Peggy's Cove guardians keep visitors safe at beautiful but deadly N.S. tourist site

Peggy's Cove patroller Japneet Singh blows his whistle at visitors who wander onto the black rocks at Peggy's Cove, N.S., Sept. 6, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cassidy McMackon

PEGGY'S COVE - Japneet Singh, a security patroller at Nova Scotia's famed Peggy's Cove — a longtime treasure of Atlantic Canada’s coastline southwest of Halifax — is no stranger to the perils of the sea.

Singh's summer job is to watch over the black rocks overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, which are routinely slapped violently with salty waves, and covered in slippery algae that can take an unsuspecting visitor by surprise. But despite its dangers, Peggy's Cove, with its red-and-white lighthouse and sprawling granite terrain, attracts roughly 700,000 visitors each year and is one of Canada's most photographed sites.

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