Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Courting the colours...

Bras d' Or Lake from Alexander Graham Bell Museum

From Cape Breton to Corner Brook...

The last few weeks, which have included the long Thanksgiving weekend without a Villages sale, have seen us on the road...chasing the fall colours and soaking in as much culture and landscape as possible.  We thought the colours had gone missing.  People were speculating...perhaps the fall had been too warm, perhaps there had been too much rain...  And then, as we were leaving Cape Breton, around Baddeck (the home of Sir Alexander Graham Bell), it happened...as if overnight...everywhere a blaze of glory. 

                               

Our Cape Breton adventure took us first to the Fortress of Louisbourg, a national historic site on the southeastern tip of Cape Breton.  Between 1960-1985 the gov't of Canada poured money into what is purported to be the largest reconstruction project in N. America. Now we can visit this amazing 18th century French colonial outpost, exactly as it was, and enter into it's daily life.   




weight-operated rotiserrie...mmm

That evening we took in a Celtic Colours concert in Sydney on the Esplanade.  The 15th annual festival of traditional celtic music runs for a week and has venues throughout Cape Breton.  Our "Taste of the Festival" was a delightful eclectic potpourri from fiddlin' to singin'...


fiddle in front of Joan Harris Pavilion, Sydney

The next day, with great anticipation, we entered the Cabot Trail...one of the most scenic drives in the world according to our tour-book, and there's not much more to be said!






We spent our last night in Beddeck, which sits at the southern entrance to Cabot Trail, ate our first complete lobster dinner with a pail of mussels! and in the morning toured the fascinating Graham Bell Museum before heading back to Petitcodiac.  This was to be a very quick
turnover.  By noon the next day we were on the road again, truck loaded heavy with merchandise for our next big sale.  So...back to North Sydney, about 550 kms... to catch the overnight ferry to Port aux Basque. We were off to Newfoundland and Labrador for the very first time and Corner Brook was to be our biggest sale yet!

pulling in to Port aux Basque harbour at sunrise

We had arranged for an extra day with Brian Elliot, our director, so after arriving at our host family's place, we parked our truck, rented a vehicle and headed into Gros Morne park (voluntary service isn't so bad, is it?).  Of course, this is mid October, and past tourist season, so we found the Discovery Centre closed and the tour boat at Western Brook Pond no longer running.  But the geological wonder of Tablelands, a world heritage site for it's illustration of plate tectonics, was there for us to explore and the coastal fishing villages were quaint and wonderful. 


cod hung to dry

 a too windy day!
The moose evaded us... although we glimpsed a small herd of elk from a distance.  We were able to drive to the northern tip of Gros Morne, Cow Head, but then needed to rush back to Corner Brook to set up for what turned out to be a $34,000 sale.




sale at Cathedral of St. John the Evangel

Today is October 25, we have six sales under our belts with six to go.  We are now four volunteer couples, although one is leaving next week, and the schedule is getting more hectic.  This coming  weekend there will be four sales happening in three Atlantic provinces. 

Next...Gaspe!




Thursday, 6 October 2011

Come along to Nova Scotia...


Late August...as we drove along the southern shore of the St. Lawrence wending our way to New Brunswick, we were fascinated that every little town we drove through was named after a saint... and featured a two-spired white Catholic church.


Now... two weeks ago, Dan and I had a weekend off and we headed off to Nova Scotia for three wonderful days.  Here too, we drove through a countryside  replete with churches... not Catholic, however... many Anglican and some Baptist, along with a sprinkling of other denominations. 

The churches are rivalled only by the many salt-shaker lighthouses.



Yes, Nova Scotia is "the sea-bound coast"... and.the old sea-faring song that I learned in school so long ago, rang in my ears as we wound our way around the South Shore. 


Our first day, however, was spent in Halifax, and we began with the historic harbour, Canada's gateway to the Atlantic.

The sun was shining brightly as we walked the boardwalk, watching the many sailing vessels moving in and out of the narrows.

One of our goals was to spend some time at Pier 21, Canada`s immigration museum.  Here we were able to search for the documents pertaining to both our parents' immigration from Ukraine to Canada in the mid 1920s.  With help we found them all.  I was particularly delighted to find the passenger list and a photo of Empress of Scotland on which my 21 year old mother, together with her mother and six siblings, sailed from Southampton, England in Sept.1925.  They landed in Quebec, as did Dan's parents, but the Halifax museum now houses all the historical immigration records. Between 1928 and 1971 1.5 million immigrants and service personnel passed through Pier 21.  The immigrant experience became much more real to us.

Above the harbour sits Halifax Citadel, the hilltop fortress of the 1880s, when Halifax was a key British stronghold.  Dan was happy to pose!










We were able to visit the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic (in Halifax on a later date) and the impressive exhibit portraying the great Halifax harbour munitions explosion of 1912, which destroyed the waterfront and several miles into the city of the day.  We also watched the National Geographic's amazing underwater   film of the remains of the Titanic.  Halifax harbour was where hundreds of those who perished washed ashore.

              From Halifax we began exploring the bays and coves of the scenic South Shore.
  

While eating our pasties at Peggy's Cove, we had an engaging encounter with a young woman from Germany (sitting there behind us), who had come, with her three young boys, to experience a year in Canada .

She has rented a house not far from Peggy's Cove, her envious husband  joining them on vacations.  She was very interested in our sales, and indeed showed up in Halifax two weeks later, to see what Ten Thousand Villages had to offer. 


From there the coastal route took us through the picturesque town of Mahone Bay,and then on to Old Town Lunenberg and the dockyard where the Bluenose II is undergoing a major restoration. The Bluenose, depicted on the Canadian dime, won many races in her time (1921-1946) and will be back sailing in 2012.

On our last day we pulled ourselves away from the south coast and headed for Fundy Shore and the famous Annapolis Valley.  Here we were looking for orchards and apples and wineries and were not disappointed. 



So, on this note we fare thee well...


Tomorrow we leave for a three day tour of Cape Breton and Celtic Colours!