CAPE BRETON: Where Your Heart Will Never Leave

20 JUN 2018: When a Caper (person born in Cape Breton) says, “It’s a large day,” they mean it’s a wonderful day. Well, I’ve just had couple of very large weeks on Nova Scotia’s ruggedly beautiful island brimming with genuine maritime hospitality, lip-smacking lobster feeds and kick-up-your-heels Celtic jigs.

Travel + Leisure magazine ranked Cape Breton as “the number one island to visit in continental North America” in 2011 and National Geographic has described it as “the most scenic island in the world.”

Here’s my insider’s guide to where to save and splurge on Cape Breton Island, where the motto is: “Your heart will never leave.”

THE “YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE” SPLURGE LIST

A Wee Dram

The Glenora Inn & Distillery, opened in 1990, calls its “water of life” Canada Single Malt because only whisky distilled in Scotland can be called Scotch. North America’s first single malt whisky distillery offers tours from mid-May to late October ($7 per adult) with a free sample. They also have a very good dining room and a lively pub where you can taste drams from their various vintages and enjoy fiddle music most nights. Splurge on a bottle of Glen Breton Rare 10 Year. www.glenoradistillery.com

All Aboard Swingers and Sailors

Captain Paul Jamieson and his crew will make you very welcome aboard their 42-foot Cape Bretoner 1 catamaran. They know all the good places to stop for a dip, such as Maskells Harbour where Alexander Graham Bell and colleagues rafted together and formed The Cruising Club of America. Most visitors only see Cape Breton from the land but it’s even more beautiful from the Bras D’Or Lake.

Keen golfers can customize a trip that lets them sail and play Dundee Resort & Golf Club, The Lakes and Bell Bay. Afterwards, if you want to play the rest of Cape Breton’s stellar courses (trust me, you do), Captain Paul will organize ground arrangements for Highlands Links, Cabot Cliffs and Cabot Links. Not to be missed!

Sailing Cape Breton Island offers bareboat charters, corporate team-building cruises and other options. The commodious interior includes three bedrooms, two heads and a roomy galley. There’s plenty of room for sunbathing and games on the bow and stern and a dinghy to take you ashore. www.sailingcbi.com

Swag Bags

Twins Michelle Newcombe and Monique Delisle hand-make their own Michique line of handbags and wallets. It’s a rags to riches tale of how the twins one day received an e-mail that they thought was a joke from a woman in Los Angeles asking if they would donate some product for the celebrity swag bags given out at the Toronto International Film Festival. Now their bags have been given away at the Cannes Film Festival, Golden Globes and more. Michelle Obama, Sophie Trudeau, Sharon Stone and Ellen DeGeneres are amongst the owners of Michique bags, each lined with red satin and festooned with nine Swarovski crystals. www.michique.ca

Whale Music

In Pleasant Bay take a two-hour whale-watching excursion with Captain Mark on his 42-foot Double Hookup research vessel. Captain Mark will turn on the sonar so you can hear the whales’ songs underwater and he guarantees sightings. Stop at the nearby Chowder House in Neil’s Harbour for a lobster club and cup of soup. www.whaleandsealcruise.com

Gov Grub

Chef Ardon Mofford who owns Governors Pub & Eatery in Sydney serves up some of the best seafood I’ve ever eaten. Don’t leave the island without trying his butter-poached halibut, seafood chowder, calamari with Thai sauce, steamed mussels in white wine and Smuggler’s Cove rum cake. Live music plays almost every night. www.governorseatery.com

THE “CHEAP THRILLS” SAVE LIST

Park Pass

Buying a Parks Canada Discovery Pass gets you into many of the island’s major attractions, including the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site, Fortress Louisbourg National Historic Site and more.

Price for a family or group up to seven people in a single vehicle is $136.40; free for ages up to 17; $67.70 for adults, $57.90 for seniors. www.pc.gc.ca

Go “Glamping”

Park Canada’s new “oTENTiks, available at Ingonish Beach, Broad Cove and Cheticamp campgrounds, offer accommodation in a combo tent/rustic cabin. Each oTENTik is equipped with beds, furniture and barbecue and sleeps six. Bring your own bedding and cooking gear. Cost is $120 per night in peak season (June 22 to September 3 and Fridays and Saturdays in September).

Cereal Killers and Panic Lines

No, I am not talking about a horror movie. The clever folks at the Big Spruce Brewing Company in Nyanza have created snappy names for their unfiltered, unpasteurized ales and brews, including Cereal Killer Oatmeal Stout and Kitchen Party Pale Ale. Their glasses have a “panic line” about an inch from the bottom so you know when to order a refill. You can sample their brews on their patio or at several pubs in Nova Scotia. www.bigspruce.ca

Baddeck for the Day

Baddeck, situated on Bras D’Or Lake, has plenty of charms. At the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site you will learn about the man and his amazing inventions that include the telephone, man-carrying kites, a hydrofoil boat and his experimental airplane, the Silver Dart. Being a true Scotsman, Bell built a par-four and two greens on his nearby estate named Beinn Bhreagh.

Later, follow your nose to Baddeck Lobster Suppers. Your meal comes with a choice of lobster, salmon or steak plus all-you-can-eat seafood chowder, mussels, rolls, salads and desserts. After dinner, join locals at the nightly summer ceilidh (kitchen party) at St. Michael’s Parish Hall. Check the website for the schedule of performers and don’t be surprised if manager, Nancy MacLean gets you up on the floor for a square dancing lesson. At the break you’ll enjoy oatcakes and a strong cup of King Cole tea, the preferred brew of Capers. www.baddeckgathering.com

A good place to spend the night is Auberge Gisele’s Inn where the rooms, cuisine and gardens are top-notch. www.giseles.com

Java Fix

Everywhere I go, I make it my mission to find the best coffee house. I was about to give up in Cape Breton, where Tim Horton’s reigns as the favourite brew of most locals. But Ian McNeil, a man who seems to know everything about his island took me to Doktor Luke’s, “a respectable coffee house” in Sydney. True to their slogan, Doktor Luke’s serves up great espresso, lattés and cappuccinos made by real baristas. And while you’re there, grab a buttertart.

www.doktorlukes.com

www.cbisland.com