Which town would you like to live in Canada? 😍 Let's get this video to 1000 Likes guys!! Then, we'll make a new video on 'Cheapest Cities to Live in Canada'.
I actually have the pleasure of living in one of these beautiful towns. There are two others that I would consider moving to if I were moving to those provinces because I have visited them and dreamt of living there.
Smithers, British Columbia: intermediate ski hill overlooking the town, 18 hole golf course, aquatic centre, curling rink, hockey arena, skateboard park, three fishing lakes within its boundaries, 3 grocery stores, nearby salmon fishing, cross country skiing, snowmobiling, hunting, hiking, a glacier overlooking the townsite, regional hospital, regional provincial government office and courts. Access by highway, passenger rail service, and airport. Population around 5,400. Would recommend an image search on Google or videos on RU-vid.
I've lived in churchill when I was a kid because my dad got pretty good job there. The people are great, and the houseparties are fun but it's remote af. We moved to Battleford Sask after that and it was honestly the BEST town. That should be on the list.
These towns for the most part are very expensive tourist towns with no jobs unless you want to wait tables.. when I searched nice towns in canada I meant to work at a career have a home you can afford. Can you suggest any of those please thanks
Well, I could argue about some of these towns but each of them has something different to offer. What I am blown away is with regards to Niagara on the lake (NOTL)- it really is a great place but you didn't mention that the town has some of the best wineries in Niagara Region. These wineries offer a great tasting with food pairing - highly recommend giving them a try. Wineries is one of the main drivers for many individuals from the GTA Greater Toronto Area as well as tourists.
I've no problem with the list per se, though there are dozens and dozens of other towns that could as easily made the list. Lunenberg, Chester, Sherbrooke, Annapolis Royal, Yarmouth, Wolfville, Bear River, Peggy's Cove, Antigonish, Louisburg, Baddeck, Ingnish, Pugwash, Pictou in Nova Scotia alone come to mind. But clearly the creator of this video has never been to any of the places they've listed. Otherwise, they'd have known how to pronounce Ucluelet (U-clue-let), would know you won't see rugged mountain peaks in Alma, NB and that sloths are nowhere to be found in Canada (never seen one even in a zoo here).
The further east you go from Vancouver, the more affordable it is. You could easily get a house for 300k-600k in cranbrook depending how good of a place you want.
I’ve been to Alma NB several times, Golden is just 3 hrs from my home - I’ve been there a few hundred times, my fav Quebec town is Chelsea!, Jasper is 6.5 hrs from me and an old friend - a retired train engineer, lives there, and I visit frequently - I’ll take Oyster Bay in PEI any day! Re: the “North” I’ll take Yellow Knife. Mahone Bay is just f’n AWSOME! And finally, Niagara-on-the-Lake sucks! I live in the town of Lake Country, BC - nothing, and I mean NOTHING compares to it! Peace
Niagara on the Lake Ontario has ONE 9 hole golf course. It sits where the Niagara River meets Lake Ontario. I am from the Niagara Region and lived in a beautiful old home directly across Queen Street from the "pedestrian" golf course in Niagara on the Lake. Now then, Queen Street turns into the Niagara Parkway, which runs along the Niagara River from Niagara on the Lake to Fort Erie. 15 minutes along the Parkway and you enter Niagara Falls. Niagara Falls has numerous world class golf courses. Ideally you want to stay in Niagara on the Lake and take the short drive to the magnificent choices for golfing. Unfortunately, being a small town Niagara on the Lake has no large Hotels and Niagara Falls is a tacky tourist trap for the most part. There is the Prince of Wales. This world renown Hotel and 5 star restaurant is right on Queen Street In the "heritage zone". That alone is worth the trip to Upper Canada's first capital and home of the War of 1812's Fort George. The town is surrounded by Wine Country and winery tours are also a highlight of the town. Enjoy the relaxing pace and feel of the #1 small town in Canada while still being within an hour and a half drive to 5+ million people between Buffalo NY and Toronto Ontario. 🍻🇨🇦🤟 🙏
I live a 10 min bike ride from Victoria-by-the-sea (PEI) It’s lovely, but the people are can be very weird, in-town squabbles/bickering, HOA attitudes and hypocrisy, but it’s nice for meals, shopping, strolling around and the people will be friendly to you!
You're not gonna find warmth if you're looking in canada. The warmedt place year-round is vancouver, and right now they've got a lot of problems and you'll need over a million dollars for a house.
Warmest and most expensive: Vancouver, BC, Victoria, BC is warm ,a little bit cheaper than Vancouver,All the rest is only comparatively warm,never too warm, only not as cold as other parts of Canada. They are:1) Halifax,Nova Scotia; 1)Windsor,2)St Catherine ;3) Niagara Falls,all three cities are inside Ontario
@@sarahchan5604 nah, Niagara falls and st Catherine's are freezing. I think the warmest people can get is BC, and near the mountains like Lethbridge AB
No mention of costs of living, availability of health care, housing costs, employment and Winnie is the name of a bear, the city south of Churchill is Win a peg. At least get the pronunciation of these towns right.
@@TRIPXTREMEStop posting misleading clickbait headlines, then. Your clip was meant to be about best small towns to live in Canada, but instead your list includes tiny villages and promotes attributes of interest to tourists with hardly anything on amenities for residents, such as schools, healthcare facilities, cost of living, climate, etc.
Just a bonus mention of number 11, St Andrews by the Sea, New Brunswick. A 19th century quaint little town with the historic 1889 Algonquin Resort (reportedly has 3 haunted rooms) many lovely Bed and Breakfasts, golf course and boat tours. They used to have an old wooden sailing tall ship tour, but I think it shut down since Covid 19. There’s also Minister’s Island you can drive to across a sandbar at low tide. What’s there? In 1892, Sir William Horne, then president of the Canadian Pacific Railway established his summer residence there. You can tour the historic Covenhoven mansion stone and shingle style home, the huge barn, creamery and other buildings that self sustained the estate, along with the gardens and hike the island trails. You might even find an artifact of the Peskotomuhkati Indigenous people who stayed on the island as a seasonal home. There’s an ancient dumping mound discovered on the island that contained broken pottery and other artifacts. Way cool place. Open seasonally from mid-May to mid-October. 😊❤
Wrong. There are places that aren't as cold and have less snow. You just have to know where they are. There are cities with the same latitude as N California and Spain. Also where I live but I'm not saying because I don't want everybody moving here and ruining it
Starting with Manitoba makes me not want to watch the rest. That province is so unbelievably garbage that it making the top 10 for anything but worst of something gives me no hope.