logo

Searching for the best options for your

Holiday

from

-

0035 193 715 8674 / UK Whatsapp - 07708055936
0035 193 715 8674 / UK Whatsapp - 07708055936

Tours and Tailor Made Holidays to

Bruce Peninsula

CANADA
  • CURRENCY Canadian Dollars
  • LANGUAGE English
  • WEATHER
  • FLYING TIME 8 hrs 35 mins
  • TIME ZONE GMT - 5
  • AIRLINE British Airways

The crown jewel vacation spot at the northern tip of the Bruce Peninsula

Tailor Made Holidays to Bruce Peninsula

At Travel Concierge, we pride ourselves on tailoring holidays to Bruce Peninsula that are designed around your needs and expectations and not ours. We have a range of Bruce Peninsula holiday offers that we have negotiated special or exclusive deals on. We can also arrange multi centre Bruce Peninsula holiday itineraries as well as tours and excursions in Bruce Peninsula. For more information on our Bruce Peninsula holidays, call an Travel Concierge tailor-made expert on 0161 729 0099 and speak to one of our reservation experts who will be able to help you plan the perfect holiday in Bruce Peninsula.

Destination Overview

Located 4 hours away from Toronto by road, Tobermory is the crown jewel vacation spot at the northern tip of the Bruce Peninsula.  Fishermen began dropping nets into Tobermory’s deep natural harbours, Big and Little Tub in the late 1800s.  Naval surveyor Henry Bayfield originally named this port Collins Harbour. 

It was renamed in 1882 by Scottish fishermen for the port of Tobermory on the Island of Mull in Scotland. From its earliest days, Tobermory has watched a steady parade of schooners and steamers make their way through a maze of islands and reefs offshore.  Many did not survive.  Today, Fathom Five National Marine Park is the final resting place of some two dozen wrecks that make Tobermory the scuba diving centre of the Great Lakes. 

There is a cornucopia of things to do in Tobermory.  Here hikers will find the beginning of the world-famous 700-kilometre Bruce Trail.  Nearby is the new and exciting Bruce Peninsula National Park Visitors’ Centre with its really tall lookout tower.  Visitors can ride the Chi-Cheemaun across the Devil’s Gap to Manitoulin Island, explore the wonders of Flowerpot Island, and view old shipwrecks from a glass bottom boat.  Quaint shops, art galleries, ship chandlers, and a wonderful array of restaurants serving fresh whitefish line the harbour.  Want to scuba dive, sail, hike, camp or kayak?  Outfitters await with everything you might need.  Looking for a cottage or campground which will allow pets?  Read this blog article featuring 5 Pet Friendly Tobermory Cottages.

At 112 square kilometers, the Fathom Five National Marine Park is one of the oldest national marine parks in Canada. Rare ferns and orchids can be found on the 20 islands that are within the park, aswell as some of the oldest forests in eastern Canada. The area is also a world famous scuba-diving site with its 22 historic shipwrecks.

When to visit Bruce Peninsula

Bruce Peninsula

Do you need inspiration for when to go on holiday to Bruce Peninsula? Give the team of experts at Travel Concierge a call and we will help you plan your Bruce Peninsula holiday at the best time of year for your requirements. Although our Bruce Peninsula holiday search tool will allow you to search for Bruce Peninsula holiday prices upto 11 months in advance, we can also price holidays to Bruce Peninsula for 2025 and 2026. We can advise on the best time to travel on your Bruce Peninsula holiday based on Bruce Peninsula weather, special events in Bruce Peninsula or even when the crowds in Bruce Peninsula are at their lowest.

Bruce Peninsula

Tobermory has its own micro climate resulting of his location at the very tip of Bruce Peninsula between Huron Lake and Georgian Bay. Along the Niagara Escarpment there are some micro climate areas such as Niagara Region which is located between two great lakes like Tobermory.

Based on a study conducted by Canada Parks, Tobermory climate station is at the top quarter of warmest parks in Canada during summer period. This longitudinal study assessed the temperature on a period of 30 years and captured data from 38 parks in Canada.