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The isthmus is crossed by the St. Peters Canal which is almost exclusively used by pleasure boats in recent decades. It is home to Battery Provincial Park. This park is situated on a hillside overlooking St. Peter's Bay adjacent to the St. Peter's Canal National Historic Site. Its entrance is on the east side of the bridge at the canal.
A swing bridge over the canal has 6 m (19.69 ft) of clearance when closed and is operated from the bridge house on Grenville Street. St. Peters Canal is the only working canal of national historic significance in Atlantic Canada and an important historic landmark for the Village of St. Peter's and for Cape Breton Island. St.
Petertide (also known as St Peter's Tide) refers to the Sunday nearest to St Peter's Day on 29 June and to the period around that day. In Anglicanism , Petertide is one of two major traditional periods for the ordination of new priests (the other being Michaelmas , around 29 September).
St. Peter's Cathedral, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada, was founded in 1869 as a result of the influence of the Oxford Movement. Since that time, the parish has remained Anglo-Catholic in ethos and practice.
Dec. 8—St. John's Lutheran Community on Friday announced the addition of an eagle camera for its widely followed eagle's nest at its Fountain Lake campus. The organization installed a live ...
The current mayor is Peter Muttart. Municipal governments in Nova Scotia are elected every four years and the most recent round of elections took place in October 2020. [11] The provincial legislation that creates and empowers the municipality is the Nova Scotia Municipal Government Act. [12]
"Leave the leaves, brush, and stems in place over the winter because birds eat the seed heads, pull the stems and twigs for shelter, and many of our beneficial pollinators, like solitary bees ...
St. Peter's Bridge links the residential districts of Šempeter and Poljane. St. Peter's Bridge (Slovene: Šempetrski most or Šentpetrski most, [1] in older sources also Šent Peterski most [2] or Šentpeterski most [3]), also Ambrož Bridge (Ambrožev most), [4] is a bridge in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, that crosses the river Ljubljanica in the northeastern end of the old town.