Saturday, September 11, 2010

Newfoundland Here we are!




Sept 11, 2010
Well “Earl” blew us through New Brunswick, we stopped at Woodstock overnight and did some sightseeing, It was very hot. Saw the world’s longest covered bridge at Hartland but forgot my camera.
Moved on the next day to Fredericton, and Earl brought the rain in buckets, when it slowed down we realized the Walmart lot we were in did not accept overnight parking. Since we will be coming back this way before we head for the US we decided to go on to Moncton and head for Amherst where we would meet up with John and Dianne.
Had a couple of great days near Amherst. Stayed at the property of Melanie and Charlie Atherton, very nice couple, with lots of information. Had a nice Happy Hour with them and friends of theirs.
It was great to spend time with John and Dianne, (it was their idea to do the Cross Canada trip, and this was the first time we saw them, had to cross 4 time zones to do so.
We did a tour of a “working grist mill” at Balmoral, where a very knowledgeable lady showed us how oats were turned into Scotish Oatmeal, and flour was ground. The method was the same as the one used in 1874, in fact the wooden cogs and stones from that date were still on the property. From there we went to Denmark to see the Sutherland Steam Mill Museum. Again a tour guide, who really knew her stuff took us through. I have to say that Nova Scotia does a good job of training their museum staff.
The next day we had to say goodbye to Dianne and John and Melanie and Charlie, Melanie made sure we left with a sampling of her garden. Great people, hope to see them again.
Sept 8 was our day for the Newfoundland Ferry, so we headed up to North Sydney to spend the night at the ferry terminal. Got in touch with some ex family members that I hadn’t seen since 1974..will see them when we get back from the rock.
Sailed on the Atlantic Vision, the newest ferry in the Marine Atlantic fleet. Very nice ship, the sailing was calm and we had live Newfie entertainment . BC Ferries could take lessons on food preparation and hospitality from these people.
Afterr landing at Port Aux Basques, we hooked up the tracker again (Jerry and I drove on the ferry separately and had to meet up later,) We drove on to Stephenville and spent the night at a Walmart lot.
Following day we drove around the “French Ancestry” trail, it was very windy, with gusts up to 120 km, I managed a few pics, the scenery was great, but had to hang on to things to keep from being blown off the cliffs.
Ran into problems with the brakes on the Tracker and arranged to have them looked at in Cornerbrook the next day. That morning we also ran into problems with the Bus and had to take it to a repair shop. Since it was afternoon Friday before we could get it to the shop there wasn’t time to find out what the problem was, so we ended up camped in the repair shop yard until Monday at least. Went to the Mamateek Inn and had cod tongues for supper. Very good.
Well, with nothing to do but wait for Monday, we decided to look up some geo caches and discovered that Corner Brook was holding a Geo Cache Event on Saturday. It was grey and miserable looking outside, so we decided to check it out. Met some really great people who were organizing their first event ever. There was a full day of caching, with a barbecue late afternoon. We found about 7 of the 30 caches before we got so wet we had to quit. But Newfies are made of sterner stuff and many of them came back with all 30 found. They were quite happy to have folks from as far away as Alaska join them, and we had a great time. Have to say that was one of the best caches I have logged so far.
Well tomorrow is Sunday, and maybe some sunshine will come our way.

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Thank-you for attending our event. You have made the memory of our event that much more special and I hope we cross paths again some day. Enjoy the rest of your travels and look forward to seeing were our coinsfind themselves.

Todd said...

Thank you for coming to our event .It makes it all worth while when people come from so far away I hope the day that you spent with us was a memorable one I know it was for me.Take care and keep in touch.Good luck on the rest of your journey.

Unknown said...

Not sure of the time difference, but I may have been running my 12.1 mile portion of the Klondike race when you posted last Saturday. Luckily I had driven the highway the day before and noticed kilometer markers every 2 KM and was able to convert them into miles to help me track my pace while I was running - as I knew I couldn't count on my team. I ran faster than I ever thought I could, so was quite happy with that, considering the hills were way more brutal than I had intended and I had a head winds most of the way except for the canyon which had hills more brutal that thought ever possible. I fiddled with my gps at the ferry terminal and sure enough, once I hit canadian border, it started to work. It didn't work very well, but at teast the lady would talk to us when she chose to. We were all very mean to her as she did miss some crucial turns at very important times that we needed her.She's not great like your guys'. Enough of all this, hope the motorhome is operational and that you are back on the road!!!

Unknown said...

It sounds like you guys are having a fantastic trip! Sorry we missed your call, we have been trying to reach you but you don't seem to have VM.
Thanks for keeping up the blog. It is nice to see where you are when we are thinking of you :)