Tobermory, Ontario

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MS Chi-Cheemaun ferry docking in Tobermory.
MS Chi-Cheemaun ferry docking in Tobermory.
Map of Southern Ontario showing Bruce Peninsula in red.  Tobermory is at the northern tip of this peninsula.
Map of Southern Ontario showing Bruce Peninsula in red. Tobermory is at the northern tip of this peninsula.

Tobermory is a small community located at the northern tip of the Bruce Peninsula in the municipality of Northern Bruce Peninsula, Ontario, Canada. It is 300km northwest of Toronto. The closest city to Tobermory is Owen Sound, 100km south of Tobermory and connected by Highway 6.

The town is known as the fresh water SCUBA diving capital of the world, because of the numerous shipwrecks that lie in the surrounding waters, especially in Fathom Five National Marine Park. Tobermory and the surrounding area are popular vacation destinations. People come for the beaches, the diving, the unspoilt countryside and the relaxed pace of life. The town lies north of the Bruce Peninsula National Park.

The M.S. Chi-Cheemaun passenger and car ferry connects Tobermory to Manitoulin Island in Lake Huron. Tobermory is also the northern terminus of the Bruce Trail.

Tobermory is well known for its two national parks - Bruce Peninsula National Park and Fathom Five National Marine Park as well as its twin harbours, known locally as "Big Tub" and "Little Tub".

Tobermory is typically a few degrees colder than Toronto. Most of the businesses in Tobermory are open between May until the Thanksgiving long weekend in October, and are closed for the other six months.

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[edit] The Bruce Peninsula National Park

In the heart of a World Biosphere Reserve, the 'Bruce' is a place of global significance. The massive, rugged cliffs of the park are inhabited by thousand-year-old cedar trees, overhanging the crystal-clear waters of Georgian Bay. The park comprises an incredible array of habitats from rare alvars to dense forests and clean lakes.

[edit] Geology of the Bruce Peninsula National Park of Canada

The "Grotto" at the Bruce Peninsula National Park
The "Grotto" at the Bruce Peninsula National Park

The Niagara Escarpment runs from Niagara Falls to Tobermory. It forms the backbone of the Peninsula and shapes the northern boundary of most of the park and provides the park with some of its most spectacular scenery.

The rock of the escarpment is very old. Approximately 400 million years ago, this area was covered by a shallow tropical sea teeming with life in the form of plant-like animals, crustaceans, living corals and mollusks. It would have looked much like the present-day Great Barrier Reef of Australia. When the sea began to dry up, the minerals dissolved in it became more and more concentrated. Magnesium in the water was absorbed into the limestone, which then became a harder, slightly different sort of rock, called dolomite.

The harder dolomite limestone forms much of the rock of the escarpment cliffs along Bruce Peninsula National Park's Georgian Bay shoreline. As at Niagara Falls, the dolomite "caprock" erodes more slowly than the rock below it, creating the sculptured cliffs for which the area is famous. Since the last Ice Age, water levels in the region have undergone great changes. Softer limestone has been eroded away by water action, leaving magnificent overhanging cliffs at various points along the shore. These are the big attraction of the Cyprus Lake trails. Where erosion has cut more deeply, caves have been formed, like the Grotto on the shore between Marr Lake and Georgian Bay Trails. Great blocks of dolomite, undercut by wave action, have tumbled from the cliffs above and can be clearly seen below the surface of the deep, clean waters of Georgian Bay.

[edit] Fathom Five National Marine Park

The deep waters at the mouth of Georgian Bay are home to Fathom Five - Canada's first National Marine Conservation Area. The park preserves a rich cultural legacy that includes 22 shipwrecks and several historic lightstations. Fathom Five’s freshwater ecosystem contains some of the most pristine waters of the Great Lakes. The rugged islands of the park are a reminder of the impressive lakebed topography found beneath the waves.

Tobermory is famous for its unique nature sites, especially its beautiful rocks. There are glass bottom cruises at the Tobermory which offer tours to the Fathom Five National Marine Park as well as rugged north coast of the Bruce Peninsula as far as Cave point. By using these typically two hours tours tourists enjoy from Tobermory nature attractions as well as its shipwrecks.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 45°15′N, 81°40′W