On 2015-07-20 10:36, Chris Walton wrote:
I seldom hear anybody referring to mainland Nova Scotia as a peninsula. Maybe that is just because I don't live in Nova Scotia!
Also, I find the term "peninsula" to be confusing when placed beside the name "Halifax". Downtown Halifax sits on the "Halifax Peninsula" which in turn sits on the "Chebucto Peninsula" ...I think attached to rather than sits on here... which in turn forms a part of mainland Nova Scotia. ...which is on the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nova_Scotia_peninsula and there are also the Avon, Aspotogan, Malagash, First and Second peninsulas around.
To add confusion Mainland Halifax is the official name for the parts of Halifax on the Chebucto pensinsula but not on the Halifax peninsula. Wikipedia also says about that: "Mainland Halifax is further divided into "Mainland North" (Bayer's Lake, Clayton Park, Fairview, and Rockingham) and "Mainland South" (Armdale, Herring Cove, Purcell's Cove, Sambro, and Spryfield). Residents do not use the term "Mainland" or the north and south divisions at all, preferring to refer to their original community names which describe the geography of their area more appropriately to those familiar with the region." It seems that anyone on a peninsula may refer to what it is attached to as the mainland. Although only a tourist and not a local, I think of New Brunswick as being on the mainland, from about Sackville, and Nova Scotia, from about Amherst, as being the peninsula; Fundy and the Strait forming the neck of the isthmus (of Chignecto, it appears to be called).
I would prefer to see this: America/Halifax Atlantic Time - PEI & mainland Nova Scotia instead of: America/Halifax Atlantic Time - Nova Scotia (peninsula), PEI
I would be curious to hear David Patte's opinion!
Other opinions from those more familiar would be welcome. -- Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis