7-DAY CANADA & NEW ENGLAND: UNESCO SITES & QUEBECOIS NIGHTS FROM $699 PP
Depart Boston to discover Portland’s charming boutiques and lighthouses, then Nova Scotia’s historical sites and Charlottetown’s coppery shores before a Québec City arrival.
SHIP Zuiderdam
DEPARTS. Boston, Massachusetts, US. ARRIVES. Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. Inside from $699pp*. What's Include
Zuiderdam
This Vista Class ship is perfectly sized to weave through straits and channels with ease while leaving plenty of room for entertainment and enrichment.
Day 1. May 23, 2026 Departs 4:00 pm. Boston, Massachusetts, US
Boston, Massachusetts, is a tapestry of historic grandeur and modern charm. Cruising into this port, Holland America guests can explore the Freedom Trail or relish the cosmopolitan air of this city's bustling streets. With every step on the cobblestone paths, the echoes of America's past blend with the vibrant rhythms of contemporary city life.
Day 2. May 24, 2026 Arrives7:00 am. Departs. 1:00 pm. Portland, Maine, US
Squint your eyes and admit it: Doesn’t that skinny, bearded hipster walking down the cobbled street look a lot like a 19th-century sea captain heading to the wharf to check his ship? Modern Portland, first settled in 1633, carries the marks of both subsets of Mainers. The restored brick buildings and warehouses of the Old Port and the fine upright houses of prosperous captains, merchants and shipbuilders make the city’s past a living part of its present. And the waterfront is a going concern, not a museum: Fishing boats chug into and out of their berths, buoys clang, harbor seals bark. Those shop windows aren’t displaying hardtack, rope or hand salve, though. Juice joints, art galleries, bookstores (and comic-book stores!), worshipful temples to coffee, locavore bistros with national press, bespoke menswear designers and gelato shops all jostle for attention. Don’t limit your visit to the Old Port, though. Wander through the terrific art museum or take a tour of one of the city’s historic homes. Jump on a ferry or whale-watching boat and get out into the busy harbor. Head to the coast—craggy, windswept, dramatic—a glorious and undeniably New England panorama. Get out and take it all in. Welcome to Vacationland.
Day 3 May 25, 2026 Arrives. 10:00 am Departs 6:00 pm. Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
See Halifax's charming architecture and tree-lined streets — remnants of its fascinating history.
Learn about the Halifax Explosion — the greatest manmade explosion before the atomic age — and how the grateful citizens of Halifax continue to honor the citizens of Massachusetts who came to their aid.
Travel with your local guide on a deluxe panoramic drive through the streets of Halifax, past old buildings and National Historic Sites. Walk through the Public Gardens — one of the finest examples of Victorian Gardens in North America — and meet members of the 78th Highlanders at the Halifax Citadel National Historic Site. Hear about Titanic's connections to Halifax and visit the Fairview Lawn Cemetery — the largest terrestrial resting place for Titanic victims.
Day 4 May 26, 2026. Arrives 10:00 am Departs 8:00 pm Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada
Sydney is the largest city on Cape Breton Island, which is linked by causeway to the rest of Nova Scotia. Sydney’s attractions start at the harbor, where visitors can shop for locally made crafts and see the world’s largest fiddle, which towers beside the port’s cruise pavilion. Some of the city’s historic houses and churches date back to the 1700s and 1800s and are open for tours. Restaurants often provide live music (expect fiddles and sea chanteys) along with meals of seafood fresh-caught in nearby waters. Sydney’s galleries give visitors a chance to meet local artists and purchase their work.
Cape Breton's natural wonders include the spectacular scenic drive known as the Cabot Trail. Hikers in Cape Breton Highlands National Park will find stunning vistas around every turn, while a boat ride on massive Bras d’Or Lake, which is ringed by wild hills, offers a different perspective on the province. Explore the region’s past with a visit to the Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site, and learn about the area’s First Nations communities at Membertou Heritage Park. If you decide to go deep underground at the Cape Breton Miners Museum, your tour guide is likely to be a man who toiled for years in the island's coal mines and has many stories to tell. Another must-see: the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site, where the famous inventor made his summer home.
Day 5. May 27, 2026 Arrives. 10:00 am Departs. 11:00 pm Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
Charlottetown is the capital of Canada’s smallest province, Prince Edward Island, as well as its largest city, though it has fewer than 35,000 residents. Despite its modest size, the city has an impressive number of Victorian houses and buildings and great parks waiting to be explored. For Canadians, it is perhaps most famous as the Birthplace of Confederation. It was here, mostly at Province House, that an 1864 conference led to the creation of the Dominion of Canada.
Prince Edward Island is linked to New Brunswick on the mainland of Canada by the 13-kilometer (eight-mile) Confederation Bridge that soars over the Northumberland Strait. A remarkable feat of engineering, the bridge opened in 1997 and is the longest in the world over icy waters.
Sites within downtown Charlottetown include the lovely Victoria Row, which becomes a pedestrian mall each summer, and other historic buildings, some of which are now museums. Nearby Prince Edward Island National Park is home to white-sand beaches and hiking and biking trails—plus fans can see the house and farm that inspired the beloved book Anne of Green Gables. During your visit, you can also learn about the daily lives, past and present, of residents on lighthouse and boat tours.
Day 6. May 28, 2026 Cruising Gulf of St. Lawrence. CRUISING ONLY
A lighthouse on little St. Paul’s Island is a stark reminder of days gone by as you sail past this infamous old shipwreck site, known as the graveyard of the gulf, on your way through the Cabot Strait and into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. So huge is the gulf that half of Canada’s 10 provinces have a coastal connection to it. Perhaps that’s not surprising, considering that it’s the world’s largest estuary and fed all the way from the Great Lakes 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) away. A mere 19,000 years ago, it was covered under a mile-thick sheet of ice. Every Canadian schoolkid knows that in 1534, Jacques Cartier was the first European known to enter the gulf waters and encounter Maritime Algonquian peoples. In short order, the French kept arriving, as did Portuguese and Basque, who established whaling operations and shipped unimaginable amounts of cod to the Old World. Today, visitors come to explore massive islands, colorful towns and national parks that straddle the surrounding mainland, as well as thousands of tiny islets around which whales now thrive.
Day 7 May 29, 2026. Cruising The Saint Lawrence River CRUISING ONLY
Day 8 May 30, 2026 Arrives. 7:00 am Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
Few places in North America are as steeped in history as Québec City, Canada. Older than Jamestown and founded before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, it is the only city north of Mexico whose original fortifications remain intact. The Québec City historic district, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is still home to religious orders and hospitals that date back to the 17th century. Its Place-Royale would look familiar to the explorer Samuel de Champlain, even with its modern attractions of gift shops and cafés. On the Plains of Abraham, you can walk the battlefield where, in 1759, the French forces under General Montcalm were decisively trounced by the British, led by General Wolfe.
The British took control of all of New France within a year of that 1759 battle, but even so French culture still lives on here in Québec City. More than 95 percent of Québec City's population speaks French as its first language, though it's easy to sightsee and navigate the city in English. As you tour the museums and historic sights of Québec City that celebrate Québecois history and dine at restaurants that serve its distinctive cuisine, you'll discover a remarkable culture that has survived and thrived into the 21st century.
Set out with your experienced guide on a walk through the charming cobblestone streets of Québec's Old Town, best explored on foot, to discover nearly four centuries of history in what is essentially a living museum. Old Town Québec is the only walled city in North America and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. See Place-Royale, where typical stone buildings surround the historic square that constitutes the heart of the Lower Town. It is home to North America's oldest catholic church -- Notre-Dame-des-Victoires.
Petit-Champlain Street is a charming pedestrian-only area with an array of quaint boutiques, specialty shops and outdoor cafes, as well as strolling musicians, jugglers, and street performers. Take the funicular from the Lower Town to the Upper Town to reach the Château Frontenac. Perched on a hill overlooking the St-Lawrence River, the castle-like château is the best-known landmark in Québec. Dufferin Terrace offers a spectacular view of the St-Lawrence River and the Laurentian Mountains. Explore the fortress area, passing Place d'Armes, the Québec Seminary, the Ursuline Convent, Place de l'Hotel de Ville, and Artists Alley. Step inside Holy Trinity Church -- the first Anglican Cathedral built outside the British Isles. Modeled after London's St-Martin-in-the-Fields, this cathedral houses numerous precious objects donated by King George III. The bells are the oldest change-ringing bells in Canada. They were made in England at the same foundry that cast Big Ben.
Don't miss a visit to Morrin College, built 200 years ago as the city's first prison. Interestingly, it now houses one of the world's most beautiful libraries. You will see the jail cells and the Victorian library, whose artifacts date back to the 16th century.