Hope you all enjoy the long awaited Ranking EVERY Province in Canada video! *Can we SMASH 5000 LIKES for MORE videos about Canada?!* Also, what is YOUR Favorite Province and WHY? Put a TON of research and work into this video, so hopefully you guys find it informative and funny!
I was born in Saskatchewan,raised in New Brunswick, raised my children in Quebec and am now living my golden years in Nova Scotia.By far my favourite province is where I’ll spend my last years…NOVA SCOTIA 🇨🇦
Every Province and Territory have their Pros and Cons. Every Canadian should do their best to go see them for themselves. They may be pleasantly surprised.
I am from Ontario and have travelled to most provinces and one Territory. I haven't travelled to any provinces East of Ontario but I really need to. They all have their own beauty!
I'd recommend New Brunswick. Vast forests and green areas. The highways are empty,easy commute. Job opportunities in the Moncton area are pretty good. Nice people, chill place.
I'm from Québec, but I love all the provinces of Canada, they are just different from each other, and keep in mind even the worst in Canada is way better than a lot of countries. For me, I see the rest of Canada like family, like cousins. So I love them all. Even the native in the north, I don't see them a lot but hey, they are family too.
If you love winter and snow, BC Interior is fantastic place to live, we've already had snow here. Finland is on my list of places to go when covid is over and done with.
Stick to the east coast of Canada, if you want to go up North. The predators are WAY smaller. I like a pack of wolves a LOT better than a grizzly or a polar bear, or even a cougar. The wolves are SCARED of you and will TRY to stay away unless starving. The other ones will actively HUNT you.
@@TheJimprez Grizzly's won't hunt you, but Black bears will. Only time you'll have trouble with a grizzly is if you leave food out or get between a mother and her cubs - not too bad as far as big critters go.
I’m an American from the West Coast of the US and I think y’all live in a beautiful country. All of your ten provinces and three territories have a beauty that is specific to each area.
Toronto and Vancouver do not define the iddentity of Canada since 50 % of their population were born in Asia and still live like they were in China or India. Canada has a history of 500 years but most of Canadians know more about USA than Canada. They watch the same hollywood drama and violent movies, same USA news , same language and same culture .
I feel like the weather in Vancouver and on the island was absolutely glossed over. It’s worth every penny to live in a city that doesn’t snow for most of the year and doesn’t get wildly hot and humid in the summer. Also, it’s so beneficial to have the mountains, ocean, lakes, and the city all within an hour radius
My husband was from Vancouver. I visited Vancouver to stay with his family many times and also travelled around B.C., including Vancouver Island and several of the Gulf Islands. I named it California North. I didn't like any of it and refused to live there. To each his/her own, I guess.
I agree. The only drawback for me would be the the constant cold rain during winter. The cold to the marrow discomfort that brings where you don't warm up until July.
@@waspwrap1235 Because it made me mentally ill. I am used to living surrounded by historic stone and brick buildings and the built environment in B.C. looks tacky and temporary. I love coastlines with cliffs, coastal walks, coves, gorgeous little beaches, and pretty villages such as you find in Britain. The B.C. coastline is rough. Pounding surf, freezing water, coastline unwalkable, in fact, often completely impassable, and choked with massive logs that have broken free from the ravages of the logging industry. Anywhere that has a swimmable beach is lined with wall to wall cottages/2nd homes (such as along the south shore of Vancouver Island), and access to the beach for visitors is difficult or impossible. In Britain, building houses on the sea shore, lake shores or on rivers is prohibited so everyone can have access and enjoy them. Hiking in the mountains in the western part of B.C. drove me to distraction. I didn't see the point. Black conifers blocking the view and blocking sunlight, which means little in the way of interesting undergrowth can grow. No undergrowth, no bird and butterfly life. Following a trail where you cannot see where you are going nor where you have just come from because dense black trees block the view. An incredible amount of nasty biting bugs everywhere. I hated every second of my road trip to Tofino. I felt ill. Claustrophobic. Freezing pounding surf on one side, depressing black forests and high mountains on the other. It was like being on a ledge trapped between the two. Vancouver's like that too. Another thing is that you cannot get around without a car. In fact, it's pretty hard to travel anywhere in Car Culture Canada without one. I would love to return to Newfoundland (the BEST province!) but it has no trains and no intercity buses, and I don't drive because my eyesight isn't good enough. I never go on vacation in Canada because its public transportation system is the worst I have encountered in all my travels in Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia, North Africa, Mexico and Central America. Also, it's impossible to 'ramble' because of private property rights. Everywhere the Keep Out, Private Property, No Public Access signs. Sure, you can follow a boring logging truck route but when you get to the end of it you have to turn round and walk back the way you came. Canada doesn't have roaming rights. It is really a country that counts its citizens out. Of course, one can roam wherever one likes in wilderness areas, but how do you get there without a car?
I visited Canada as a tourist a few times. It is definately one of the best countries (landscape + people). Each province has its own charm and from my foreign perspective all provinces are ranked no. 1 😊👍
You'd feel differently if you lived here. Low wages, high taxes, astronomical cost of living, dismal healthcare, dwindling rights and freedoms -- Canada is going down the tubes really fast. Many immigrants who came to Canada for a better life are returning home, and many Canadians are leaving the country.
@@ryanm7263 wat home? Ukrain? Srilanka? They left because their education at home rubbish then they hoped to get a decent job in Canada right away? Btw Canada still a catholic nation, wart they want? Hinduism? Buddhism?
Your talking moose had me laughing out loud and why the Weeknd can't feel his face was the most underrated joke ever. Loved your take on the 50 states too!
I visited western Alberta & B.C. 40 years ago as a teen, Banff, Lake Louise, and all thru the Canadian Rockies are the most beautiful places on the planet ... I wish to go back someday!
Tim, we probably crossed paths. I went west 1980 - 1982. Almost everyone I met and partied with was from Ontario. Such a blast! Tunnel Mountain, Ma Ruby's and the Annex in Banff, crashing in the student rez in Jasper, getting chased out of the fields along the Fraser while shroom picking - good times.
As a Quebecers who travels a lot in Europe, nothing came close to our Canadian Rookies in term of beauty. We are lucky to have them cause they are so beautiful
I'm canadian from BC, but to say that the rockies is the most beautiful place on the planet is a little bit of a stretch, you obviously never been to places like Namibia and the Namib-Naukluft NP , Annapurna CA in Nepal, the Cajas NP in Ecuador , the Jonkershoek in South Africa or the Huascarán NP in Peru to mention just a few I've seen while traveling abroad. BC is a magical place it's true but to say that it's the best on the planet isn't. You need to travel and travel a lot to compare it to other places in the world.
Let's be positive, here: Manitoba has a balanced climate; -35°C in winter, +35°C in summer. Hard to beat. Québec has some of that too, but it has much more snow. The city of Québec receives almost as much precipitations as Vancouver, 950mm vs 1100mm for Vancouver, but in Québec it falls as snow and everything gets buried. People in Vancouver do not tan, they rust!
I agree about the summers. It’s hot out here in the summer. This video is wrong on are weather. Yes it’s cold in the winter that’s why are crime us high and also we have a lot of homeless because the government don’t care about the homeless out here. Help the homeless and crime will go down.
@@caroleboulet4587 Manitoba also has the highest percentage of Indigenous people living on reserves, many of which are extremely remote. I'd ask anybody to try and live in a small, remote 2,000 people or less town with very basic housing, not many things to do or see and ask them to be happy, productive and not engage in any mischievous behaviours. And then, about 20 years after living like that, maybe they move to a city: most of which are also small cities, 10, 000 to 50, 000 with only one major city around and ask them to quickly integrate into that city with a steady job and few social supports or programs to really help anybody in transition. It's not exactly a recipe for success. Despite all those challenges, more often than not you see people doing all they can do survive, be kind, helpful, contribute and live a good life.
UPDATE: Halifax (NS in general) is now unaffordable and the salaries have not aligned with the price increases. Food, gas, and the housing market have essentially doubled in price (seemingly overnight) and the population more than doubled so there are new condo buildings built everywhere with rent averaging $2500+ per month for a 2 bedroom. A house that used to cost $300K, is now closer to $700K. For the first time ever, there are homeless people living in their cars or in tents. The only thing that has stayed the same is the beautiful landscape.
@@evhfan5150 No, it started in 2021, with the HUGE influx of CFAs and foreign investors driving up the price of houses. Our government was advertising to retirees and wealthy foreigners. The influx of immigrants made it a thousand times worse, though. Agreed.
I was born in Manitoba and lived here for 28 years. While the negative aspects pointed out in the video are true, hardly any of the positives of living here were touched on. Yes, we do have a month or two where you can hardly spend time outside but during the winter there are beautiful sunny days often and plenty of +25-+30 days all summer long. Manitoba has an incredible amount of festivals during the summer all across Winnipeg and small towns. We have a thriving underground EDM scene where young people explore various forms of art, dance, costrumes, and musical genres every weekend nowadays. There are many interesting cultures present here including Mennonite and Hutterite communities which are some of the most generous small town folk. We have tons of local farms which people can buy affordable organic food from. Manitobans on average are friendly people and strangers will often strike up a conversation or help get your car unstuck on a wintery day. I have travelled around Canada but I do feel like Manitoba carries a unique sense of community that other places might not have.
I visited Manitoba (from Australia) to see a mate I met on my travels though Central America. We did a 5 day Canoe trip down the Assiniboine river, trying to get from Brandon to Winnipeg. We didn't quite make it that far, but it was a great trip. Had I not met someone from there I probably would have never gone. His family were extremely hospitable and he and all of his friends were farmers, working on massive farms. I will always have a soft spot from the beautiful province of Manitoba.
Manitobas got some pretty bad gang activity that the average person may not notice the true scale of. Grew up there. EDM scene is pretty good, but it still doesnt compare to the festivals in BC and east coast. Then again, nothing compares to shambhala.
I am happily surprised that for a change, there is no Québec bashing in this video nor in the comments. Usually the Canadian social medias are full of repetitive degrading comments about Québec. I'm from Québec and as a veteran I served my country in many beautiful provinces and territories until retirement. I wish we would be more united and see what we have in common rather than the contrary. 🇨🇦
There is a reason for the "Quebec bashing" but based upon my experience with a friend from Montreal it is pointless discussing it. A "can't see the forest for the trees" type of thing.
What a surprise that you found MY province of Quebec the best to live in. I do speak French which is a necessity for most jobs. Compared to Paris and Germany where I lived for several years, our weather is very sunny...even in winter with its blue, blue skies and glistening snow. And the 4 season climate is perfect except I'd rather winter be shorter.
I've noticed a lot of Aussies come up for the skiing/snowboarding. If you take lessons on any of the main mountains in Alberta I swear like half the time, chances are your instructor'll be Australian 😂 Cheers from YYC 🍻
@@OouzyYew452 My friend went to Canada with no skiing knowledge and ended up an instructor somehow 😂. He's Australian but I'm from New Zealand. I was planning a trip next year. I'll probably get confused for an Australian.
The best province to live in is the one where your friends and family live at. It doesn't matter where you go in Canada, or how rich you are. When you feel lonely and down, you are more miserable than even the poorest of Canadians in the worst locations. I could live in the coldest of climates and hardest job markets, and still find the love of life when I can just hop over to visit my relatives or hang out with my besties.
Very true. My friend always says that the worst day of your life in Canada is still something over half of the world would literally trade their left arm for in a heartbeat, so if we keep that in perspective it’s hard to feel bad about living in any province.
I’m from Pittsburgh PA but I’ve been all over Canada- Vitoria- Vancouver- Quebec- St Johns - Nova Scotia- Newfoundland- PEI/ all wonderful- the French is real in Quebec.
"The French is real in Quebec"? Try speaking Quebecois French in France and you will soon change your mind. They don't understand anything that Quebekers say since it's not really French.
well i'm actually from Québec and i really love Nova Scotia. Such a beautiful province. But all the other province and territoire are beautiful as well, it would be a shame to died without to see each of them.
I lived in Southern Ontario for 68 years and a year and a half ago moved to Vancouver. For me BC is the most scenic province over all. It's also too expensive for most people here once you get closer to Vancouver. The best thing in my opinion after moving to Vancouver is the fact that a person really doesn't need to own a car. With carshare systems, bikeshare, and an amazing bus, skytrain, and seabus transit system a person can travel anywhere inexpensively and easily.
Tim, I have travelled across Canada numerous times and certainly agree that BC has some beautiful areas (out of the desert areas of Merritt). I do have difficulty with your comment about cars in BC. Vancouver has a great transit system, however it is limited to the GVR (Greater Vancouver Region). It is obvious the government of BC is shafting their province with the surcharge on fuel (paying $1.65 a litre -about $4.50 a US gallon) in the GVR and $1.53 per litre outside the region (probably the most expensive fuel in the country outside remote northern areas and Arctic. If you live outside of the GVR and without a vehicle, you are limited as your walking and cycling distance. There are many remote areas with no public transit and with no car, you are stuck (which SUCKS).
@@murrayfarrow866 absolutely brother. I should have made my comment more clear that this great transit system is only in the Greater Vancouver area. Outside of here yes a person definitely needs their own transportation. As a retiree in Vancouver I'm thrilled to no longer need my own vehicle and should I want can get a monthly compass card for around $54.00 a month, ... but to live any place else in the province I'd be paying for a car, expensive insurance and as you state the most expensive gas in Canada.
@@murrayfarrow866 I always find it intriguing when people carry on about the price of gas. Do you realize that if you travel 20,000 km per year that $0.12 surcharge in Vancouver amounts to roughly $250? Pretty hard to garner sympathy over a paltry $250 when the price of an average home in Vancouver increased by $137,500 in the last 12 months. Even if you don’t own a home chances are you drop $250 just going out for dinner. Gas is cheap …
@Janitor Queen Gasoline causes obesity. Kind of a stretch there, fella. There is such a thing as being too left wing, you know. Until alternative fuels and/or transportation methods are readily available, gasoline is not a luxury. Anyway, my point was that gasoline is very affordable. NONE of this has anything to do with violence, be it against men, women, children, or people of any race.
Mr. Roy, first thank you for your reply. I can't account what portion of the fuel surcharge goes to the Vancouver, but fuel wasn't a 12 cents a litre different, This summer in Vancouver, the fuel price was .30 a litre more than other parts of Canada, (Calgary, Edmonton and Toronto). Additionally, not everyone get more than 27 miles to the gallon according to your calculations. (hence $250.00). The BC government is charging 30 per litre and the average fuel economy is 20 miles per gallon for an additionally $458. dollars of taxing those who drive. New home housing in Vancouver is a dream to newcomers to the area. With the average housing cost in the area of $1.3 million , plan on lottery winnings, group living or elevated incomes if you plan to live in the lovely and scenic city of Vancouver. Commercial/investment speculation, the demand and limited amount of land add up to high prices. As beautiful as Vancouver is, I think I'll live outside the area (more affordable) and pay the price when I visit.
@@bylot You have to get off the bloody Trans Canada! If you stay on the highway, you'd think no one lives here. Take my word for it, NB is just as scenic as Nova Scotia. Next time do the Fundy Coastal Drive, or the River Valley Scenic Drive. You'll from an entirely different impression of the "Picture Province".
All depends on how they run the province so far Alberta for work, affordability, education, people nature, one tax, cheapest gas. Thanks I vote for AB as number 1 since 2004 still.
I’ve lived in Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan (as well as two other countries). I’ve also travelled to every province except Newfoundland and Labrador and the territories. All these places are wonderful, but Manitoba is home.
I’ve only lived in 2 provinces, BC and Saskatchewan. I am currently living over seas in Australia though. So that makes up for living in less provinces then lol. Australia is a wonderful country.
Manitoba would be ranked top 3.... its cold? Probably no different than any other province. Rarely snows and is probably the most fun province to be in the winter. So many festivals and outdoor events. It has a NHL team to enjoy. Spring and fall is #1 in manitoba of all in Canada. Most beautiful summers and has the nicest beaches and lakes in Canada. Not 1 province can compete with summer life. So how would you rank it #10??.... they make more Hollywood films in Winnipeg than Toronto/Vancouver. Jobs? Education? Rivals any city in Canada. Thats nonsense what was said in this video. NHL abd CFL players love living here over other cdn cities so that just says it all
It has a ton of nature but we are also at nature's mercy. It's cold af and the storms can be really savage out in the prairies. 100km winds, tornados and hail in summer and blizzards in winter. It do take nerve to battle the elements to live here but the nature is top notch. I see black bears, deer and moose on the regular and a lot of eagles and owls.
I used to have a lakehouse in Muskoka Ontario and boy was it beautiful land The people there were insanely nice too. Normally when travelling, locals have a stigma around Americans but Ontarians were just so respectful and polite it was honestly touching
Having been all around this great big beautiful country, while I love Quebec because it is like a cheap and easily convenient flight to Western Europe, I'd say that the Maritimes are the hidden gem and heart of Canada. And after having seen all of Canada, I always felt that if I was Prime Minister, I would make it a law that every citizen would have a free VIA train ticket, good for the rest of their life, to see the entire country. At least once.
@@zors5188 Be patriotic, my hometown is Ottawa and I am proud of it! And Quebec city is a beautiful city with a rich vibrant history, I have always wanted to visit during Jean Baptise day. Any suggestions of unusual tourist sites in Quebec city ? Currently living in rural Quebec.
@@CountryLifestyle2023 unusual? Hmmm check out the musée de la civilisation maybe? Some really cool stuff there. Or simply walk the streets around the château Frontenac! Enjoy ^^
I was born & raised in northwestern Ontario and I absolutely love it there! But 30 years later my wife and I moved to Saskatchewan and I've grown to love it here too but Ontario will always be home
I've lived 2 years in Toronto. Plusses, it's all there, sports, theatre, music, amazing restaurants. Negatives I found the people difficult to get to know, I usually felt I wasn't breathing fast enough, and no mountains. I've lived 10 years in Calgary. Plusses, people are incredibly open and friendly, mountains, energetic without being frenetic, affordable. Minuses, very cyclic economy, everything always under construction with little sense of history or culture. I was born and raised in Victoria and returned here 34 years ago. Plusses, ocean and mountains, sense of history, laid back and friendly, amazing climate. Minuses, completely unaffordable (if I hadn't bought my house over 30 years ago I couldn't afford it today). Enjoyed them all but wouldn't voluntarily leave Victoria.
Been to every province, lived in Quebec, New Brunswick, Alberts and BC (My home province and current residence) but my favorite was actually PEI. It's stunning to me.
10. Manitoba (2:32) Population: 1,382,904 9. Newfoundland and Labrador (3:49) Population: 520,286 8. Prince Edward Island (5:09) Population: 160,536 7. New Brunswick (6:29) Population: 783,721 6. Saskatchewan (7:46) Population: 1,179, 906 5. Nova Scotia (9:00) Population: 982,326 4. British Columbia (10:14) Population 5,174,724 3. Ontario (11:25) Population 14,789,778 2. Alberta (12:51) Population 4,444,277 1. Quebec (14:11) Population 8,585,523 Newfoundland is great it should have been higher, 100% should be ranked higher.
I know you from the channel called: Mango tango and i know you won't see this but you have made my childhood, you have always been there when i was sad, and i just have to say thank you for all of the memories.
As a Quebecer, I would say British Columbia and Alberta are definitely the best provinces for the landscape, probably because it's way more impressive than Quebec (although Gaspésie mountains near the coast are nice). Still, I'm honoured to be in first place.
I’ve been to Quebec City, Montreal and have driven through to Nova Scotia. I think Quebec is very beautiful. I love the older mountain range, and Quebec City is charming. Carnival is so fun!
@@criticRN yeah Quebec is very nice in general with the cities and the mountains of Charlevoix for example but once you get used to it, you kind of forget about it and you want to see more diversity like in Alberta and British Columbia. When I went there, I was absolutely flabbergasted when I saw the landscapes
I am from NYC and I always wanted to visit the Maritimes since I was in 3rd grade in 1987-88 when I saw them on a Atlas that I had ordered. In 2006 I got to fulfill that dream. I started in Halifax and I toured Cape Breton Island, Antigonish, the Acadian country and the Cabot Trial. My tour guide a warm friendly former Lieutenant in the Canadian Army made the trip for me! We went to PEI and rode bikes on beautiful trials. We crossed the Confederation bridge stepped foot on New Brunswick and crossed right back to Halifax.
@@miguelneet3438 lol Believe it or not it was a budget trip. I stayed at a hostel everywhere I went and the tour I paid for was only $200. NYC is only an hour and twenty minutes from Halifax hence the cheap flight.
I love that you stepped foot on New Brunswick and headed right back to Halifax. Lol. If you ever make your way back again try hiking mount Carleton(the highest point in the Atlantic provinces)It is amazing and you would not be disappointed or visit some of our beautiful waterfalls!
Fredericton nicest city in Canada. Has a river in middle of the city which connects to many lakes, very clean and one of the warmest cities in Canada in the summer!!
I am pleasantly surprised that you place Quebec in first position without doing "Quebec bashing" thank you! I have traveled to New Brunswick a few times and I find Acadians to be the most welcoming people in the world.
There are Acadian communities in NS as well! I have Acadian ancestry on both sides of my family, with my mom coming from NB and my dad coming from a small island off of Cape Breton.
Quebec city instead of Mtl, I prefere Mtl in many ways, people are more open mind than Quebec City, it was more easy to make friends, make a girlfriend or boyfriend too or whatever you like. Lol
Interesting and entertaining to see this from an outsider’s perspective. I’ve been to every province, and they all have a lot to offer, but you barely touched on one vital metric: Interprovincial Migration. Of course there are always people moving from one province to another for work, marriage, etc.; for example, lots of people move to Alberta to work, when it’s booming, but one province consistently enjoys the highest Net interprovincial immigration rate: British Columbia. That’s a pretty strong indicator that B.C. is where Canadians most Want to live; which, of course, is exactly why our property values are so insanely high!
Yes, it's nice. I live in Victoria. However housing is grotesquely expensive. Must have been nice to have beeen born in the 50's and just kind of cake-walked into a house here.
@@supermash1 I don't think anyone ever "cake-walked" into buying a house here. My parents worked damn hard for what they got, as did their parents; the difference is home ownership used to be attainable for most hard working people, but now it's getting less and less attainable for those who don't have high incomes.
@@timberwolfdtproductions3890 Let me put it this way Timberwolf. A great uncle of mine moved to Canada (Niagara region) from Croatia. He was a nightwatchman on construction sites and could barely speak english. He owned a house - modest but he owned a house. When I moved to Vancouver I remember a barber telling me about the house he owned in Kitsilano. I asked "How did you own a house in Kitsilano", he said "Anyone could at that time". Or the builder here in Victoria I struck up a conversation with. He used to buy old houses to renovate and re-sell, When I asked where he got the money he said "The bank, they were cheap". Or the lonely old man I recently struck up a sidewalk conversation with who told me he worked at a truck stop when he bought his house here in Oak Bay for $8k. He said the lot is now worth more than 800k (probably over a million...). So that's what I mean. I am a highly skilled man who has been working hard for 35 years in the architectural field and live in a small apartment because it's all I can afford. That's what Canada is now. Think about that and ask yourself what people like myself think of Canada. Think of what young people think of Canada when they are paying a vast slice of their income to RENT small apartments. You are not being honest with yourself. Do the research and look into real home ownership costs compared to incomes over time. Do it and get back to me here.
A little (recent) history lesson. British Columbia used to be fairly affordable, including Vancouver. But then the city decided to host Expo ‘86 as a way to put itself on the map. And did it ever. As people learned about the city and province, its beautiful scenery, and its mild climate, people flocked to the region. As the main city on the west coast, and therefore a gateway to nations in the Pacific Rim, it attracted immigrants from Asia, most notably affluent Hong Kong residents who wanted to leave before the British colony was handed back to China in 1997. Then in 2010, the city put itself on the map again when it hosted the Winter Olympics. All these factors drove up the demand for real estate, and with little new construction, prices skyrocketed. Vancouver is the most expensive, but pretty well all of the lower mainland has become pricey. I have heard that even rental housing is hard to find in some places. If it weren’t so crazy expensive and difficult to find a place to live, BC would be the best province.
@@irkhanbasc History lesson? I was born, raised, and have lived almost 59 years here. I am intimately aware of our history. Since judging the "best" of just about anything is highly subjective, it seems to me the most objective metric in this example is desirability. Clearly if B.C. consistently has Canada's highest net immigration, despite the cost of living, it's the most desirable.
New Brunswick; the climate is fairly moderate, lots of hills lakes and rivers, the housing is reasonable, and the forests are beautiful. And not crowded with too many people. Canada's best kept secret. But really all of Canada is beautiful.
@@C1azed I don't mind people getting rich as long as they are creating many thousands of good paying jobs. I despise stock market insiders and hedge fund managers who create wealth for themselves and jobs for no one.
Every place has its beauty. Lived in Ontario until I retired. I then packed my bags and moved to Vancouver island. Proud and grateful to be a Canadian. Cheers everyone🎉
After 12 years living in Quebec, I can only agree this province is probably the best one to live in, especially if you speak French. The language, the culture, the safety, the architecture (especially Québec City and Montréal but elsewhere too), the natural landscapes (Charlevoix, Gaspésie, Mauricie, Saguenay, Estrie...), the St-Laurence river, the great location in Northeastern Canada bordering 4 US states (New York State, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine - insert a hiker's bias here), the relatively low-cost of higher-education and excellent universities...In spite of the downsides that anyone could point out, it is still a great place to live and raise a family.
@@kavenbourgonje8428 Who cares? People love to hate on what they can’t understand, have or be. So be it, a small price to pay to live in a beautiful province like ours. 😌
@@jackpeck2494 I think I have been around enough to know, yes! After 70 years of of living and traveling across Canada and comparing it to other countries in the world, I would definitely say it's the place to raise your family. But don't take my word for it buddy Jack. According to the 2021 Best Countries Report, Canada is the No. 1 Country in the World. Look it up and learn. Of course if you are a true Canuk, I wouldn't have to explain this to you, would I? lol
@@jimroberts4828 LOL buddy once again I’ve grew up in Canada but I’ve left the country to you say it’s unrivalled that is a fucking joke just because one website says it is does it mean it is buddy I live in Ontario Canada and I can tell you right now it is not unrivalled there are countries that are better than us and of course there are Countries that we are better than to but we are not unrivalled
Every province has its pluses and minuses. However, one thing I like about much of Alberta is the dry climate. Much of Alberta is on the High Plains, and has a semi-arid climate. A semi-arid climate is actually a really nice positive aspect of Alberta compared to the other provinces, especially compared to the very depressing wet and cloudy weather in portions of BC and much of Atlantic Canada. One warning about the Prairie Provinces, particularly Manitoba and Saskatchewan. You can get severe weather out there. Now that shouldn’t discourage you from living there. Everyplace has its risks of natural disasters. However, the storms in that part of Canada can get downright dangerous and scary!
Lived on the Lower Mainland of B.C winter of 72. Never been so cold in all my life. Rain,rain, rain and then hard rain. No sun. I was ready to slash up by February. Give me a dry prairie winter anytime.
@@TheEstowrath that's a horrible thing to say if you took the time to get to know them they are GREAT people just a few bad apples like all groups have
My stepson works in Tuk NWT, and he gets his food and lodging paid for, and gets to fly back to Alberta for a break every few weeks. He really likes it. In the winter they're only allowed to stay outside for a certain amount of time, and then go inside to warm up for awhile.
BC and Ontario both struggle with too many foreign home buyers, that make already high priced housing market, absolutely ridiculous. If this trend continues I guess we'll all be moving up to the territories.
Hi from Newfoundland! "Small town feel" really hits the mark. Despite living 3 hours from st.johns my area was hit hard by "snowmageddon" last year (probably would have helped if I had put my snow blower in my house before the storm started, instead of leaving it out in the shed - took 2 hours to dig out the shed).
I was born in Ontario, Moved to Manitoba when I was 16, also lived in Alberta and Saskatchewan. As a long haul trucker I've been to Newfoundland to Vancouver. Canada does have many beautiful parts but I chose Manitoba over them all until I retire to Thailand.
Saskatchewan here. The crime rate thing is really overblown. I've lived here for 47 of 49 years (2 in Calgary) and never been the victim of ANY crime in any Sask city I've lived in. Yep, it's cold in winter and hot as hell in summer, but like you said, cheap to live and we get paid well. There also isn't any such thing as an hour commute, unless you live at the lake. You also are missing about 2/3 of the province that is covered in lakes and forest if all you focus on is the areas around Regina and Saskatoon. There's a reason the campgrounds here are full of Albertans and every other province in the summer...
Alberta is very good. Born in BC, lot's of great nature but is unaffordable and almost impossible to have a home remotely close to Vancouver but in Alberta you can buy a home right in one of it's cities for a decent price oil will always be needed at least for lubrication of vehicles and farm ware.
We tried to move to Ottawa but we couldn’t leave Quebec. It’s our home and we got homesick fast. Montreal is a fun city and the restaurants are the best. Sure the taxes are high but we have great affordable daycare systems, great restaurants and overall great homes. All of Canada is great my heart will always be in Quebec
How I wish I would find a way to Canada, I don't mind where I just need that greener pasture.. Life here in Kenya is way to hard. I can't even describe it... May God help me for real
Probably the best put together, informative, and visually pleasing video I have seen about Canada. Your criteria and rankings seems to make sense, and pretty accurate from most accounts. Nice work!
Born In Saskatchewan. Have lived in the 3 most western Provinces nearly all my life ( New Brunswick being the exception). Currently living In Alberta. I have been to nearly all the provinces. with the exception of Newfoundland. But I am hoping to rectifying that before I pass on. If I had to choose some other then Alberta to live in. Nova Scotia, (Cape Breton and or Halifax) Quebec ( old QC and anywhere on the Gaspe) Ontario ( Kingston or the Niagara area) would be all high considerations
I live In the state of Rhode Island. I know all of those Canadian Provinces and Territories (even though I have not been to Canada). This is a helpful video for me to decide which province I should move to.
I used to live in RI and moved to Montreal for 5 years (I live in CA now). I loved it there! One of my favorite cities on the "island" (North America).
@Canada-Germany … it’s not so easy to answer. I’m from Germany and I live in BC now for a bit over 12 years. If I would move here in Canada I would stay in BC ( but move to a warmer place like Vancouver Island or the Okanagan ) or if not stay in BC I would move the Maritime provinces.
@Merle J. Stadnyk I'm a minority but I would still visit Alberta. but I do agree that Quebec is great. although I have a feeling some Albertans won't like a Californian there, they might have the same mentality as Idaho or Montana
The thing about Ontario is there are two vastly different regions those being Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario, two different peoples, lifestyles and cultures. Housing is cheaper in the north then the south.. throwing northern Ontario's housing market with southern Ontario's is misleading. Depending where in northern Ontario houses can go from $80,000 - $370,000 unlike in southern Ontario where I'm sure it's above $500,000 to a million in most places. Northern Ontario may not have many cities like southern Ontario, but I prefer the laid back lifestyle, lakefront properties, nature not too far out of a drive, the scenery.. etc
It's always so cool to me when someone on the internet mentions Nova Scotia, especially when one of the villages you mentioned is less than 30 minutes from my house. I once saw a video of the tides taken not 5 minutes from my house with 500k views and it amazed me for some reason.
I’m from Ontario, but I’ve been working outside of the country for over 4 years now. If I ever move to a different province, my top choices would be Alberta and British Columbia. Other possibilities would be Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, and Quebec.
Absolutely Brilliant, You had us rolling with laugher. We watched, prepared to defend, what will they say about our country, then you totally disarmed us. Well done Cheers from Toronto
Ontario is so based and awesome tbh!! I am from Detroit and when I used to live in Detroit (I live in Houston now), I went to Toronto a lot growing up since I have close family there (I am South Asian so that explains it lol. I also went to New York a lot for that reason too but aint been to London or the rest of England yet tho). Honestly the similarities that Toronto has to my hometown and also another GOATed Great Lakes city like Chicago really makes cities like Toronto have a special place in my heart!! It is like a second home to me due to the amazing memories I have just like how Chicago is!! Honestly Toronto is my second favorite city in North America right behind New York City and slightly ahead of Chicago and I really am hoping of moving back to that region of North America one day tbh!!! I miss it so much
As a bilingual Canadian I agree with this ranking. I live in Northeastern Ontario (3rd on the list) but the Quebec border is only a ten minute drive away (1st on the list). I absolutely love this area
@@antonboludo8886 a place called Temiskaming Shores but it's just a bunch of small towns. On paper it says we're a city but it's very rural and spread out.
I live in Saskatchewan and I can confirm that the description here is true. I genuinely love it here, it's not very populated, but that's what I love about it. I'm in Regina, so we don't have too much crime here. The crime rate of this province is this high mostly because of North Battleford. But Saskatoon and Regina are rather convenient.
I had to work in Regina for 8 months and found the crime rate to be lower than what I expected. It seems to vary depending on where you are in the city. Luckily I lived in a good part of the city as seen very little crime. In comparison, I lived in bad area of Edmonton for a few years where I seen quite a bit more crime.
Im from Ontario and it's pretty crazy especially right now..when i went to Montreal for a week i loved it!..i loved BC, Nova Scotia and PEI are also beautiful because there's nothing like the scenery in those spots ❤
We were just in New Brunswick (road trip from Toronto to Halifax and back). We visited Moncton, Fredericton and Saint John. While the drive was scenic with the fall colors, the cities and towns left much to be desired for us. Can you share what you enjoyed about the province, maybe we missed something?
Canada is a very beautiful, polite and organized country. I had the opportunity to study in Toronto (2009/2010), province of Ontario. And visit some provinces and cities. However, its population (about 37,000,000) is disproportionate to its area (9,984,000 km²), which ends up harming its development a little. Hugs from Brazil.
That is true, Majority of our population lives close to the border with the US but even still its difficult to maintain and grow so many small towns and such with how spread out they are from the main cities.
I’m sad to see Manitoba here spoken of so sadly. I love living here. Yes there are mosquitos in the summer, and extreme weather. The home values make the province very very livable. Those working in trades make more and spend less than those in many provinces (and states). Winnipeg has a great art scene, lots of sports, etc. yes, we do have a high homeless & jobless rate. We also have a very high Native American rate, which has its own historical struggles.
They speak of almost every province here badly that it’s actually a joke at this point. This dude went out of the way to categorize some good provinces as decent or shit meanwhile putting the most notoriously hated province in Canada at the number 1 spot. I’m from Newfoundland and the way they described us and other good provinces out there is honestly insulting. That’s just my opinion though.
@@OpalyzedYT true they did speak of so many provinces very negatively and then put quebec and alberta in the top 2 spots when they're the most hated by most of the country
Just because they are "hated" doesn't mean they are not the best places to live. That's a weird way to gauge best and worse provinces. He ranks them on hard statistics like livability, quality of life, job pay, unemployment , crime, real estate and rent costs, city life, natural beauty etc.... Calgary was literally ranked the 4th best city in the world to live. And Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver also made the top 15 list. I've lived in the Maritimes and while they are beautiful provinces they have way more issues than Quebec or Alberta where I also lived for a few years. Quebec might not be liked by most of the country, but its economy is booming, Montreal and Quebec city are some of the safest, most beautiful and historic cities in the country, and its a huge province with many awesome small towns. I dont know if I would rank it first, but its certainly top 3 for me
I was so glad that my parents transferred jobs from Winnipeg to Vancouver in 1980. All my famil and friends who unfortunately had to remain in the Peg? Dead,Junkies,gangsters,drunks in Jail… Kidscan become what they are surrounded by. Winnipeg is chalk full of Losers and underachiever types unfortunately
Moved to New Brunswick from Ontario 6 years ago and no regrets! I have 10 times more here than I did living in the GTA. Way more affordable and my wife and I always find something to do. So many scenic places and lots of places to shop. Great people too... From where I live: 30 minutes to Nova Scotia 45 minutes to PEI 2.5 hours to the United States border 4 hours to Quebec It's been fantastic!! 👍
@@shekaniarusselino9291 Moncton. They call it the Hub City because it's in the middle of everything. The 2nd fastest growing city in Canada right now. Not too big and not too small. Moncton also has the 2nd largest Costco in Canada.
Newfoundland should be ranked much higher! The culture there is so unique and resembles Ireland is so many ways (St. John’s is one of the oldest cities in the continent). The landscape is so diverse and scenic and largely untouched my humans. From the more mountainous areas on the west coast (like Gros Morne, which houses rare geological sites, making it a World Heritage Site) to the East coast where icebergs, whales, and puffins are common sites, NL is incredibly diverse
@@MWBlueNoodles if you like being jobless and poor its great. Alberta Saskatchewan maybe BC if you find a good job anything east of Manitoba is a welfare state
I visited New Brunswick in high school as part of an exchange program. I STILL, 40+ years later have fond memories of the wonderful scenery and people.
I'm a native English speaker who moved from another province to Quebec 20 years ago... my French is still not perfect but my family and I are quite happy here :-)
I love BC! Skiing Whistler-Blackcomb for six days was like a fantasy. I had to stop constantly to gaze at the spectacular scenery (and I lived in Tahoe for years). Vancouver is a fun and friendly city...Victoria is so charming....like the backdrop for a rom com. Alberta is also staggeringly gorgeous. I remember visiting Banff many years ago and fell in love with the place. And Buchart Gardens was amazing.
Thank you for the kind words. I belong to a number of Facebook World Nature and Travel Groups and when-ever a picture is posted of Alberta or British Columbia, which is quite frequent, the number of comments like yours from the millions of Americans who have vacationed here over the past 50 years are very numerous and very appreciated by us. If you like us and respect us, as most do, you are always welcome.
@@davidmarshall718 I would LOVE to move to Canada. I plan to move back to Washington just to be closer to BC. Canadians are such nice people...is that because living in such a spectacular country creates so much joy?
Canada is a beautiful country and every place has it's perks and negative aspects. Have seen much of the eastern side of Canada and loved every place. Maybe one day I will be able to see the western side. Boy is this country big. Lived in Europe for a few years and visited so much places in so many countries where I have done pretty much the same distance in Canada and did not see half of the country yet.
That's the beauty of living in Canada - you have a variety of choices to choose from. Wide open sunshine, or mountains, or large city life, etc. Choose what you like - lots of options. Truthfully, even the last provinces on this list here are great to live in.
I live 8 hours away from St. John’s Newfoundland and we get pretty good weather for the most part. Sure we get tons of snow in the winter but we don’t get fog everyday our summers are actually really nice. This guy probably searched up some info on St. John’s and thinks the whole island is like that.. I’ve been in every province and love them all Canada is the best country in the world and I’m proud to call it home
You’re from either Corner Brook or Stephenville or somewhere in the vicinity …lots of nice weather around those parts… I grew up half an hour from St John’s… everyday was a cointoss for which season you’d get….. Loved it though and will retire there soon
@@nobodyspecial6436 yup stephenville but I find St. John’s nice as well I love it anywhere in Newfoundland actually no matter where I am on the island I feel home
I live in Ontario, and I like it here, but Newfoundland is definitely my favourite part of Canada and St. John's is my favourite city. Also, the west coast of Newfoundland (Gros Morne Park) is stunningly beautiful.
Being from the Island i’m kinda partial to where i grew up as my favourite place but in terms of beautiful scenery(from the hi-way anyway) nothing beats the Codroy Valley
Hope you all enjoy the long awaited Ranking EVERY Province in Canada video! *Can we SMASH 5000 LIKES for MORE videos about Canada?!*
Also, what is YOUR Favorite Province and WHY?
Put a TON of research and work into this video, so hopefully you guys find it informative and funny!
Very cool that you upload another video so soon.
Alberta is my favorite because of the high quality of life, affordability (compared to Colorado or Ontario) and ofc the West Edmonton Mall
@Adolphus Inc. fun fact: they have the same HDI of 94.8
@Adolphus Inc. I got my numbers from Wikipedia, but that’s just the quality of life in the two states
I was born in Saskatchewan,raised in New Brunswick, raised my children in Quebec and am now living my golden years in Nova Scotia.By far my favourite province is where I’ll spend my last years…NOVA SCOTIA 🇨🇦
Progress is progress, regardless if it is slow or consistent. Either ways one still goes up, credits to Lunvo
Lunvo has quite been very helpful in the system. I recommend him anyday
There is no need to rush life, in the end what will be will be. Just be hardworking, steadfast and always seek for guidance
How can I communicate with him for advice
Search his full name
Jason Lunvo Rodrguez
Every Province and Territory have their Pros and Cons. Every Canadian should do their best to go see them for themselves. They may be pleasantly surprised.
Agreed! The country is is a wonder!
Ive been to the 4 corners of Canada and i agree...i don't think you need to go far to explore o see something...its full of pleasures for everyone
True ! Vrai !
Ontario is a good province to live in.
Except for Manitoba. Fuck that place.
Alberta here. I’ve lived here all of my life and have travelled to every province. And I LOVE all of them!
Alberta is the best though. 😆
@@marcussinclaire4890 lmfao, Alberta is a shithole. Only good part here is the mountains.
@@Tre16 why bro?
I am from Ontario and have travelled to most provinces and one Territory. I haven't travelled to any provinces East of Ontario but I really need to. They all have their own beauty!
@@Tre16 thank you bro, the people are assholes, I never got bullied at work until I moved to Alberta
Honourable mention - Territories
10 - Manitoba
9 - Newfoundland
8 - PEI
7 - New Brunswick
6 - Sasketchewan
5 - Nova Scotia
4 - BC
3 - Ontario
2 - Alberta
1- Quebec
quebec should be numeber 10 its dogshit
Thx
I understand Alberta is cheaper than most provinces but 2nd place …
@@zdvxr what’s not to like about alberta it’s literally Quebec -French
I'd recommend New Brunswick. Vast forests and green areas. The highways are empty,easy commute. Job opportunities in the Moncton area are pretty good. Nice people, chill place.
I'm from Québec, but I love all the provinces of Canada, they are just different from each other, and keep in mind even the worst in Canada is way better than a lot of countries. For me, I see the rest of Canada like family, like cousins. So I love them all. Even the native in the north, I don't see them a lot but hey, they are family too.
😂♥️
Well said peace from cowtown
I'm also Canadian and I think of Quebec like that "special" cousin you only see at Xmas and even then.....Meh.....
@@TheAmishElectrican Yeah! Normal for a Amish Shit!!!
"even the worst in Canada is way better than a lot of countries"... even Thunder Bay?
The weather in all those places seemed perfectly fine to me. Then again, I'm from Finland. Northern Finland.
If you love winter and snow, BC Interior is fantastic place to live, we've already had snow here. Finland is on my list of places to go when covid is over and done with.
Northern Finland? You're a brave brave soul!
Stick to the east coast of Canada, if you want to go up North. The predators are WAY smaller.
I like a pack of wolves a LOT better than a grizzly or a polar bear, or even a cougar. The wolves are SCARED of you and will TRY to stay away unless starving. The other ones will actively HUNT you.
@@TheJimprez Grizzly's won't hunt you, but Black bears will. Only time you'll have trouble with a grizzly is if you leave food out or get between a mother and her cubs - not too bad as far as big critters go.
I would love to visit Finland. Nature is gorgeous there too.
I’m an American from the West Coast of the US and I think y’all live in a beautiful country. All of your ten provinces and three territories have a beauty that is specific to each area.
Yeah, we just have a treasonous leader TRUDEAU who is hellbent on ruining the country
I live in New England
Toronto and Vancouver do not define the iddentity of Canada since 50 % of their population were born in Asia and still live like they were in China or India. Canada has a history of 500 years but most of Canadians know more about USA than Canada. They watch the same hollywood drama and violent movies, same USA news , same language and same culture .
Hey Marco where do u live? l’m from Québec. I live in Sherbrooke 4 h from Boston. Nice place!
@@bealightinthedarkness9986 No, just no. How dare you say England is the same as Canada- 😵💫
I feel like the weather in Vancouver and on the island was absolutely glossed over. It’s worth every penny to live in a city that doesn’t snow for most of the year and doesn’t get wildly hot and humid in the summer. Also, it’s so beneficial to have the mountains, ocean, lakes, and the city all within an hour radius
My husband was from Vancouver. I visited Vancouver to stay with his family many times and also travelled around B.C., including Vancouver Island and several of the Gulf Islands. I named it California North. I didn't like any of it and refused to live there. To each his/her own, I guess.
I agree. The only drawback for me would be the the constant cold rain during winter. The cold to the marrow discomfort that brings where you don't warm up until July.
@@anncoffey8375 why didn’t you like it?
@@waspwrap1235 Because it made me mentally ill. I am used to living surrounded by historic stone and brick buildings and the built environment in B.C. looks tacky and temporary. I love coastlines with cliffs, coastal walks, coves, gorgeous little beaches, and pretty villages such as you find in Britain. The B.C. coastline is rough. Pounding surf, freezing water, coastline unwalkable, in fact, often completely impassable, and choked with massive logs that have broken free from the ravages of the logging industry. Anywhere that has a swimmable beach is lined with wall to wall cottages/2nd homes (such as along the south shore of Vancouver Island), and access to the beach for visitors is difficult or impossible. In Britain, building houses on the sea shore, lake shores or on rivers is prohibited so everyone can have access and enjoy them. Hiking in the mountains in the western part of B.C. drove me to distraction. I didn't see the point. Black conifers blocking the view and blocking sunlight, which means little in the way of interesting undergrowth can grow. No undergrowth, no bird and butterfly life. Following a trail where you cannot see where you are going nor where you have just come from because dense black trees block the view. An incredible amount of nasty biting bugs everywhere. I hated every second of my road trip to Tofino. I felt ill. Claustrophobic. Freezing pounding surf on one side, depressing black forests and high mountains on the other. It was like being on a ledge trapped between the two. Vancouver's like that too. Another thing is that you cannot get around without a car. In fact, it's pretty hard to travel anywhere in Car Culture Canada without one. I would love to return to Newfoundland (the BEST province!) but it has no trains and no intercity buses, and I don't drive because my eyesight isn't good enough. I never go on vacation in Canada because its public transportation system is the worst I have encountered in all my travels in Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia, North Africa, Mexico and Central America. Also, it's impossible to 'ramble' because of private property rights. Everywhere the Keep Out, Private Property, No Public Access signs. Sure, you can follow a boring logging truck route but when you get to the end of it you have to turn round and walk back the way you came. Canada doesn't have roaming rights. It is really a country that counts its citizens out. Of course, one can roam wherever one likes in wilderness areas, but how do you get there without a car?
It's my home town and excellent. If you can afford to live here. Remember BC stands for bring cash.
Oh, man! You showed us the whole Canada within 15 minutes. Thanks a lot. It's a very beautiful and informative video.
Actually, only 1/16 of the country was shown, and I'm being generous because this country is so darn big!
@@francelaferriere6106 second largest landmass for ya lol. Russia being first of course.
@@jesseroberts1041 hahahah t hanks Jesse! I wouldn't have known
It’s a good day when From Here to There uploads
It's a good day when Tariq Vlogs comments :)
@@FromHeretoThere hey will you ever go back to mango tango?
@@FromHeretoThere it’s a good day when you get a reply form here to there
@@RoingusTheFem I hope so
@@RoingusTheFem i doubt but.. his old videos fill me with joy
I visited Canada as a tourist a few times. It is definately one of the best countries (landscape + people). Each province has its own charm and from my foreign perspective all provinces are ranked no. 1 😊👍
You'd feel differently if you lived here. Low wages, high taxes, astronomical cost of living, dismal healthcare, dwindling rights and freedoms -- Canada is going down the tubes really fast. Many immigrants who came to Canada for a better life are returning home, and many Canadians are leaving the country.
Vous êtes bienvenu, vous pouvez revenir quand vous voulez!!!😘😘😘
@@ryanm7263 “dwindling rights and freedoms” lol
@@d.d.5633 yeah ole Trudy might freeze your bank account if you say something he doesn’t like.
@@ryanm7263 wat home? Ukrain? Srilanka? They left because their education at home rubbish then they hoped to get a decent job in Canada right away? Btw Canada still a catholic nation, wart they want? Hinduism? Buddhism?
Your talking moose had me laughing out loud and why the Weeknd can't feel his face was the most underrated joke ever. Loved your take on the 50 states too!
I visited western Alberta & B.C. 40 years ago as a teen, Banff, Lake Louise, and all thru the Canadian Rockies are the most beautiful places on the planet ... I wish to go back someday!
Tim, we probably crossed paths. I went west 1980 - 1982. Almost everyone I met and partied with was from Ontario. Such a blast! Tunnel Mountain, Ma Ruby's and the Annex in Banff, crashing in the student rez in Jasper, getting chased out of the fields along the Fraser while shroom picking - good times.
Welcome anytime (in AB), love sharing our province with others!
Agreed. Yoho was/is phenomenal.
As a Quebecers who travels a lot in Europe, nothing came close to our Canadian Rookies in term of beauty. We are lucky to have them cause they are so beautiful
I'm canadian from BC, but to say that the rockies is the most beautiful place on the planet is a little bit of a stretch, you obviously never been to places like Namibia and the Namib-Naukluft NP , Annapurna CA in Nepal, the Cajas NP in Ecuador , the Jonkershoek in South Africa or the Huascarán NP in Peru to mention just a few I've seen while traveling abroad. BC is a magical place it's true but to say that it's the best on the planet isn't. You need to travel and travel a lot to compare it to other places in the world.
Let's be positive, here: Manitoba has a balanced climate; -35°C in winter, +35°C in summer. Hard to beat. Québec has some of that too, but it has much more snow. The city of Québec receives almost as much precipitations as Vancouver, 950mm vs 1100mm for Vancouver, but in Québec it falls as snow and everything gets buried. People in Vancouver do not tan, they rust!
I agree about the summers. It’s hot out here in the summer. This video is wrong on are weather. Yes it’s cold in the winter that’s why are crime us high and also we have a lot of homeless because the government don’t care about the homeless out here. Help the homeless and crime will go down.
laughs in Nova Scotian at 1515mm
Well, in quebec it's hot and wet. In Manitoba it's hot and dry. To be comfy dry climate are the best
@@caroleboulet4587 Manitoba also has the highest percentage of Indigenous people living on reserves, many of which are extremely remote. I'd ask anybody to try and live in a small, remote 2,000 people or less town with very basic housing, not many things to do or see and ask them to be happy, productive and not engage in any mischievous behaviours. And then, about 20 years after living like that, maybe they move to a city: most of which are also small cities, 10, 000 to 50, 000 with only one major city around and ask them to quickly integrate into that city with a steady job and few social supports or programs to really help anybody in transition. It's not exactly a recipe for success.
Despite all those challenges, more often than not you see people doing all they can do survive, be kind, helpful, contribute and live a good life.
@@caroleboulet4587 no here in Quebec you can't be homeless expect if it's per choice because you get a job an money if you are homeless
The fishing boat in the price Edward island clip the island venture 2 is my uncles boat, it fishes out of Margaree harbour Nova Scotia
Margaree is Cape Breton
@@francisdoran8992 cape breton is nova Scotia
@@ricecube100 no it's not bi it's Cape Breton were noting like the mainland
@Chad Kaiser no bi we don't act the same we don't talk the same and we don't really get along we to diffenct people
UPDATE: Halifax (NS in general) is now unaffordable and the salaries have not aligned with the price increases. Food, gas, and the housing market have essentially doubled in price (seemingly overnight) and the population more than doubled so there are new condo buildings built everywhere with rent averaging $2500+ per month for a 2 bedroom. A house that used to cost $300K, is now closer to $700K. For the first time ever, there are homeless people living in their cars or in tents. The only thing that has stayed the same is the beautiful landscape.
Trudeaus immigration did that
@@evhfan5150 No, it started in 2021, with the HUGE influx of CFAs and foreign investors driving up the price of houses. Our government was advertising to retirees and wealthy foreigners. The influx of immigrants made it a thousand times worse, though. Agreed.
This is cool you should do more of these videos about different parts of the world
Planning on many more!
@@FromHeretoThere do Switzerland or Italy!!
Please do states of Mexico! Thanks!
Plz do Austria, Australia or New Zealand!!
I was born in Manitoba and lived here for 28 years. While the negative aspects pointed out in the video are true, hardly any of the positives of living here were touched on. Yes, we do have a month or two where you can hardly spend time outside but during the winter there are beautiful sunny days often and plenty of +25-+30 days all summer long. Manitoba has an incredible amount of festivals during the summer all across Winnipeg and small towns. We have a thriving underground EDM scene where young people explore various forms of art, dance, costrumes, and musical genres every weekend nowadays. There are many interesting cultures present here including Mennonite and Hutterite communities which are some of the most generous small town folk. We have tons of local farms which people can buy affordable organic food from. Manitobans on average are friendly people and strangers will often strike up a conversation or help get your car unstuck on a wintery day. I have travelled around Canada but I do feel like Manitoba carries a unique sense of community that other places might not have.
I visited Manitoba (from Australia) to see a mate I met on my travels though Central America. We did a 5 day Canoe trip down the Assiniboine river, trying to get from Brandon to Winnipeg. We didn't quite make it that far, but it was a great trip. Had I not met someone from there I probably would have never gone. His family were extremely hospitable and he and all of his friends were farmers, working on massive farms. I will always have a soft spot from the beautiful province of Manitoba.
Manitoba is where the *real* music started, thanks to The Guess Who.
Manitobas got some pretty bad gang activity that the average person may not notice the true scale of. Grew up there. EDM scene is pretty good, but it still doesnt compare to the festivals in BC and east coast. Then again, nothing compares to shambhala.
Manitoba is the home of the Harry Métis people as well
I will say that any of those list are subjective...
I am happily surprised that for a change, there is no Québec bashing in this video nor in the comments. Usually the Canadian social medias are full of repetitive degrading comments about Québec.
I'm from Québec and as a veteran I served my country in many beautiful provinces and territories until retirement. I wish we would be more united and see what we have in common rather than the contrary. 🇨🇦
There is a reason for the "Quebec bashing" but based upon my experience with a friend from Montreal it is pointless discussing it. A "can't see the forest for the trees" type of thing.
@@darrellsturrock5795 here we go again. I guess you just couldn't pass an occasion.
Never had a language issue in Montreal. I could speak English to most people.
@@lb9007 I'll pass when Quebec passes on $23 billion in transfer payments.
factsssss!!!
What a surprise that you found MY province of Quebec the best to live in. I do speak French which is a necessity for most jobs. Compared to Paris and Germany where I lived for several years, our weather is very sunny...even in winter with its blue, blue skies and glistening snow. And the 4 season climate is perfect except I'd rather winter be shorter.
The Maritime provinces are underrated. I may be biased being from there, but they deserve some love.
Halifax, NS is pretty nice :-)
I dont think the provinces can be ranked
@@latifilaspoon I agree. Things are not that simple.
We love the Maritimes, some of the best places to visit and the people are about the best you could find anywhere !
@@palco22 Les gens sont vraiment nices et humbles labas. C'est ce que j'aime le plus.
I’m Aussie but i had a humanities teacher from Alberta and he always brought up how good it was. Would love to visit Canada one day
You're most certainly welcome!!
I've noticed a lot of Aussies come up for the skiing/snowboarding.
If you take lessons on any of the main mountains in Alberta I swear like half the time, chances are your instructor'll be Australian 😂
Cheers from YYC 🍻
Come on up mate! 😄
I'm American, but I'm almost positive, Canadians are sick and tired of us. 🥲
@@OouzyYew452 My friend went to Canada with no skiing knowledge and ended up an instructor somehow 😂. He's Australian but I'm from New Zealand. I was planning a trip next year. I'll probably get confused for an Australian.
The best province to live in is the one where your friends and family live at.
It doesn't matter where you go in Canada, or how rich you are. When you feel lonely and down, you are more miserable than even the poorest of Canadians in the worst locations.
I could live in the coldest of climates and hardest job markets, and still find the love of life when I can just hop over to visit my relatives or hang out with my besties.
Manitoban spotted
Well said, and all that needs to be said.
Underated Comment !!!
Don't need to live near your family if you have found family
Very true. My friend always says that the worst day of your life in Canada is still something over half of the world would literally trade their left arm for in a heartbeat, so if we keep that in perspective it’s hard to feel bad about living in any province.
I’m from Pittsburgh PA but I’ve been all over Canada- Vitoria- Vancouver- Quebec- St Johns - Nova Scotia- Newfoundland- PEI/ all wonderful- the French is real in Quebec.
What will you say about Nova Scotia?
"The French is real in Quebec"? Try speaking Quebecois French in France and you will soon change your mind. They don't understand anything that Quebekers say since it's not really French.
well i'm actually from Québec and i really love Nova Scotia. Such a beautiful province. But all the other province and territoire are beautiful as well, it would be a shame to died without to see each of them.
Thanks for the love, we love Quebec too! Mont-Sainte-Anne FTW!
The grass is always greeneron the other side until u live there! Lol
That’s weird man cause I’m from Nova Scotia and I lived in Quebec for only like 3/4 weeks sadly but I absolutely loved it😂
I lived in Southern Ontario for 68 years and a year and a half ago moved to Vancouver. For me BC is the most scenic province over all. It's also too expensive for most people here once you get closer to Vancouver. The best thing in my opinion after moving to Vancouver is the fact that a person really doesn't need to own a car. With carshare systems, bikeshare, and an amazing bus, skytrain, and seabus transit system a person can travel anywhere inexpensively and easily.
Tim, I have travelled across Canada numerous times and certainly agree that BC has some beautiful areas (out of the desert areas of Merritt). I do have difficulty with your comment about cars in BC. Vancouver has a great transit system, however it is limited to the GVR (Greater Vancouver Region). It is obvious the government of BC is shafting their province with the surcharge on fuel (paying $1.65 a litre -about $4.50 a US gallon) in the GVR and $1.53 per litre outside the region (probably the most expensive fuel in the country outside remote northern areas and Arctic. If you live outside of the GVR and without a vehicle, you are limited as your walking and cycling distance. There are many remote areas with no public transit and with no car, you are stuck (which SUCKS).
@@murrayfarrow866 absolutely brother. I should have made my comment more clear that this great transit system is only in the Greater Vancouver area. Outside of here yes a person definitely needs their own transportation.
As a retiree in Vancouver I'm thrilled to no longer need my own vehicle and should I want can get a monthly compass card for around $54.00 a month, ... but to live any place else in the province I'd be paying for a car, expensive insurance and as you state the most expensive gas in Canada.
@@murrayfarrow866 I always find it intriguing when people carry on about the price of gas. Do you realize that if you travel 20,000 km per year that $0.12 surcharge in Vancouver amounts to roughly $250? Pretty hard to garner sympathy over a paltry $250 when the price of an average home in Vancouver increased by $137,500 in the last 12 months. Even if you don’t own a home chances are you drop $250 just going out for dinner. Gas is cheap …
@Janitor Queen Gasoline causes obesity. Kind of a stretch there, fella. There is such a thing as being too left wing, you know. Until alternative fuels and/or transportation methods are readily available, gasoline is not a luxury. Anyway, my point was that gasoline is very affordable. NONE of this has anything to do with violence, be it against men, women, children, or people of any race.
Mr. Roy, first thank you for your reply. I can't account what portion of the fuel surcharge goes to the Vancouver, but fuel wasn't a 12 cents a litre different, This summer in Vancouver, the fuel price was .30 a litre more than other parts of Canada, (Calgary, Edmonton and Toronto). Additionally, not everyone get more than 27 miles to the gallon according to your calculations. (hence $250.00). The BC government is charging 30 per litre and the average fuel economy is 20 miles per gallon for an additionally $458. dollars of taxing those who drive.
New home housing in Vancouver is a dream to newcomers to the area. With the average housing cost in the area of $1.3 million , plan on lottery winnings, group living or elevated incomes if you plan to live in the lovely and scenic city of Vancouver. Commercial/investment speculation, the demand and limited amount of land add up to high prices. As beautiful as Vancouver is, I think I'll live outside the area (more affordable) and pay the price when I visit.
I’m from New Brunswick, it’s a great place to live overall and tons of sights to see throughout the whole province!
definitely the most underrated province in my opinion! Unless Nova Scotia is still "underrated"
@@FromHeretoThere yeah it’s underrated here
Drove through there once to get to Nova Scotia I saw 2 towns the rest was forest 😐
I was born there! Plan to go back one day.
@@bylot You have to get off the bloody Trans Canada! If you stay on the highway, you'd think no one lives here. Take my word for it, NB is just as scenic as Nova Scotia. Next time do the Fundy Coastal Drive, or the River Valley Scenic Drive. You'll from an entirely different impression of the "Picture Province".
All depends on how they run the province so far Alberta for work, affordability, education, people nature, one tax, cheapest gas. Thanks I vote for AB as number 1 since 2004 still.
I’ve lived in Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan (as well as two other countries). I’ve also travelled to every province except Newfoundland and Labrador and the territories. All these places are wonderful, but Manitoba is home.
Hello how are you doing,hope you have a marvelous day?
Thanks so much! As someone who was born and raised in Manitoba, seeing that makes me so happy!
What two other countries did you live in?
@@alexthegamer8324 USA and UK
I’ve only lived in 2 provinces, BC and Saskatchewan. I am currently living over seas in Australia though. So that makes up for living in less provinces then lol. Australia is a wonderful country.
Manitoba’s weather is the BEST PART of Manitoba and it’s so pretty, and there is great attractions since this video was made.
I'm Brazilian and Canada enchants me!!! I seems so green! So full of forests and lakes! So natural, clean and beautiful!
Manitoba would be ranked top 3.... its cold? Probably no different than any other province. Rarely snows and is probably the most fun province to be in the winter. So many festivals and outdoor events. It has a NHL team to enjoy. Spring and fall is #1 in manitoba of all in Canada. Most beautiful summers and has the nicest beaches and lakes in Canada. Not 1 province can compete with summer life. So how would you rank it #10??.... they make more Hollywood films in Winnipeg than Toronto/Vancouver. Jobs? Education? Rivals any city in Canada. Thats nonsense what was said in this video. NHL abd CFL players love living here over other cdn cities so that just says it all
@Frozooms its cold every where. You can have more fun there
It has a ton of nature but we are also at nature's mercy. It's cold af and the storms can be really savage out in the prairies. 100km winds, tornados and hail in summer and blizzards in winter. It do take nerve to battle the elements to live here but the nature is top notch. I see black bears, deer and moose on the regular and a lot of eagles and owls.
it's winter 8 months a year
@@mikej238 no its not lol
I used to have a lakehouse in Muskoka Ontario and boy was it beautiful land
The people there were insanely nice too. Normally when travelling, locals have a stigma around Americans but Ontarians were just so respectful and polite it was honestly touching
So good to hear that! You are welcome here anytime!!
Having been all around this great big beautiful country, while I love Quebec because it is like a cheap and easily convenient flight to Western Europe, I'd say that the Maritimes are the hidden gem and heart of Canada.
And after having seen all of Canada, I always felt that if I was Prime Minister, I would make it a law that every citizen would have a free VIA train ticket, good for the rest of their life, to see the entire country. At least once.
Québec doesn’t look like Europe haha, from someone living in France.
@@augth Quebec City definitely resembles it.
@@augth ils disent juste ça à cause du français.....
Now that is a great idea ! I totally agree. One free pass for every province and territory !
@@augth
Quebec Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia / Expedia
ua-cam.com/video/XXhmblzSAeU/v-deo.html
Even the worst province in Canada is still better than most other countries in the world. Love being Canadian and from Quebec!
The most corrupt province in Canada you forgot to mention.
Should have mentioned Quebec City, that place is a gem. Oldest wall city in north America. So much history and beauty
I’ve moved to quebec some month ago it really is a gem
Moved here a few months ago as well. I don't regret it at all. The people and the city are amazing
Thank you! Born and still live here, such a beautiful place that we are proud of (without becoming patriotic Over it lol)
@@zors5188 Be patriotic, my hometown is Ottawa and I am proud of it! And Quebec city is a beautiful city with a rich vibrant history, I have always wanted to visit during Jean Baptise day. Any suggestions of unusual tourist sites in Quebec city ? Currently living in rural Quebec.
@@CountryLifestyle2023 unusual? Hmmm check out the musée de la civilisation maybe? Some really cool stuff there. Or simply walk the streets around the château Frontenac! Enjoy ^^
I was born & raised in northwestern Ontario and I absolutely love it there! But 30 years later my wife and I moved to Saskatchewan and I've grown to love it here too but Ontario will always be home
"Home is where the rump rests." - Pumbaa, Lion King
I go up to PA National Park when feeling homesick. It’s a beautiful place. Although being in SK, I’m sure you’ve been.
i love Canada! from Winnipeg to Ontario to Montreal! the most beautiful thing is the people!
passive aggressive cancel culture....polite but not friendly.
@@SharkMinnow you have not seen eastern asian, much much much worse
I've lived 2 years in Toronto. Plusses, it's all there, sports, theatre, music, amazing restaurants. Negatives I found the people difficult to get to know, I usually felt I wasn't breathing fast enough, and no mountains. I've lived 10 years in Calgary. Plusses, people are incredibly open and friendly, mountains, energetic without being frenetic, affordable. Minuses, very cyclic economy, everything always under construction with little sense of history or culture. I was born and raised in Victoria and returned here 34 years ago. Plusses, ocean and mountains, sense of history, laid back and friendly, amazing climate. Minuses, completely unaffordable (if I hadn't bought my house over 30 years ago I couldn't afford it today). Enjoyed them all but wouldn't voluntarily leave Victoria.
Been to every province, lived in Quebec, New Brunswick, Alberts and BC (My home province and current residence) but my favorite was actually PEI. It's stunning to me.
10. Manitoba (2:32) Population: 1,382,904
9. Newfoundland and Labrador (3:49) Population: 520,286
8. Prince Edward Island (5:09) Population: 160,536
7. New Brunswick (6:29) Population: 783,721
6. Saskatchewan (7:46) Population: 1,179, 906
5. Nova Scotia (9:00) Population: 982,326
4. British Columbia (10:14) Population 5,174,724
3. Ontario (11:25) Population 14,789,778
2. Alberta (12:51) Population 4,444,277
1. Quebec (14:11) Population 8,585,523
Newfoundland is great it should have been higher, 100% should be ranked higher.
You Newfies are crazy. I live in Vancouver also. Well, a little further east; won't say the particular city : )
Ging bang laundry Fing Wing laundry or Arr Lee laundry
@@ballaking1000no balls
@@queentina1160 Nope, none. That makes yours bigger.
what do you think are the best in terms of warmness ? i hate cold lol
I know you from the channel called: Mango tango and i know you won't see this but you have made my childhood, you have always been there when i was sad, and i just have to say thank you for all of the memories.
I live I'm Alberta and am very satisfied with my home and family, I would never want to leave canada.
As someone from BC I think we ended up pretty much where I expected. It was also fun to recognize all the the random clips from the province!
I don't think Ontario should be ahead of BC, all of my neighbours here came from Ontario XD
Hello. Could you confirm all these jobs positions in Canada for foreign people are real?
I'm going on vacation to quebec in July can't wait!! 😊
As a Quebecer, I would say British Columbia and Alberta are definitely the best provinces for the landscape, probably because it's way more impressive than Quebec (although Gaspésie mountains near the coast are nice). Still, I'm honoured to be in first place.
The variety of terrain in BC is mind boggling. I love the Gulf Islands.
I agree with you , I would rank Alberta 🥇
@@rps1689 ... When there it's not an environnemental disaster.... Mega rains ⛈️ mega fires 🔥. Poor British-Columbia.
I’ve been to Quebec City, Montreal and have driven through to Nova Scotia. I think Quebec is very beautiful. I love the older mountain range, and Quebec City is charming. Carnival is so fun!
@@criticRN yeah Quebec is very nice in general with the cities and the mountains of Charlevoix for example but once you get used to it, you kind of forget about it and you want to see more diversity like in Alberta and British Columbia. When I went there, I was absolutely flabbergasted when I saw the landscapes
I am from NYC and I always wanted to visit the Maritimes since I was in 3rd grade in 1987-88 when I saw them on a Atlas that I had ordered. In 2006 I got to fulfill that dream. I started in Halifax and I toured Cape Breton Island, Antigonish, the Acadian country and the Cabot Trial.
My tour guide a warm friendly former Lieutenant in the Canadian Army made the trip for me! We went to PEI and rode bikes on beautiful trials. We crossed the Confederation bridge stepped foot on New Brunswick and crossed right back to Halifax.
I'm From Canada and I always wanted to visit Disneyland but I'm not Rich 😝
@@miguelneet3438 lol Believe it or not it was a budget trip. I stayed at a hostel everywhere I went and the tour I paid for was only $200. NYC is only an hour and twenty minutes from Halifax hence the cheap flight.
oh this sounds like a love story to me lol .. Did u and your guide end up together ?
I love that you stepped foot on New Brunswick and headed right back to Halifax. Lol. If you ever make your way back again try hiking mount Carleton(the highest point in the Atlantic provinces)It is amazing and you would not be disappointed or visit some of our beautiful waterfalls!
Fredericton nicest city in Canada. Has a river in middle of the city which connects to many lakes, very clean and one of the warmest cities in Canada in the summer!!
I am pleasantly surprised that you place Quebec in first position without doing "Quebec bashing" thank you! I have traveled to New Brunswick a few times and I find Acadians to be the most welcoming people in the world.
I was in Quebec for a few months a couple years ago. I fell in love. I cried when I had to leave.
same here
There are Acadian communities in NS as well! I have Acadian ancestry on both sides of my family, with my mom coming from NB and my dad coming from a small island off of Cape Breton.
Quebec city instead of Mtl, I prefere Mtl in many ways, people are more open mind than Quebec City, it was more easy to make friends, make a girlfriend or boyfriend too or whatever you like. Lol
Beautifully elaborated💫
I like that when they say "Ontario has it all", they show a photo of Tobermory on the Isle of Mull in Scotland! 11:28
Lol
Interesting and entertaining to see this from an outsider’s perspective. I’ve been to every province, and they all have a lot to offer, but you barely touched on one vital metric: Interprovincial Migration. Of course there are always people moving from one province to another for work, marriage, etc.; for example, lots of people move to Alberta to work, when it’s booming, but one province consistently enjoys the highest Net interprovincial immigration rate: British Columbia. That’s a pretty strong indicator that B.C. is where Canadians most Want to live; which, of course, is exactly why our property values are so insanely high!
Yes, it's nice. I live in Victoria. However housing is grotesquely expensive. Must have been nice to have beeen born in the 50's and just kind of cake-walked into a house here.
@@supermash1 I don't think anyone ever "cake-walked" into buying a house here. My parents worked damn hard for what they got, as did their parents; the difference is home ownership used to be attainable for most hard working people, but now it's getting less and less attainable for those who don't have high incomes.
@@timberwolfdtproductions3890 Let me put it this way Timberwolf. A great uncle of mine moved to Canada (Niagara region) from Croatia. He was a nightwatchman on construction sites and could barely speak english. He owned a house - modest but he owned a house. When I moved to Vancouver I remember a barber telling me about the house he owned in Kitsilano. I asked "How did you own a house in Kitsilano", he said "Anyone could at that time". Or the builder here in Victoria I struck up a conversation with. He used to buy old houses to renovate and re-sell, When I asked where he got the money he said "The bank, they were cheap". Or the lonely old man I recently struck up a sidewalk conversation with who told me he worked at a truck stop when he bought his house here in Oak Bay for $8k. He said the lot is now worth more than 800k (probably over a million...).
So that's what I mean.
I am a highly skilled man who has been working hard for 35 years in the architectural field and live in a small apartment because it's all I can afford.
That's what Canada is now.
Think about that and ask yourself what people like myself think of Canada. Think of what young people think of Canada when they are paying a vast slice of their income to RENT small apartments.
You are not being honest with yourself. Do the research and look into real home ownership costs compared to incomes over time.
Do it and get back to me here.
A little (recent) history lesson. British Columbia used to be fairly affordable, including Vancouver. But then the city decided to host Expo ‘86 as a way to put itself on the map. And did it ever. As people learned about the city and province, its beautiful scenery, and its mild climate, people flocked to the region. As the main city on the west coast, and therefore a gateway to nations in the Pacific Rim, it attracted immigrants from Asia, most notably affluent Hong Kong residents who wanted to leave before the British colony was handed back to China in 1997. Then in 2010, the city put itself on the map again when it hosted the Winter Olympics. All these factors drove up the demand for real estate, and with little new construction, prices skyrocketed. Vancouver is the most expensive, but pretty well all of the lower mainland has become pricey. I have heard that even rental housing is hard to find in some places. If it weren’t so crazy expensive and difficult to find a place to live, BC would be the best province.
@@irkhanbasc History lesson? I was born, raised, and have lived almost 59 years here. I am intimately aware of our history. Since judging the "best" of just about anything is highly subjective, it seems to me the most objective metric in this example is desirability. Clearly if B.C. consistently has Canada's highest net immigration, despite the cost of living, it's the most desirable.
New Brunswick; the climate is fairly moderate, lots of hills lakes and rivers, the housing is reasonable, and the forests are beautiful. And not crowded with too many people. Canada's best kept secret. But really all of Canada is beautiful.
Shhhh....we don't want everyone to know and come a ruin it
In quebec its a pain
Biggest issue is that it's basically owned by one corporation
Manitoulin Island. Ontario Canada 🇨🇦
@@C1azed I don't mind people getting rich as long as they are creating many thousands of good paying jobs. I despise stock market insiders and hedge fund managers who create wealth for themselves and jobs for no one.
I live in Quebec and was surprised to see it ranked number one!
Every place has its beauty. Lived in Ontario until I retired. I then packed my bags and moved to Vancouver island. Proud and grateful to be a Canadian. Cheers everyone🎉
true
After 12 years living in Quebec, I can only agree this province is probably the best one to live in, especially if you speak French. The language, the culture, the safety, the architecture (especially Québec City and Montréal but elsewhere too), the natural landscapes (Charlevoix, Gaspésie, Mauricie, Saguenay, Estrie...), the St-Laurence river, the great location in Northeastern Canada bordering 4 US states (New York State, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine - insert a hiker's bias here), the relatively low-cost of higher-education and excellent universities...In spite of the downsides that anyone could point out, it is still a great place to live and raise a family.
You Got That Right. Isn't Quebec City the most beautiful city in Canada?
If you live in Quebec you’re going to be hated by every other Canadian
@@kavenbourgonje8428 Who cares? People love to hate on what they can’t understand, have or be. So be it, a small price to pay to live in a beautiful province like ours. 😌
@@kavenbourgonje8428 I can't sleep at night knowing that..
@@mgtowp.l.7756 I know sometimes I have trouble sleeping knowing thatEspecially when I live in English community I could barely go to school come back
Every Province in Canada is rich in quality of people and resources unrivaled in the World.
Lol OK buddy you’ve probably never left the country
@@jackpeck2494 I think I have been around enough to know, yes! After 70 years of of living and traveling across Canada and comparing it to other countries in the world, I would definitely say it's the place to raise your family. But don't take my word for it buddy Jack. According to the 2021 Best Countries Report, Canada is the No. 1 Country in the World. Look it up and learn. Of course if you are a true Canuk, I wouldn't have to explain this to you, would I? lol
@@jimroberts4828 LOL buddy once again I’ve grew up in Canada but I’ve left the country to you say it’s unrivalled that is a fucking joke just because one website says it is does it mean it is buddy I live in Ontario Canada and I can tell you right now it is not unrivalled there are countries that are better than us and of course there are Countries that we are better than to but we are not unrivalled
@@jackpeck2494 As I said, in Canada we have free speech and you are entitled to your opinion but I don't agree with you. Over and Out!
@@jimroberts4828 Do we have free-speech though not really see you said you were 70 well you should take a look at the new free speech laws in Canada
Visited Quebec in September. Absolutely loved Montreal and Quebec City.
Thoroughly enjoyed watching this, I’ve been to 5 of our provinces and plan on visiting the rest. We live in such a beautiful and diverse country.
Every province has its pluses and minuses. However, one thing I like about much of Alberta is the dry climate. Much of Alberta is on the High Plains, and has a semi-arid climate. A semi-arid climate is actually a really nice positive aspect of Alberta compared to the other provinces, especially compared to the very depressing wet and cloudy weather in portions of BC and much of Atlantic Canada.
One warning about the Prairie Provinces, particularly Manitoba and Saskatchewan. You can get severe weather out there. Now that shouldn’t discourage you from living there. Everyplace has its risks of natural disasters. However, the storms in that part of Canada can get downright dangerous and scary!
Alberta probably has the craziest weather out of any of the provinces
If you're in Sask or Manitoba you need to be worried about the natives, not the weather. Lol
Lived on the Lower Mainland of B.C winter of 72. Never been so cold in all my life. Rain,rain, rain and then hard rain. No sun. I was ready to slash up by February. Give me a dry prairie winter anytime.
@@allanlavallee7171 within the last week it has been both -20 as a high and 0 as a high
@@TheEstowrath that's a horrible thing to say if you took the time to get to know them they are GREAT people just a few bad apples like all groups have
Please do a top 10 best canadian cities. Also, I would love to see best australian territories/cities too! Excellent video nevertheless.
Thanks! And hopefully the video does well and more people wanna see other videos on Canada / Australia!
Plz to New Zealand, too!
@@cbhorxo yes NZ too!
My stepson works in Tuk NWT, and he gets his food and lodging paid for, and gets to fly back to Alberta for a break every few weeks. He really likes it. In the winter they're only allowed to stay outside for a certain amount of time, and then go inside to warm up for awhile.
BC and Ontario both struggle with too many foreign home buyers, that make already high priced housing market, absolutely ridiculous. If this trend continues I guess we'll all be moving up to the territories.
Nearly all of BC's foreign real estate ownership is concentrated in the Metro Vancouver area and nearby areas.
GTA is way too crowded rn
@@mooseboi7835 huh??
@@wokk9543 I meant the greater Toronto area but I had poor context sorry
That is the new money-laundering scheme. It's all over the globe
Thank you so much for the video! I've looked forward to this one for a long time!
Hope you enjoyed!
@@FromHeretoThere do you know what happened to Blackichan?
Great video! love it.
Hi from Newfoundland! "Small town feel" really hits the mark. Despite living 3 hours from st.johns my area was hit hard by "snowmageddon" last year (probably would have helped if I had put my snow blower in my house before the storm started, instead of leaving it out in the shed - took 2 hours to dig out the shed).
Another Newfie Friend :D
Stephenville here
@@canadaeast8358 BRO WAIT Same!
Carbonear here. Living in rural N.S. for the last four decades. But Carbonear is always where my heart is.
It would be so cool if you live in Little Burnt Bay
I was born in Ontario, Moved to Manitoba when I was 16, also lived in Alberta and Saskatchewan. As a long haul trucker I've been to Newfoundland to Vancouver. Canada does have many beautiful parts but I chose Manitoba over them all until I retire to Thailand.
I work at a mine in Ontario and just met a long haul trucker who bought a house in Thailand and is retiring soon, he loves it
I’m a trucker in the uk and planning to move to Canada factoring highest pay and cost of living what will you recommend?
Saskatchewan here. The crime rate thing is really overblown. I've lived here for 47 of 49 years (2 in Calgary) and never been the victim of ANY crime in any Sask city I've lived in. Yep, it's cold in winter and hot as hell in summer, but like you said, cheap to live and we get paid well. There also isn't any such thing as an hour commute, unless you live at the lake. You also are missing about 2/3 of the province that is covered in lakes and forest if all you focus on is the areas around Regina and Saskatoon. There's a reason the campgrounds here are full of Albertans and every other province in the summer...
Alberta is very good. Born in BC, lot's of great nature but is unaffordable and almost impossible to have a home remotely close to Vancouver but in Alberta you can buy a home right in one of it's cities for a decent price oil will always be needed at least for lubrication of vehicles and farm ware.
We tried to move to Ottawa but we couldn’t leave Quebec. It’s our home and we got homesick fast. Montreal is a fun city and the restaurants are the best. Sure the taxes are high but we have great affordable daycare systems, great restaurants and overall great homes. All of Canada is great my heart will always be in Quebec
Dido and I’m living in NYC and I like it now but Montreal is home
Ottawa suuuuuucks
How I wish I would find a way to Canada, I don't mind where I just need that greener pasture.. Life here in Kenya is way to hard. I can't even describe it... May God help me for real
Assurance Maladie is in the toilet, however.
except for the education system 💀
Probably the best put together, informative, and visually pleasing video I have seen about Canada. Your criteria and rankings seems to make sense, and pretty accurate from most accounts. Nice work!
The way you transitioned between photos of Edmonton using the tower as an anchor was cool
Born In Saskatchewan. Have lived in the 3 most western Provinces nearly all my life ( New Brunswick being the exception). Currently living In Alberta. I have been to nearly all the provinces. with the exception of Newfoundland. But I am hoping to rectifying that before I pass on. If I had to choose some other then Alberta to live in. Nova Scotia, (Cape Breton and or Halifax) Quebec ( old QC and anywhere on the Gaspe) Ontario ( Kingston or the Niagara area) would be all high considerations
I live In the state of Rhode Island. I know all of those Canadian Provinces and Territories (even though I have not been to Canada). This is a helpful video for me to decide which province I should move to.
Saskatchewan the whole way dude 🤣 Best province, he's lying 😁
I used to live in RI and moved to Montreal for 5 years (I live in CA now). I loved it there! One of my favorite cities on the "island" (North America).
@Canada-Germany … it’s not so easy to answer. I’m from Germany and I live in BC now for a bit over 12 years. If I would move here in Canada I would stay in BC ( but move to a warmer place like Vancouver Island or the Okanagan ) or if not stay in BC I would move the Maritime provinces.
Quebec City is my favourite city in North America! (that I've been to so far)
Me too
I always love hearing people saying great things about my city
I love Quebec City and I also love Montreal. Both are beautiful cities.
@Merle J. Stadnyk I'm a minority but I would still visit Alberta. but I do agree that Quebec is great. although I have a feeling some Albertans won't like a Californian there, they might have the same mentality as Idaho or Montana
@@mooseboi7835 it’s a Wal Mart version of Texas. At least the people’s mentality, the province itself isn’t bad…
The thing about Ontario is there are two vastly different regions those being Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario, two different peoples, lifestyles and cultures. Housing is cheaper in the north then the south.. throwing northern Ontario's housing market with southern Ontario's is misleading. Depending where in northern Ontario houses can go from $80,000 - $370,000 unlike in southern Ontario where I'm sure it's above $500,000 to a million in most places. Northern Ontario may not have many cities like southern Ontario, but I prefer the laid back lifestyle, lakefront properties, nature not too far out of a drive, the scenery.. etc
I've in the Cabot trail and it is absolutely gorgeous. Definitely recommend
It's always so cool to me when someone on the internet mentions Nova Scotia, especially when one of the villages you mentioned is less than 30 minutes from my house. I once saw a video of the tides taken not 5 minutes from my house with 500k views and it amazed me for some reason.
Haha Nova Scotia definitely feels like my home away from home. Kinda like an idealized, cooler version of where I grew up
Hey I’m watching these videos because I’m moving to Canada soon hope we can we social media friends
I live in NS so I might be biased but I think Nova Scotia is a hidden gem. So many beautiful places here.
I’m from Ontario, but I’ve been working outside of the country for over 4 years now. If I ever move to a different province, my top choices would be Alberta and British Columbia. Other possibilities would be Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, and Quebec.
Absolutely Brilliant, You had us rolling with laugher. We watched, prepared to defend, what will they say about our country, then you totally disarmed us.
Well done
Cheers from Toronto
Ontario is so based and awesome tbh!! I am from Detroit and when I used to live in Detroit (I live in Houston now), I went to Toronto a lot growing up since I have close family there (I am South Asian so that explains it lol. I also went to New York a lot for that reason too but aint been to London or the rest of England yet tho). Honestly the similarities that Toronto has to my hometown and also another GOATed Great Lakes city like Chicago really makes cities like Toronto have a special place in my heart!! It is like a second home to me due to the amazing memories I have just like how Chicago is!! Honestly Toronto is my second favorite city in North America right behind New York City and slightly ahead of Chicago and I really am hoping of moving back to that region of North America one day tbh!!! I miss it so much
Thanks for good information.
As a bilingual Canadian I agree with this ranking. I live in Northeastern Ontario (3rd on the list) but the Quebec border is only a ten minute drive away (1st on the list). I absolutely love this area
Which city do you like in?
@@antonboludo8886 a place called Temiskaming Shores but it's just a bunch of small towns. On paper it says we're a city but it's very rural and spread out.
@@jizzaymz This sounds great. I am from Québec. It sounds like it is the same region as Abitibi-Témiscamingue.
@@antonboludo8886 ce n'est pas loin. Témiscamingue est environ une heure d'ici.
@@jizzaymz C'est essentiellement la même région. Un peu comme Outaouais/Ottawa.
I live in Saskatchewan and I can confirm that the description here is true. I genuinely love it here, it's not very populated, but that's what I love about it. I'm in Regina, so we don't have too much crime here. The crime rate of this province is this high mostly because of North Battleford. But Saskatoon and Regina are rather convenient.
I had to work in Regina for 8 months and found the crime rate to be lower than what I expected. It seems to vary depending on where you are in the city. Luckily I lived in a good part of the city as seen very little crime. In comparison, I lived in bad area of Edmonton for a few years where I seen quite a bit more crime.
Saskatoon was nice as well in the 90s. Headed back there after 25 years in Ontario it appears.
Born and raised in Québec here! I love the Maritimes, especially New-Brunswick which is probably the only other province that makes me feel at home.
So u should at least know two languages
France and English
Im from Ontario and it's pretty crazy especially right now..when i went to Montreal for a week i loved it!..i loved BC, Nova Scotia and PEI are also beautiful because there's nothing like the scenery in those spots ❤
@@timmycheung314 I’m perfectly bilingual. :)
We were just in New Brunswick (road trip from Toronto to Halifax and back).
We visited Moncton, Fredericton and Saint John. While the drive was scenic with the fall colors, the cities and towns left much to be desired for us. Can you share what you enjoyed about the province, maybe we missed something?
Cool, I'm from NS, but went to McGill for grad school, and I've got family on the West Island.
Canada is a very beautiful, polite and organized country. I had the opportunity to study in Toronto (2009/2010), province of Ontario. And visit some provinces and cities. However, its population (about 37,000,000) is disproportionate to its area (9,984,000 km²), which ends up harming its development a little. Hugs from Brazil.
Keep in mind that most of the country is very difficult to live in, and difficult to even get to.
That is true, Majority of our population lives close to the border with the US but even still its difficult to maintain and grow so many small towns and such with how spread out they are from the main cities.
Indeed the country is organized…I had opportunity to study in Alberta at SAIT 2014/2016. Visited BC and Saskatchuen.
Love Canada- very beautiful country. Great educational video!
I’m sad to see Manitoba here spoken of so sadly. I love living here. Yes there are mosquitos in the summer, and extreme weather. The home values make the province very very livable. Those working in trades make more and spend less than those in many provinces (and states). Winnipeg has a great art scene, lots of sports, etc. yes, we do have a high homeless & jobless rate. We also have a very high Native American rate, which has its own historical struggles.
I would love to see the northern part of this province. The untouched land. There is no denying though the native population has a huge influence.
They speak of almost every province here badly that it’s actually a joke at this point. This dude went out of the way to categorize some good provinces as decent or shit meanwhile putting the most notoriously hated province in Canada at the number 1 spot. I’m from Newfoundland and the way they described us and other good provinces out there is honestly insulting. That’s just my opinion though.
@@OpalyzedYT true they did speak of so many provinces very negatively and then put quebec and alberta in the top 2 spots when they're the most hated by most of the country
Just because they are "hated" doesn't mean they are not the best places to live. That's a weird way to gauge best and worse provinces. He ranks them on hard statistics like livability, quality of life, job pay, unemployment , crime, real estate and rent costs, city life, natural beauty etc.... Calgary was literally ranked the 4th best city in the world to live. And Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver also made the top 15 list. I've lived in the Maritimes and while they are beautiful provinces they have way more issues than Quebec or Alberta where I also lived for a few years. Quebec might not be liked by most of the country, but its economy is booming, Montreal and Quebec city are some of the safest, most beautiful and historic cities in the country, and its a huge province with many awesome small towns. I dont know if I would rank it first, but its certainly top 3 for me
I was so glad that my parents transferred jobs from Winnipeg to Vancouver in 1980. All my famil and friends who unfortunately had to remain in the Peg? Dead,Junkies,gangsters,drunks in Jail… Kidscan become what they are surrounded by. Winnipeg is chalk full of Losers and underachiever types unfortunately
Moved to New Brunswick from Ontario 6 years ago and no regrets! I have 10 times more here than I did living in the GTA. Way more affordable and my wife and I always find something to do. So many scenic places and lots of places to shop. Great people too...
From where I live:
30 minutes to Nova Scotia
45 minutes to PEI
2.5 hours to the United States border
4 hours to Quebec
It's been fantastic!! 👍
which city of nb?
@@shekaniarusselino9291 Moncton. They call it the Hub City because it's in the middle of everything. The 2nd fastest growing city in Canada right now. Not too big and not too small. Moncton also has the 2nd largest Costco in Canada.
Joining you soon 🙏
@@folakeolaoye5983 Right on!! Great decision. 👍
Lovely, humorous well-edited video - well done....
Newfoundland should be ranked much higher! The culture there is so unique and resembles Ireland is so many ways (St. John’s is one of the oldest cities in the continent). The landscape is so diverse and scenic and largely untouched my humans. From the more mountainous areas on the west coast (like Gros Morne, which houses rare geological sites, making it a World Heritage Site) to the East coast where icebergs, whales, and puffins are common sites, NL is incredibly diverse
Do u stay there?
No jobs worst taxes why does every newfie move to Alberta
I'm from newfoundland and i agree.
I'm from ireland and would love to move to canada, would you recommend newfoundland for an Irish person like myself?
@@MWBlueNoodles if you like being jobless and poor its great. Alberta Saskatchewan maybe BC if you find a good job anything east of Manitoba is a welfare state
I visited New Brunswick in high school as part of an exchange program.
I STILL, 40+ years later have fond memories of the wonderful scenery and people.
You'd be disappointed now.
Still wonderful people here!
I’m from Quebec, and I love Ontario. I also love love love Nova Scotia, and planing of retirement in Halifax
Im sure you would make a great addition to our City!
I’ve really enjoyed your presentation! Your show always gives me a laugh too!
Love Québec and every day I spend outside of it I wish I was back in it. Ranking approved.
I'm a native English speaker who moved from another province to Quebec 20 years ago... my French is still not perfect but my family and I are quite happy here :-)
I love BC! Skiing Whistler-Blackcomb for six days was like a fantasy. I had to stop constantly to gaze at the spectacular scenery (and I lived in Tahoe for years). Vancouver is a fun and friendly city...Victoria is so charming....like the backdrop for a rom com.
Alberta is also staggeringly gorgeous. I remember visiting Banff many years ago and fell in love with the place. And Buchart Gardens was amazing.
As a Victorian, I love bc too.
Thank you for the kind words. I belong to a number of Facebook World Nature and Travel Groups and when-ever a picture is posted of Alberta or British Columbia, which is quite frequent, the number of comments like yours from the millions of Americans who have vacationed here over the past 50 years are very numerous and very appreciated by us. If you like us and respect us, as most do, you are always welcome.
@@davidmarshall718 I would LOVE to move to Canada. I plan to move back to Washington just to be closer to BC. Canadians are such nice people...is that because living in such a spectacular country creates so much joy?
@@chronicallyboredenby you are soooo fortunate!
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Spent quality time in Western Canada last century.
Canada is a beautiful country and every place has it's perks and negative aspects. Have seen much of the eastern side of Canada and loved every place. Maybe one day I will be able to see the western side. Boy is this country big. Lived in Europe for a few years and visited so much places in so many countries where I have done pretty much the same distance in Canada and did not see half of the country yet.
That's the beauty of living in Canada - you have a variety of choices to choose from. Wide open sunshine, or mountains, or large city life, etc. Choose what you like - lots of options. Truthfully, even the last provinces on this list here are great to live in.
I live 8 hours away from St. John’s Newfoundland and we get pretty good weather for the most part. Sure we get tons of snow in the winter but we don’t get fog everyday our summers are actually really nice. This guy probably searched up some info on St. John’s and thinks the whole island is like that.. I’ve been in every province and love them all Canada is the best country in the world and I’m proud to call it home
You’re from either Corner Brook or Stephenville or somewhere in the vicinity …lots of nice weather around those parts… I grew up half an hour from St John’s… everyday was a cointoss for which season you’d get….. Loved it though and will retire there soon
@@nobodyspecial6436 yup stephenville but I find St. John’s nice as well I love it anywhere in Newfoundland actually no matter where I am on the island I feel home
I live in Ontario, and I like it here, but Newfoundland is definitely my favourite part of Canada and St. John's is my favourite city. Also, the west coast of Newfoundland (Gros Morne Park) is stunningly beautiful.
Being from the Island i’m kinda partial to where i grew up as my favourite place but in terms of beautiful scenery(from the hi-way anyway) nothing beats the Codroy Valley
@@nobodyspecial6436 yes it’s beautiful out there