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Shubie Park is a 16-hectare (40-acre) urban park in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia maintained by the Halifax Regional Municipality.. Heavily forested, Shubie Park is roughly linear in shape as it is bounded on the north and west by Highway 118 expressway and on the south and east by Lake Micmac and the southern edge of Lake Charles.
After heavy hurricane-season rains, run-off from the construction overflowed containment ponds and began running into the canal, Lake Charles, Lake Micmac, and Shubie Park's Grassy Brook. [citation needed] Dartmouth Crossing is located on Highway 118 across from Shubie Park. Measures were taken to mitigate the silt run-off and construction ...
Musquodoboit Trail System Nova Scotia Coastal Water Trail 44°38′27.1″N 64°4′1.1″W / 44.640861°N 64.066972°W / 44.640861; -64.066972 ( Nova Scotia Coastal Water Old Annapolis Road Hiking Trail 44°41′52.2″N 63°53′17.1″W / 44.697833°N 63.888083°W / 44.697833; -63.888083 ( Old Annapolis Road ...
Halifax serves as the center of the show's filming locations, but fans can also visit Beaver Bank, Shubie Park and Oakfield Provincial Park, which are all spots where the show has been filmed.
Shubenacadie (/ ˌ ʃ uː b ə ˈ n æ k ə d i / SHOO-bə-NAK-ə-dee) is a village located in Hants County, in central Nova Scotia, Canada.As of 2021, the population was 411. The name for the Mi'kmaw territory in which present-day Shubenacadie is located and the origin of its name is the Mi'kmaw word Sipekne'katik, which "place abounding in groundnuts" or "place where the wapato grows."
The Lake Charles Trail, part of the Trans Canada Trail, runs along the western side of the lake, from Shubie Park to the Highway 107 overpass at Route 318 in Portobello. The trail is approximately 4.39 km long, and has a crusher dust surface. The trail is used year-round and is maintained by the Halifax Regional Municipality.
The Shubenacadie River (/ ˌ ʃ uː b ə ˈ n æ k ə d i /) is a river in Nova Scotia, Canada.It has a meander length of approximately 72 km [2] from its source at Shubenacadie Grand Lake to its mouth at the historic seaport village of Maitland on Cobequid Bay, site of the building of the William D. Lawrence, the largest wooden ship ever built in Canada.
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