About the Cabot Trail
The Cabot Trail is a modern two-lane highway along
296 kilometers of magnificent Cape Breton Island. Named for
the explorer John Cabot, who may have sighted the tip of the
island in 1497, the trail threads lush glens, passes white gypsum
bluffs. and skirts headlands pounded by beautiful white surf.
Seldom far from the sea, always breathtaking, it is one of Canada's
most exciting highways.
Whether traveling in the summer or in the beauty
of autumn highland colour, the Cabot Trail will offer you the
most spectacular sights that Cape Breton has to offer.
Start to finish the Trail is a three hour drive, with stops
longer. While most visitors plan to see the Trail full circle
in a single day you may get a greater appreciation of the Trail
by travelling to Ingonish in the morning, for lunch, and returning
through Cheticamp for the sunset view. This approach allows
time for a hands on experience of the Highlands: a mountain
hike or a whale watching tour.