❄️ Take advantage of our Boxing Day offer and enjoy 20% off bookings when you book your winter tiny cabin stay before January 31st! ❄️ Booking is now live on our website using special code SAVE20WINTER • https://www.meridian63.com/winter-at-meridian63
It’s been just over a year since Hurricane Fiona hit PEI. It certainly wasn’t the opening weekend we expected but one we will never forget. 🌬️ 🌧️ #hurricanefiona Thankfully everyone was ok and we couldn’t have had a better group of people to be stuck in a hurricane with! Micayla Ghatto @micaylagatto Steffi Marth @steffimarth Tim Foster @timberfoster Dru Kennedy @dru_kennedy Sam Bosence @sambosence Mountain Bike Atlantic @mtbatlantic
Strathgartney views 🌅 Book your fall getaway today 🍁 📸 @climbingshanman
Tour our tiny cabins with Globe Guide! 🤩
Canada Day views at Strathgartney did not disappoint! 🎆 🎇
Mornings at Meridian63° tiny cabins! ☕️ 📖 ☀️ 🍳 Book your weekdays in June starting from $129 per night!
Feels like home here 🌳 Book your cabin stay today!
Did you know in Scots Gaelic, Strath Gartney means “a valley in the hills.” 🌳 🌲
Strathgartney was one of the first 3 provincial parks created from land donated by Charlottetown philanthropist Robert L. Cotton.
The history of Strathgartney goes back to the early 19th century, when David Stewart and his son Robert began to acquire title to 27 000 ha in the colony under the absentee landlord system that was to occupy the colonial and provincial political agenda for over a century. Strathgartney became the country estate of Robert Stewart, and Stewart descendants retained it as the family home well into the 20th century. The house he built about 1861 still graces the horizon above the park.
After the addition of our cabins and the havoc of Hurricane Fiona, the park looks much different today!
Source: Canadian Encyclopedia
We love winter but we’re not too sad to see it go ❄️ ⛄️
Happy Long Weekend & World Health Day, folks!
Post Hurrican Fiona damage at Strathgartney Park, PEI
It’s devastating to see the destruction the storm has caused across our beautiful province but as Islanders always do, they will come together to restore our Island life back to normal.
We had hoped to announce the opening today but Hurricane Fiona had other plans for us. A majority of the old trees that have been there for decades are now down or damaged. 😢
We’ll be working as quickly as possible to get the park cleaned up but please avoid the area until it’s safe.
Thank you for all the messages and support over the weekend. We are all safe and were lucky that the main building and cabins only had minor damage so there’s still hope to be open to catch some of the fall season.
Now the cleanup and tree planting begins. 🌲🌳🌲🌳