary. Pausing outside the Cossit House, the oldest residence in Sydney, you will gain great insight into the life of Reverend Ranna Cossit and his wife, who died there at age 47 while giving birth to their 13th child. Visiting St. George’s Anglican will also be enlightening as it is Sydney’s oldest building.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Walk through Sydney’s historical downtown, which dates to the late 1700s.
• Hear stories of Sydney earliest years from a guide dressed in a period costume.
• See the oldest church, oldest residence and oldest wooden building in Sydney.
• Browse the artifacts in historical buildings that are now museums.
• Remain in Sydney after the walking tour and explore on your own if you wish.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 2 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Savor some of Sydney’s most characteristic foods and beverages and gain historical insight into the town while walking between venues. While sampling a selection of locally brewed craft drinks, you will learn about the brewing process step by step and how it affects the taste. The exact ones chosen for the sampling will depend on what’s freshest and seasonal, but you can be sure that they will reflect the locally sourced ingredients. You will also be served some of Sydney’s most popular, local sourced and representative foods.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Taste a selection of locally brewed craft drinks in a downtown brewery.
• Sample local foods.
• Receive a recipe for one of the dishes so you can prepare it later at home.
• Learn a bit about Sydney’s history while passing key landmarks downtown and North End.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 1 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Enjoy a hearty lobster boil at The Flavor on the Water Beer Garden, a popular outdoor venue that looks out over Sydney’s historical waterfront. Locally caught, ethically and sustainably harvested lobsters are always available on Cape Breton Island. They are among the world’s tastiest lobsters because of the favorable environmental conditions that impact their flavor. These crustaceans are cooked in every way imaginable but as you will discover firsthand boiling them may be the most classic preparation. A chef will demonstrate how it is traditionally done on the island. Afterwards, a local musician and lobster expert will demonstrate how to properly shuck a lobster after it is boiled. He will also regale you with entertaining songs about life along the eastern coast of Canada and how lobstering has changed over the years. Your lobster lunch comes with melted butter, a side of potato salad and a beverage.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Dine on locally caught, freshly boiled lobster at an outdoor waterfront restaurant.
• Watch how a chef prepares the lobster for your meal.
• See how to easily and properly remove the lobster meat from the shell by shucking.
• Listen to entertaining songs by a local musician while dining.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing for an outdoor dining experience.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
• Alternate indoor venue is available in case of inclement weather.
Duration 2 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Meander through the charming streets of Sydney and discover much about its early history through an array of monuments and architectural gems. Your walking tour will begin at Cape Breton Centre for Craft and Design, where the creativity of the local artisans will be on display and you may see jewelers, weavers, dyers and glassblowers working on new pieces. Outdoor monuments nearby include one dedicated to the sailors who served Canada in the merchant navy during the world wars and the Big Fiddle, an oversized steel musical instrument that pays tribute to the folk music of the province’s Celtic community. While browsing Jost House, Sydney’s oldest original wooden building, be sure to notice the more unusual furnishings such as the beehive bake oven. St. George’s Anglican is notable for being the island’s oldest church.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Walk through Sydney’s historical downtown, which dates to the late 1700s.
• View a monument to Canada’s merchant navy and another that celebrates Celtic folk music.
• Visit the island’s oldest church and see the unusual tombstones in the graveyard.
• Purchase fine crafts by local artisans in an acclaimed design center, if you wish.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 2 1/2 hrs
Snap selfies at the most photogenic spots in and around Sydney, many of them iconic attractions that define the city. To ensure the best possible results, a selfie expert guide will offer tips so you can capture just the right angle, lighting and composition for every shot. Your pictures will be ideal for posting on social media and sharing in other ways.
As you walk through Sydney, you will pause at designated selfie stops that include:
• Sydney sign
• Cape Breton Centre
• Merchant Mariner Monument
• Waterfront Boardwalk
• Saint George’s Anglican Church
• A Land of Our Own statue
• Big Fiddle Statue
HIGHLIGHTS
• Take inspiring selfies at the most photogenic attractions in Sydney.
• Follow tips from your selfie expert guide to ensure the very best pictures.
• Learn the historical significance of the locales while enjoying their dramatic settings.
• Pose before the world’s largest fiddle, a 60-foot-high solid-steel musical instrument.
• Walk along a boardwalk with the sea as a backdrop.
• See works from local artisans at the Cape Breton Centre for Craft & Design.
• Behold a late 18th-century stone Anglican church built in the Gothic Revival style.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 7 hrs
OVERVIEW
Delve into Cape Breton’s history by browsing two museums in the island’s Bras d’Or Lakes region, one focusing on the Gaelic culture, the other on the island’s most famous resident. While meandering about the Highland Village Museum, you will begin to understand what island life what like in the 18th and 19th centuries. This outdoor museum boasts a collection of historical buildings with costumed guides that will demonstrate traditional skills such as quilting and wool dying. It offers an entertaining way to learn about the once prominent Gaelic lifestyle. After lunch at a local restaurant, explore the village of Baddeck .The area’s most celebrated resident was Alexander Graham Bell, a Scotsman who lived in nearby Baddeck. At his namesake museum, you will learn about some of his inventions, which go far beyond the telephone. Bell held or co-held 30 patents in fields as diverse as medicine and marine engineering. Inside, you will find full-scale replicas of his co-inventions, including the Silver Dart airplane.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Get a glimpse of the island’s early Gaelic culture at the outdoor Highland Village Museum.
• Browse historical buildings and watch costumed guides perform traditional chores.
• Tour Alexander Graham Bell’s namesake museum for a look into his life and inventions.
• See models of some of his co-inventions in fields such as aeronautics and electricity.
• Spend free time independently exploring Bell’s hometown of Baddeck.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 3 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Discover inventor Alexander Graham Bell’s many remarkable contributions to the world in his namesake museum in Baddeck, a lovely village on the shores of Bras d’Or Lake. You will drive there along the spectacularly scenic and circuitous Trans-Canada Highway. Upon arriving at the Alexander Graham Bell Museum, you will be struck by its unusual design, which is based on the tetrahedron form that the inventor used in his flight test kites. Although Bell is renowned for inventing the telephone, that groundbreaking accomplishment only touches upon the Scotsman’s scientific achievements. Bell earned 18 patents on his own and collaborated on another 12 in areas as diverse as medicine, genetics, electricity, sound, speech, aeronautics and marine engineering. You can learn more about the principles of drag, lift and weight as you explore the exhibits at the museum. On the return to Sydney, you will enjoy extraordinary views of Boulanderie Island and Kelly’s Mountain.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Learn about inventions by Alexander Graham Bell that go far beyond the telephone.
• See models of some of his co-inventions in aeronautics and watercraft.
• Recognize how the museum’s design evokes the look of Bell’s innovative kites.
• Enjoy ever-changing views of Nova Scotia’s natural beauty during the panoramic drives.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
Duration 1 1/2 hrs
OVERVIEW
Watch a performance that celebrates the Celtic musical heritage of Cape Breton and the fiddle, its most iconic instrument. Although steel and coal production once drove the economy, Sydney is now known as a hotbed of Celtic music. A 50-foot-high Celtic fiddle at the cruise terminal honors that history and will provide an ideal setting for a piper to play a tune that will introduce you to the island’s iconic music. After taking a seat in the pavilion’s Kavanaugh Room, you will see a lenghtier performance of traditional music that reflects the island’s Scottish, Irish and Acadian influences. Cape Breton supposedly has more fiddlers per capita than anywhere else in the world, so it is only fitting that a fiddle will be featured. The performance will also include singers and a unique form of step-dancing in which the movement of the upper body is more limited than in other forms of step-dancing.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Listen to a piper play a Celtic tune at the 50-foot-high fiddle statue at the cruise terminal.
• Watch a performance of traditional Celtic music inside a pavilion at the cruise terminal.
• Be awed by the talent of the accomplished fiddle players, singers and step-dancers.
HELPFUL HINTS
• Dress in weather-appropriate clothing.
• Wear flat comfortable walking shoes.
*Prices vary by ship and sail date. See Terms & Conditions
NCL makes arrangements for Guests for shore excursions solely for the convenience of the Guest; NCL does not act on behalf of or supervise the parties or persons who own, furnish, or operate such excursions, and the same are provided by independent contractors. NCL assumes no responsibility for, nor guarantees the performance of, any such excursion provider, and Guests acknowledge that NCL shall not be liable for losses or injuries arising from the acts or omissions of such provider.
Participation in activities and excursions may involve physical exertion, and may be potentially hazardous or dangerous. It is the responsibility of each individual to determine whether you are capable of engaging in any activity. Participation in any activity or excursion is at your own risk.
Photographs are for illustration purposes only used to represent the excursion experience and may not accurately depict the excursion, location, or activity indicated.
Our group shore excursions are offered in English. Depending on the booking situation, various excursions are also offered in German, Spanish, French, Italian or Russian (minimum number of 30 participants). The tours offered may vary from cruise to cruise. Please see the detailed information for your shore excursion on board.