Okay, so here are some useful things you may need to know if it's your first time out of the U.S. and visiting Canada:
1. You need passports. Best to start the process now if you don't have them, in case you hit any snags.
2. Your credit cards and ATM cards will probably work in Canada. Your credit card company will charge an exchange fee on top of the currency exchange for Canadian transactions.
3. If you're driving, gas is EXPENSIVE in Canada. The price on the sign at the gas station is for a litre, not a gallon. Figure roughly double the price, though if the US$ goes higher this summer, the exchange rate will cushion it a little.
4. If you're not driving, it's really hard to see all the great places everyone has mentioned! There are bus tours, but it's not easy to tour without a car.
5. Some vocabulary:
Carbonated drinks are POP.
If a restaurant advertises itself as LICENSED, that means they serve alcohol. And if you want to buy a few beers to drink in your hotel, don't go looking in a grocery store... you need a liquor store. The sign will say NSLC (for Nova Scotia Liquor Commission)
Store that's equivalent to Dunkin Donuts or Robins Donuts, only way better: TIM HORTONS
We have some typical foods, which I won't define because you'll have fun asking about them: donairs, chow (South Shore thing), poutine (really a Quebec thing, but we borrowed it).
The usual polite term for a public bathroom is WASHROOM.
There's a one-dollar coin, called a LOONIE, and a two-dollar coin, called a TOONIE or TWONIE.
Ah, you'll have fun. We get lots of tourists here but never enough that we feel overrun, so Nova Scotians are usually very happy to show you the ropes!