
Hopewell Rocks Provincial Park is at 131 Discovery Road in Hopewell Cape, where the Bay of Fundy tide cycle is the main experience. NB Parks describes more than twenty free-standing sea stacks along two kilometres of shoreline, plus ocean-floor access that changes dramatically between high and low tide.
Hopewell Rocks is built around seeing the same coast two different ways. The official page says park admission is valid for two consecutive days so visitors have flexibility to see both high and low tides, and it asks visitors to check tide times before exploring the ocean floor.
The sea stacks, also known as flowerpots, are the landmark. NB Parks notes named rock forms such as Elephant, Bear, Dinosaur, ET, and Mother-in-Law, with interpretive staff available around the grounds.
Access is also part of the planning. The park lists three primary ocean-floor access points: Main Deck stairs, a North Beach ramp, and the Demoiselle trail south from behind the Interpretive Centre. The official page also notes wheelchair-friendly trails, lookoffs, forest walks, and a shuttle option to the stairway for a fee.
Plan around tide-timed ocean-floor walks, sea-stack viewpoints, the Main Deck, North Beach, Demoiselle Beach Trail, self-guided interpretation, photography, wooded trails, and checking current ticket details.
That combination makes timing more important than distance, because a short trail can lead to a very different shoreline six hours later.
Confirm tide times, safe ocean-floor windows, ticketing, footwear, stair or ramp access, slippery ledges, trail status, shuttle availability, weather, and NB Parks advisories before travelling.