Garçons Nova Scotia

Garçons Nova Scotia A safe space for travellers with open minds and open hearts, in beautiful Rose Bay, Nova Scotia.

Another season begins! Welcome to Garçons Rose Bay — a safe space by the sea, where summer unfolds a little more gently....
05/31/2026

Another season begins! Welcome to Garçons Rose Bay — a safe space by the sea, where summer unfolds a little more gently. Here, we welcome open minds, open hearts, and kind spirits to slow down, breathe deeply, and enjoy the beauty, serenity, and simple magic of life by the bay. We’re so happy to share this season with you.

Bienvenue à Garçons Rose Bay — un espace bienveillant au bord de la mer, où l’été se vit tout en douceur. Ici, nous accueillons les esprits ouverts, les cœurs ouverts et les âmes bienveillantes à ralentir, à respirer profondément et à profiter de la beauté, de la sérénité et de la magie simple de la vie au bord de la baie. Nous sommes très heureux de partager cette nouvelle saison avec vous.

04/22/2026

Pourquoi tu devrais écouter Nico Le Maudit Français ? 👀

Nicolas Jean, aka Le Maudit Français, c’est un artiste qui te propose pas juste des chansons… mais un vrai univers 💥

Né en France, passé par Ottawa et Montréal, puis installé en Nouvelle-Écosse, il traîne avec lui un parcours qui se ressent direct dans sa musique.

💭 Sa vibe :
– des textes profonds et imagés
– une ambiance planante
– une musique qui te fait autant réfléchir que ressentir

Il parle d’amour, d’exil, de deuil, d’art… avec une sensibilité qui reste longtemps après l’écoute.

Catégorie : Auteur-compositeur-interprète
https://galadelachanson.ca/artistes/nicolas-jean-2/

A delicate interpretation in watercolor by our dear friend Lillian  , capturing the beauty and ephemeral nature of the l...
04/13/2026

A delicate interpretation in watercolor by our dear friend Lillian , capturing the beauty and ephemeral nature of the lupins that frame our faithful barn, announcing the arrival of warm days.

There’s something quietly defiant about the old barns of Nova Scotia—the way they stand at the edge of the sea as if they’ve chosen that place, wind-beaten and salt-stained, yet utterly unmovable. Their boards, weathered to a silvery grain beneath layers of oxblood red, seem to hold decades of storms in their memory. The paint, once bold and practical, now fades and deepens in uneven patches, like a story retold so many times it becomes more beautiful than precise.

They lean, some of them—just slightly—toward the Atlantic, as though listening. The doors creak in the wind, not in complaint, but in conversation, answering the low, endless hush of waves folding over stone. Gulls wheel overhead, their cries sharp against the softness of the horizon, while grasses bow and rise in the salt air like a slow, patient tide.

At dusk, the barns glow. That deep red catches the last light of the day and holds it, warm against the cooling blues of sea and sky, as if protecting some quiet ember within. You can almost imagine the lives that moved through them—boots on wood, hay in the loft, the steady rhythm of work tied to land and season—now replaced by a stillness that feels less like absence, but more like rest.

They are not abandoned, not really. They endure. Rooted between land and ocean, they carry both—holding the memory of harvest and the breath of the sea in the same weathered frame.

There’s something quietly defiant about the old barns of Nova Scotia—the way they stand at the edge of the sea as if the...
04/10/2026

There’s something quietly defiant about the old barns of Nova Scotia—the way they stand at the edge of the sea as if they’ve chosen that place, wind-beaten and salt-stained, yet utterly unmovable. Their boards, weathered to a silvery grain beneath layers of oxblood red, seem to hold decades of storms in their memory. The paint, once bold and practical, now fades and deepens in uneven patches, like a story retold so many times it becomes more beautiful than precise.

They lean, some of them—just slightly—toward the Atlantic, as though listening. The doors creak in the wind, not in complaint, but in conversation, answering the low, endless hush of waves folding over stone. Gulls wheel overhead, their cries sharp against the softness of the horizon, while grasses bow and rise in the salt air like a slow, patient tide.

At dusk, the barns glow. That deep red catches the last light of the day and holds it, warm against the cooling blues of sea and sky, as if protecting some quiet ember within. You can almost imagine the lives that moved through them—boots on wood, hay in the loft, the steady rhythm of work tied to land and season—now replaced by a stillness that feels less like absence, but more like rest.

They are not abandoned, not really. They endure. Rooted between land and ocean, they carry both—holding the memory of harvest and the breath of the sea in the same weathered frame.

🌷 Thank you to the Conseil de développement économique de la Nouvelle-Écosse - CDÉNÉ for this recognition and encouragem...
03/31/2026

🌷 Thank you to the Conseil de développement économique de la Nouvelle-Écosse - CDÉNÉ for this recognition and encouragement! Looking forward to another enchanting season at Vie de garçons ! 🌷

The salt air is back. The light has changed. Spring has found its way to Rose Bay and something in us exhales. 🌱Our litt...
03/29/2026

The salt air is back. The light has changed. Spring has found its way to Rose Bay and something in us exhales. 🌱

Our little 160-year-old cape house has seen many seasons come and go, and each one reminds us how wonderful it has been to share it with folks from near and far. The herons are back on the marsh, the wildflowers are pushing through, and the south shore is doing what it does best — quietly taking your breath away.
🌊

Wander the colorful streets of the UNESCO town of Lunenburg, lose yourself on the Gaff Point trail with the ocean stretching out below, or spend a golden afternoon searching for sand dollars at Sand Dollar Beach in Rose Bay. This corner of Nova Scotia has a way of getting into your soul — and we love nothing more than watching it happen. 🌸

We look forward to welcoming you at Garçons — open doors, open hearts, and all the beauty of coastal Nova Scotia waiting just outside. Reservations beginning June are now open. Come find your slow mornings here. Come let the sea and salt air do its thing. ✨

Christmas in Paris during the 1970s.Golden lights glowing over the Champs Élysées. Fur coats brush past beautiful shop...
12/20/2025

Christmas in Paris during the 1970s.

Golden lights glowing over the Champs Élysées. Fur coats brush past beautiful shop windows. The air carries the smell of roasted chestnuts and perfume.

A small dog waiting by the door, already knowing the ritual. Outside, the city moving slowly. The chilly air feeling gentle instead of sharp. Ribbon wrapped boutiques. Soft footsteps on stone sidewalks.

Hot chocolate thick enough to linger. Coffee steaming into the winter air. The Eiffel tower sparkles quietly against a pale sky while shoppers drift past with gifts.

Silk scarves. Leather gloves. Chocolates boxed like treasures. Perfumes promising spring. Warm interiors. Gentle voices. Boutique doors opening softly full of hope and anticipation.

As night fell, Paris shimmered under the lights, feeling like a dream you never want to wake from.

📷 .arts
via luxury

Address

Kingsburg Road, Rose Bay, NS B0J
Lunenburg, NS
B0J2X0

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