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MV Caribou and MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood laid up at Sydport in Point Edward, Sydney Harbour in March 2011. A roll-on, roll-off design with a bow visor, Caribou had 2 vehicle decks and 5 decks above, the main passenger deck being Deck 5. She measured 179 metres in overall length and 25 metres in breadth, weighing 27,212 tons.
Caribou Marsh Reserve No. 29. Plan of Indian Reserve near new Mira Road seven miles from Sydney C.B. Caribou Marsh 29 [1] is a Mi'kmaq reserve in Cape Breton County, Nova Scotia, [2] 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) southwest of Sydney. It is an unpopulated reserve, [3] encompassing 219.3 hectares (542 acres), and was established on 28 April 1882. [4]
Caribou and Joseph and Clara Smallwood laid up at Sydport in Edwardsville, Nova Scotia in March 2011. After Joseph and Clara Smallwood replaced MV Ambrose Shea in 1989, the North Sydney-Argentia crossing was reduced from 18 hours to a 14-hour schedule.
North Sydney, Nova Scotia, and Argentia, Newfoundland and Labrador The 96-nautical-mile (178 km) Port aux Basques route is operated year-round. This service was assumed by Canadian National Railway in 1949 from the Newfoundland Railway when the Dominion of Newfoundland entered into Canadian Confederation .
Highway 105 in Nova Scotia represents the Cape Breton Island leg of the Trans-Canada Highway.It runs from the Port Hastings Rotary just east of the Canso Causeway in Port Hastings to the Marine Atlantic ferry terminal in North Sydney, representing a distance of 142 kilometres (88 mi).
Caribou is a small rural community in Pictou County, Nova Scotia, Canada. [ 1 ] it is populated by an estimated 103 people as of 2024. Located on the Northumberland Strait northwest of the town of Pictou , Caribou is named after the Woodland Caribou which used to live in Nova Scotia. [ 2 ]
Sydney is a former city and urban community on the east coast of Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, Canada within the Cape Breton Regional Municipality. Sydney was founded in 1785 by the British, was incorporated as a city in 1904, and dissolved on 1 August 1995, when it was amalgamated into the regional municipality.
Northumberland Ferries terminal at Caribou, Nova Scotia, Canada This terminal serves Nova Scotia, and is located at the North end of Highway 106 , a spur route of the Trans-Canada Highway . The terminal was constructed following the formation of Northumberland Ferries in 1941, and has received numerous upgrades since its construction.