Minganie
regional county municipality
The Minganie is a region on the North Shore, in Quebec, in Canada. It is located on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
![](../I/Monolithes_Mingan.jpg.webp)
Limestone monolith shaped by the waves
The main attractions of the Minganie are:
- its vast hinterland made up of rivers, lakes, peat bogs, forests, mountains offering unique panoramas, wild hunting and fishing sites, mountain biking and snowmobile trails, and varied northern wildlife and flora;
- its hundreds of bays dotted with islands and archipelagos, offering unusual panoramas, and allowing the observation of nature, winged fauna (especially migratory birds or nesting), marine fauna (e.g. whales, belugas, dolphins, porpoises, killer whales, seals sharing the same playground), the sea in all its forms as well as magnificent beaches where visitors take the time to combine the wonder of nature and the tranquility of the holidays;
- small villages with a rustic built heritage equipped with a wharf which is the soul of the place;
- the supply ship for the villages of the Côte-Nord, which allows passengers to admire the old fishing villages, the wild coast, its majestic bays, its steep rocks, its rocky coasts, its endless forest, the confluence of rivers , marine fauna, marine landmarks (e.g lighthouses), archipelagos hosting a varied island nature;
- its fascinating story told by people from the riverside localities: the village quay, the little chapel, shipwrecks, disasters, medical care, hunting or fishing adventures, supply ships, the first snowmobiles, the first cars, the arrival of electricity (telephone, television, Internet), fishing adventures, and the arrival of Route 138 and its socio-economic impacts.
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.