Saturday, August 31, 2013

Shadow Shot Sunday




Shadow Shot Sunday


August 2013 - Mabou Nova Scotia

We drove around Nova Scotia last week and stopped in Mabou to visit the Mother of Sorrows Shrine.




Song-ography



Here's a new fun meme to join! You'll Shoot Your Eye Out rules are:

1.  Would be kinda cool if you would link back to my blog somewhere...ANYWHERE
2.  Would be kinda cool if you "followed" me.  Not to the bathroom or anything creepy...just here in blog-land.
3.  Please link up using your permalink URL.
4.  Photos MAY or MAY NOT be recently taken.  Heck, sometimes you might see a song title and think "I ALREADY have an amaaaaaaazing photograph for that song title!"  No reason you shouldn't use it.  Amazing is amazing regardless of when it's taken, right?
5.  Would be kinda cool if you'd visit some of the other participants and leave a kind word or two.  I'm from Philly, and you KNOW we have a rep for being the kindest and friendliest peeps in the world :)
6.  You may have one photo,  or drop a photo bomb of photos in your link up post.  Just please make sure your photo(s) are an interpretation of the song title for the week. 
7.  Link-up will be available beginning Sunday mornings.
8.  Tell lots, and LOTS of your blogging friends so I don't feel like I'm sitting at the school lunch table all by myself on Sunday morning.  I don't want to be a "Lonesome Loser" and have to post a photo about it.Got it?  Sunday, link up, song titles, photographs that are interpretations, a mash up I'm calling Song-ography, be there...YO.


If I Had A Million Dollars - Bare-Naked Ladies


A song by a group from my home town, Toronto.

A MIllion to do as I wish with...not just the basic requirements. TRAVEL!! Asia, Africa everywhere !! River cruises definitely.
We've sold our house and downsized to a condo, but if money was available perhaps a B&B in Nova Scotia and spend the summer months there?

Yarmouth Nova Scotia August 2013


Or maybe I could have a house like this? Full of Simpson characters, spotted in Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia last week.




If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you a house (I would buy you a house)
If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you furniture for your house
(Maybe a nice chesterfield or an ottoman)
If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you a K-Car (a nice Reliant automobile)
If I Had $1000000 I'd buy your love.

If I Had $1000000
I'd build a tree fort in our yard.
If I Had $1000000
You could help, it wouldn't be that hard.
If I Had $1000000
Maybe we could put put a little tiny fridge in there somewhere
([Talking:] We could just go up there and hang out.
Like open the fridge and stuff, and there'd be foods laid out for us
With little pre-wrapped sausages and things. Mmmmm.
They have pre-wrapped sausages but they don't have pre-wrapped bacon.
Well can you blame them. Yeah)

If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you a fur coat (but not a real fur coat that's cruel)
If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you an exotic pet (Like a llama or an emu)
If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you John Merrick's remains (All them crazy elephant bones)
If I Had $1000000 I'd buy your love

If I Had $1000000
We wouldn't have to walk to the store
If I Had $1000000
We'd take a limousine 'cause it costs more
If I Had $1000000
We wouldn't have to eat Kraft Dinner.
(But we would eat Kraft Dinner. Of course we would, we'd just eat more.
And buy really expensive ketchup with it.
That's right, all the fanciest Dijon Ketchup. Mmmmmm.)

If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you a green dress (but not a real green dress, that's cruel)
If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you some art (a Picasso or a Garfunkel)
If I Had $1000000 (If I Had $1000000)
I'd buy you a monkey (haven't you always wanted a monkey?)
If I Had $1000000 I'd buy your love

If I Had $1000000, If I Had $1000000
If I Had $1000000, If I Had $1000000
I'd be rich.



Scavenger Hunt Sunday

Scavenger Hunt Sunday

I'm joining the Scavenger Hunt Sunday sponsored by Ashley.


The rules are simple:

  1. Anyone can participate.
  2. You’re encouraged to take five new photos this week for the challenge. Creativity is also encouraged!
  3. If you get stumped, you may use one photo from your archive (although I’m not too strict about it – I do my best to take fresh shots).
  4. Link up here on Sunday (or Tuesday at the latest) – you can use the button above.
  5. Leave comments for at least five entries around yours (with so many new participants each week, it’s the only way I know to be inclusive
  6. Have fun!

  1. Down
  2. Shadow
  3. Flow
  4. Tip
  5. Beyond


We've been in Nova Scotia for the last week so I will try to match these words to our trip...

DOWN - my husband took this from the top of the Gilbert Cove Lighthouse looking DOWN.

SHADOW -  Halifax




FLOW - Mahone Bay



TIP - Gilbert Cove Lighthouse near Digby Nova Scotia. Lighthouses sit on the tip of the land to warn sailors.




BEYOND - Gilbert Cove - I wonder what is beyond?



inSPIREd Sunday


We were in Nova Scotia this week, driving around.
August 2013 - Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia



An iconic Nova Scotian photo is of the three churches in Mahone Bay.


The view across the harbour is of three prominent churches: St James' Anglican; St John's Evangelical Lutheran; and Trinity United. They need to cut some of the trees!
It was slightly overcast so we didn't get the reflections I was hoping for.











Nova Scotia Ramblings Day 1-3

August 2013 - Nova Scotia



We arrived home last night and I will recap our trip. I will highlight some items of interest in future posts.

Map shows our highlighted itinerary for the first three days.
Friday August 23, 2013


We set our (newish never used) alarm clock for 4AM but it went off at 3AM so we only had a few hours sleep in preparation for our 6:30 AM flight into Halifax on Friday morning (August 23). The pilot wasn't sure if we could land due to fog but we did, in fact, we were on the ground before we even knew it.

We picked up our rental car and headed out, it wasn't raining but was overcast.

 



Our plan was to head towards Peggy's Cove and Lunenburg.

We stopped at the Swissair memorial for flight 111 which had left JFK airport in New York headed for Geneva Switzerland on September 2, 1998 when it crashed off the shores of Nova Scotia killing all 229 people aboard.

Unfortunately it started to absolutely pour as we headed out.





We drove on to Peggy's Cove where we had been in 1990 after a couple of photo stops.





Time for lunch...after getting up at 4AM for our flight, hubby decided to have breakfast and I had seafood chowder with a biscuit.


Back on the road...

Mahone Bay - the image of the three churches is famous. I will highlight the churches in an inSPIREd Sunday post.

Lunenburg








Time to get back on the road and find a place to spend the night. Our first choice was possibly Liverpool but after driving through we decided to keep going to Shelbourne. Shelbourne had their Pirate Rendezvous so most rooms were taken.


Back on the road and made Yarmouth our evening stop at the Rodd Grand Yarmouth, a local hotel chain. The hotel is dated and very tired but service was very hospitable. You won't find the typical national chains as you tour the small towns of Nova Scotia.




We decided to eat in the hotel as there didn't seem to be many places in town, a trend that continued all week.

The restaurant, labelled as Gale's Eatery Restaurant looked more like a cafe, was too well lit and the tables were already set for breakfast complete with coffee mugs.

Our server was delightful if inexperienced. I ordered the hot lobster roll and was appalled when I received it. I have never sent something back as inedible but it was a few pieces of lobster in a thick gooey gluey cheese sauce. I then ordered the scallops and baked potato which was good.

Don't worry our food after this was all great.


Saturday August 24

Awoke to a sunny bright morning and headed to the local "Timmies" for breakfast located in an old railway station.

 


When the old Dominion Atlantic Railway station was torn down a replica of the building was erected and now houses a Wendy’s and a Tim Horton’s. There are replicas of the old lamps hanging on the wall as well.


We then took a tour of the town.


At the Lost to the Sea memorial.



The year 1879 was a disastrous one for Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada, with no fewer than 31 vessels lost along with 106 persons. The ships lost were among the best of the Yarmouth fleet, some carrying valuable cargoes, while the loss of life left 26 widows and 99 children to mourn husbands and fathers.

One instance alone was that of the schooner Boadicea, 79 tons; she sailed from Yarmouth for Martinique with a general cargo, but was not heard of afterwards. Her crew, consisting of six men, left five widows and sixteen fatherless children.

Both before and after 1879, numerous courageous Yarmouth men and women have died at sea. It is the intention of the Yarmouth Waterfront Development Committee to construct a monument to all those "Lost to the Sea".

Of particular importance in the names listed on the monument will be those citizens of Yarmouth County who have been lost at sea as a result of the fishing industry, Yarmouth's longest and continuing seafaring industry. An example of losses in this sector was the tragic loss of life when the herring seiner Silver King was run down by tugboat Ocean Rockswift in August 1967.



We stopped at the Gilbert Lighthouse.




Time for lunch...in Digby established in 1783 under the leadership of Rear Admiral Robert Digby, the town was first settled by the United Empire Loyalists who built the town as a fishing and lumbering centre. With a long, sea faring history, Digby was an important regional transportation centre in the 1890’s where trains connected with steamships. Today, the picturesque town of Digby has a population of 2,092 and hosts a large scallop fishing fleet.


So naturally scallops were on our mind for lunch.





Our next stop was the charming town of Wolfville, home to Acadia University. University towns are always teeming with energy.









Our evening stop was in Truro at the Holiday Inn.


On our way into town I snapped this photo of Glooscap, more on him later.



Truro is known as the “Hub of Nova Scotia”, because of its geographical position and historical significance. In the mid 19th century Truro had become a manufacturing centre and – thanks in large part to the railroad facilities - a natural distribution centre for the province; thereby earning the Town of Truro the nickname, “Hubtown.” And today, with all major highways intersecting through Truro, the town truly is the Hub of Nova Scotia!


We again ate at the hotel and had an amazing meal with a fun server. Food photos to come...




Sunday August 25

After another breakfast at Tim's, we decided to head back to check out the Glooscap Heritage Centre.






According to legend Glooscap, the first human, was created out of a bolt of lightening in the sand and remains a figure that appears in many of the Mi’kmaw legends. These legends are stories that are passed down from generation to generation and tell of the Mi’kmaw culture.
We made a decision to drive the coastal highway to Springhill which turned out to be not a great idea. It wasted a lot of time with nothing to really see. There are scenic loops on the Trans Canada highway that would have reduced the driving time. The other problem was the lack of places to eat along this drive which amazed us.


We did stop at Five Islands which was certainly worth it. Five Islands is a rural community in Colchester County Nova Scotia with a population of 300 located on the north shore of the Minas Basin, home of the highest tides in the world. It is named after five small islands - Moose, Diamond, Long, Egg, and Pinnacle - located just off the coast. As you can see the tide was way out at noon.
Native Mi'kmaq legend has it that the Five Islands were created when their god Glooscap threw the mud, sticks and stones at the giant beaver who dammed his medicine garden in Advocate. The mud, sticks and stones that formed the islands are said to have trapped the beaver in one of the islands and turned it into gold.







We went to Advocate Harbour as it was supposed to have a great view of the Bay of Fundy.

 

We ended up in Joggins and having a hot dog at the Bayview Restaurant or Margie's. The owner had gone to deliver pizzas and therefore picked up her supplies while she left a teenager in charge on a Sunday afternoon. Hot dogs just seemed the fastest idea.



We went on to Springhill the home of Anne Murray and more importantly known for the miners'
disasters.

This version of Working Man sung by Rita MacNeil has stunning photo clips of the miners. There are many versions of this song but the version sung by a native Nova Scotian is my favourite.








Onto the Trans Canada to Antigonish for the evening at the Antigonish Maritime Inn.



A stroll around town with some photos.