Well, now that we are home and the kids have had time to reflect on their trip, here is each one's top 5 favourite things they did.
Ryan
1. Deep Sea Fishing on PEI because fishing on a boat in saltwater was very exciting and I got 2 big Cod.
2. Fortress of Louisburg because is was protected by the military and we got to see the muskets shot.
3. The beach in PEI because I loved playing in the sand.
4. Whale watching in Lunenburg because I was the first one on the boat to see the whale.
5. Old Quebec City because we got a caricature done of us.
Hannah
1. Fortress of Louisburg- At the we saw fife and drums. We also saw the guns fire.
2. The Beach- There were 2 beaches on PEI and one in New Brunswick. I like the beach in PEI because at the beach there was a river. I liked the New Brunswick one because it had big waves for us to swim through. I also liked it because there was no rocks in the water.
3. Whale Watching- I liked it because we saw whales, seals and puffins.
4. Riding my Bike- Riding around the campground in Fundy, Ryan and I rode this trail for bikes only and it was all downhill. It led us to a park.
5. Seeing Old Quebec City- We got a caricature and the town was cool.
Emily
1. Seeing a bear
2. Going hiking
3. Going whale watching. I liked going on the boat.
4. Going to the park
5. Car rides.
Saturday, August 6, 2011
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Quebec City
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| Kids on the boardwalk |
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| Caricatures of the kids |
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Travel Day
We got up really early to get a good start and we were on the road by 8. We made good time too thanks to our shortcut. 2 hours cutting across the province of New Brunswick, not a soul in sight. Totally remote. Kind of spooky actually. Of course it rained most of the way to Quebec City. When we arrived we realized that time went back an hour so we were here at 3. We decided to go into town and what a mistake that proved to be. Traffic nightmare, cops all over directing traffic. Another parade. However, we didn’t hang around for this one. We just went back to camp and had dinner. We’ll go into town tomorrow.
This is the second worst campground I have ever stayed in.
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Another Grey Day
Another grey, cold and rainy day here. We let the kids play around on their bikes when it wasn’t raining but even they are getting bored with that. I did go for a bike ride myself and they have a beautiful trail system here. I rode most of the way around the park on just their trails and it was 30 kms. However, when it is crummy out, not much to do here. We ventured into the local “towns” but absolutely nothing of interest, you really have to go into Moncton to find anything. So, looking at the forecast (rain till the weekend), we have decided to move on to Quebec City sans (everyone here speaks French) reservation again. At least the weather there looks good. I have had it with east coast weather!
On a more exciting note, we had a bear sighting in our campground. We were on the road driving into the campground when a mother and a cub ran out right in front of the car. The mother made it across the road while the cub scurried back into the woods. We pulled over and waited to see if either would reemerge but they didn’t.
Monday, August 1, 2011
Beach (finally) (by Hannah)
Today we left the Daigle campground and went into Kouchibouguac. There was a playground that was boring. The monkey bars were too low, my feet touched the ground.
We went to the beach. Ryan and I made a hole and Ryan made 3 sandcastles. Emily and I went into the water and jumped through the waves. After the beach, Mommy and Daddy bought us ice cream.
I met a chipmunk and I named it Lulu. Lulu always came toward me when I had a pinecone in my hand and ran away when we moved.
Daddy took us on a bike ride to another playground, it was awesome. We went down a trail and saw a groundhog (Ryan called it a mole-rat thingy)
After we started a fire and had smores.
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Big Mistake
We just couldn’t take the PEI weather anymore. Too be honest, I am glad I have visited PEI but I have no interest in going back. The weather didn’t help. So we decided at noon to pack up after being promised good weather only to have grey clouds as far as you can see. By the time we got on the road it was 3:00 but no big deal since we only had a 2 ½ hour drive to our next stop, Kouchibouguac (I bet you can’t pronounce it) in New Brunswick. The Confederation Bridge was cool (minus the cost) and just like that we were now starting our final leg of the trip.
Unfortunately, I have not really kept track of days and dates so we didn’t realize it was a holiday weekend here in New Brunswick until we arrived only to find that everything was booked solid (our reservations didn’t start until tomorrow). So we headed into town to find a motel except we couldn’t find a town. We found one motel that wanted $135. No. We ended up settling in a KOA-like park. Possibly the worst camping experience of my life. It is like a Chucky Cheese only camping. Kids everywhere with no supervision, open field camping, loud, up late. Horrible. We should have just toughed it out in PEI. Let’s just hope the weather turns around or we could be moving on to our next stop.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Charlottetown
Forecast for today called for not so good weather so we decided to go into Charlottetown. Our campground is only 40 minutes from Charlottetown. A cute looking downtown core but not much else there. Only 40, 000 people live there (only 140, 000 on the whole island) so not much for a capital city. The one cool thing that we did do was visit TheProvince House. This is where the famous Charlottetown Conference took place in 1864 to begin talks about confederation. The building is really cool and there is a neat video showing a re-enactment of the time. ![]() |
| Emily and Dad at Province House |
Coming back to camp it continued to rain so we are having movie night tonight in the trailer. Tomorrow is supposed to be nicer weather so we promised the kids they could do whatever they wanted tomorrow, no following mom and dad around.
Friday, July 29, 2011
Deep Sea Fishing/ Anne of Green Gables
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| Ryan with his big catch |
Seriously. If you had the choice which would you rather do? Those were the options for the day. So Ryan and I opted to go deep sea fishing. $70 for both of us, 3 hours on the ocean with a guaranteed catch of mackerel and cod. I had no idea what we were in for. 8 of us went out and it turned out that one family with us had 2 boys, 10 & 7 and were from London. The kids instantly hit it off and the parents were very nice. They have relatives in Puce and go to Lakeshore Discovery. Anyways, we go out about 20 minutes and stop. The captain says here is how you do it. Drop the line, count to 5 and reel up. He comes up with 2 mackerel on his line (each line had 2 hooks). So we drop our line in and sure enough everyone had 2 on their line (see video below). It was almost stupid how easy it was and honestly, not a whole lot of fun. The captain showed us a ripple in the water and said that was the school of mackerel. There must have been thousands. The mackerel were then used as bait for the harder to catch cod (a larger fish also). We went out another 20 minutes and now you could not see land. This time you had to let the line sink all the way to the bottom and slowly reel up. Ryan dropped his in and says to me that he has a bite. I am thinking no way but his line was bending big time and he could barely turn the reel. He asked if I could reel it in for him. I told him “you snag it, you reel it in”. The next 10 minutes were quite comical as Ryan struggled to reel in this cod. When he finally got it to the surface, he had 2 on his line and fairly large ones. I was also successful in catching a large cod. When we got back, MP, Hannah and Emily were waiting for us and shocked at our catch. The girls were even more shocked when the captain started cutting up the spoils and handing out everyone’s portion. As a matter of fact, Hannah went a little grey in the face.
We stopped at a grocery store on the way home for some butter and that became our supper for the night. It was very good. MP and I ended up eating it all. Hannah was going to be sick.
The girls opted for Anne of Green Gables. So they dropped us off and headed for the hills.
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| The girls at Anne of Green Gables |
The rest is according to Emily: Anne of Green Gables is a book and a movie about a girl who is an orphan. The place we went to see was the authors home and where she wrote Anne of Green Gables. We went into the cousins house and the aunt and uncles. Hannah and I got to sit in a carriage. In the corner of the aunt and uncle’s house there was a fire but it didn’t burn down the house. We went on a little walk and it was a nice walk. We saw lots of nature stuff. I had lots of fun there.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Slow Day
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| Passing time in the rain |
Well the rain finally stopped some time during the night. However the wind certainly didn’t. It was so windy that the trailer was rocking (get your mind out of the gutter!). We slept in till about 9:00 since there wasn’t anything else to do. We packed up the trailer and moved it to our more permanent site, a very nice one too. Wooded, protection from wind (which died down later in the day). By the time we were done setting up and had lunch it was after 1 so we decided to head into Summerside. Summerside is promoted here as a beachfront city with all kinds of stuff to see and do. They hosted the royal couple (can’t remember their names) when they were here earlier in the month. Anyways, about the town…. BORING!! Everyone thought so. Nothing to do here that we could see.
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| The girls in the ocean |
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| Ryan making a sandcastle |
Things are quite different here. It moves at island time and people are very friendly. It doesn’t offer the spectacular beauty of Fundy or Cape Breton (although MP thinks so), it is more scenic. A ton of cyclists on the roadways here and cars given them a wide berth. Might be fun one day.
I should also mention that we are staying in Prince Edward Island National Park, Cavendish campground.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
PEI
We decided to leave Cape Breton a day early. Forecast was crummy weather and we really did everything we could there. We got away real early and were on the road by 8:00. We had to catch the 1:00 ferry to PEI and it was a 4 hour drive. Had to arrive an hour early to ensure you got on. We left in a horrible fog. You saw maybe 10 feet in front of you. To leave our campground you have to drive over a spectacular mountain pass. One of those ones where there is almost nothing between you and 1000 feet down to the ocean. During a nice day it is incredible. In the fog, towing a trailer over wet pavement, not fun. A total white knuckle drive. And that was just the start of the trip. It proceeded to rain the entire way. I am so sick of two lane highways that twist and turn. Ryan is going through a Costco-sized amount of Gravol. Also, Nova Scotia has the worst roads I have ever driven. They are in horrible shape. Not just one or two but all of them. A lot of them have sign “rough pavement next few kilometers”. Makes it impossible to do the speed limit.
We made the ferry (barely) and enjoyed the 1 ½ ride to PEI. We had lunch in the cafeteria and walked around the boat. The kids were a little disappointed. Not sure what they expected. Upon arrival in PEI it was a 2 hour drive to our new campground but since we arrived a day early, we weren’t sure that we could get a spot. We got one. One night of no services and right on the ocean. Right where I was told not to camp because of the wind. And windy it was. However, that was the least of our concerns as the rain was brutal. We set up a temporary site in the rain and all of us got wet. I scouted out the site that we get tomorrow and it is really nice. So it was an early bed and hopefully better weather tomorrow.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Fortress of Louisburg (by Ryan)
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| Kids playing with the band |
Today we went to the Fortress of Louisburg. Louisburg is an old fortress the French used to defend against the British in the 1700’s. The fortress originally was made for fishing and shipping goods over to France. The fortress was attacked and taken over by the British in 1745.
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| Hannah and Emily with town folk |
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| Ryan with a musket |
Before that I got a chance to write with a quill. The best feathers to use are crow feathers. The ink was made of linseed oil and soot.
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| Kids with a French soldier |
When we got back to the visitor's centre we handed in our activity book and got a key chain and certificate.
We went back to camp and played with our friends until bedtime.
Monday, July 25, 2011
Cabot Trail
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| Cabot Trail |
What a beautiful day here today. Was it ever cold during the night. I am so glad we have a furnace because we had it cranked. However, it warmed up to 80 degrees here today. We decided to cover the northern portion of the Cabot Trail. They recommend 3-4 hours to see it properly. It took us most of that. There is not much you can really say about the Cabot Trail other than it is completely breathtaking. The roads are steep with fantastic views and many places to stop for scenic outlooks. The kids weren’t really interested. Oh well. Mary Pat and I were. Here are a couple of pictures and video I put together of the drive.
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| Cabot Trail |
We were in desperate need of a Laundromat so we stopped on the other side of the mountains at a town called Cheticamp to do laundry. The kids and I went to the ocean while MP did the laundry (trust me, she didn’t mind the alone time). We saw some really cool jellyfish and a bunch of dead crabs. Hopefully one day we’ll see a live one.
On the way home we saw a moose and a baby moose standing beside the road. I got out and took some video and pictures. The video is a little long but I didn’t really feel like doing too much editing.
They are calling for bad weather here the next two days. We are talking about going to see the Fortress of Louisburg.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Cape Breton
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| Cape Breton coast |
Well we actually got away earlier than planned. On the road by 8:30. Everyone is getting good at breaking camp and everyone has their own jobs. According to GPS, we had a 6 hour drive ahead of us to Cape Breton. That is, to the park entrance. I drove the entire way so I was a little tired when we arrived. Can you imagine my frustration when I was told that our campground was another 1 ½ up the road. Not just any road but a 13% grade on the edge of mountains road. Real fun when you are tired dragging a trailer with 5 bikes. The car did really well. Anyways, as beautiful as Cape Breton is, our campground sucks! I can count the number of trees on one hand. Nowhere to hang a clothesline. What am I going to do in the night when I have to go.
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| Camp at Cape Breton |
I am having a very, very hard time getting any WiFi so that is why I am behind in the posts. I am going into town tonight to see if I can steal someones an upload this. So even though it hasn’t happened, let me predict the next 2 hours. Fire, smores, Emily meltdown, bed.
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Halifax
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| Peggy's Cove |
We ventured into Halifax today via Peggy’s Cove. Very picturesque place. According to their signage, it is one of the most photographed places in Canada. We did our share. It was beautiful out when we got there and then the fog started rolling in and soon you couldn’t even see the lighthouse that was 200 meters away.
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| kids enjoying Pride parade |
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| Craig enjoying pride parade |
At first, Mary Pat was mortified that I was going to take pictures but I thought there is no way I am letting an opportunity like this go by. So I took lots of photos. Also, I have included a video below.
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| ??????? |
By the time the parade was done it was 3:00 and we headed down to the boardwalk. What a beautiful city. This is going on my list to return to one day for sure, however, not with kids. By the time we got back to camp it was 7:30 and we still had to start packing to leave tomorrow. We would like to be on the road by 9:00 as we have a 6 hour drive to Cape Breton Highlands National Park
.
Friday, July 22, 2011
Lunenburg
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| Lunenburg Bay |
Weather started off crappy today. Rain during the night and very grey and foggy for most of the morning. We decided to head in to Lunenburg. It is one the oldest British settlements in Canada and the home to Bluenose II. The town is gorgeous. It is very steep, rising away from the ocean. The old part of town is only 4 blocks deep but rising a few hundred feet. Unfortunately Bluenose II was in dry dock. They were debating whether to build a Bluenose III but opted to take Bluenose II apart and rebuild it.
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| going whale watching |
The town is big on whale watching and fishing tours so we decided to go whale and seal watching plus a harbor tour. The boat gave us a tour of the harbor and the history behind a lot of the stuff. The fog blew away and the sun came out. After that we headed about 20 km out to sea and just stopped. Sure enough the whales began to surface around us. There were Minke whales. They grow to about 30 feet. One surfaced a couple of feet from Ryan and scared the heck out of Hannah. She didn’t like the thought of a whale going under our boat. Getting a picture or video of the whales is surprisingly hard. You just never know when or where they will surface and by the time they do, you have missed the shot. However, as luck would have it, Ryan managed to get some video(see below). The tour was 3 hours long so after that we just putzed around town.
After dinner we took the kids on the boardwalk in the park and then a walk along the beach where the kids found some dead crabs and jellyfish. Fire, smores, Emily meltdown, bed.
From Emily’s Journal
Today we went whale watching. And I saw a whale! And after we went back to camp.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Good Bye Fundy, Hello Nova Scotia
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| Rissers Beach |
When I was in Florida in March we had some trouble with the GPS not recognizing certain roads. I figured I could deal with that once in a while. However, out here is seems to happen often. It didn’t recognize a new highway in Moncton which took us off route and through a construction zone (fun) and then it really messed up near Halifax. Out came the paper maps and finally we arrived at Rissers Beach at 4:00.
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| our campsite |
The kids are having a blast at the playground as I write this it is 9:00 and still very light. I am going to get them as we have a long day tomorrow, plus they have regular journal writing every night. They may even do a blog entry one night.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Last Full Day in Fundy National Park
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| Rocks at Hopewell |
Last full day in Fundy. What to do. We decided to go to Hopewell Rocks. They are very tall rocks, much like Flowerpot Island in Tobermory. At low tide you can walk around the rocks and walk on the ocean floor. As you walk around you can see how high the water comes up and the rocks become islands. We walked around for an hour and took a million pictures. All of a sudden it seemed like the place became packed. It was impossible to take a picture without someone else in it. I will refrain from my thoughts about the Asian tourist bus that dropped off seemingly 500 people as MP is sitting here telling me not to.
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| Craig and Mary Pat at Hopewell |
Emily decided to venture down closer to the ocean and that proved a mistake as she got caught in the mud and couldn’t get out. As far as I was concerned she was on her own, high tide was still 5 hours away. However, Hannah went to her rescue and both ended up muddy as can be. Apparently this is not uncommon as they have a place to clean your feet up top.
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| Mary Pat and Emily at Hopewell |
After lunch we went on a small hike to a very beautiful waterfall. We were all tired so decided to go into town and shop. The kids bought books at a used book store in town and gemstones (or rocks) from some store.
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| Craig at Dickson Falls |
After dinner, we started to pack up. It is a 5 hour drive to Rissers Beach, Nova Scotia so we want to be gone from here by 10 at the latest. Famous last words.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
What a Beautiful Day
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| Fossil Beach at low tide (remember those rocks on the wall?) |
A beautiful start to the day. Weather is perfect. Although the temperature changes a lot here depending on where you are. At camp it is 80, down at the ocean, 70. We decided to go back to Cape Enrage to see the low tide. Wow! You can walk out for probably ½ km. Fossil beach (where yesterday we could barely move, we now had a football field) was amazing. There is actually a hiking trail you can take when it is low tide. We watched some people rock climbing and Hannah was quite interested. However, that was the only session offered that day.
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| Emily starting the hike |
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| Hannah and Dad on the hike |
After lunch we went on a hike called Matthew’s Head, which the kids found quite hilarious. It was a strenuous hike for them. A lot of uphill and 4.4 km long. We got great views of the bay. After the hike we were all tired, especially Emily. We came back to the camp and just let the kids play. They went to the playground and biked around. Ryan got bit by something and his ear swelled up huge. It was very funny. His nickname was Dumbo. No pictures however, he wouldn’t let us. Actually he wouldn’t even leave the trailer after that. It was pretty big.
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| a view from our hike |
Fire, smores, bed
Monday, July 18, 2011
Day One
Welcome to the Maritimes! Can you say rain? No, make that torrential downpour with thunderstorms for most of the morning. Everything is soaked (except the trailer, but everything outside). Even stuff we thought was very safe if it did rain got wet. So we hung out in the trailer and played games and read.
After the rain stopped it was cold and grey. So we headed out to get a lay of the land. The first thing we noticed as we headed into town (when I say town I mean Alma (pop. 10)) was the boats that were sitting on the ground. You really don’t appreciate the effects of the tide. It is the greatest tide change anywhere in the world. Every 6 hours it changes for a height of 53’. They even post the tide schedule for the next 3 months right down the minute for high and low tide. I guess there are no excuses if you get caught out.
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| low tide |
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| high tide |
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| Hannah at Fossil Beach at high tide |
We get some ideas for things to do and putzed around town. The kids threw rocks into the ocean and took some pictures. Did I mention that I forgot to bring the camcorder charger? Yep, didn’t realize that until my battery died. So I called (wait, no cell phone service here), I used a pay phone (wait, I have no calling card or number that I can bill to) so I called collect to Jim (wait, he does not accept collect calls). So I turn to my trusty computer (wait, no WiFi). Stymied at every turn I go to the ranger station and they assure that WiFi will work if I move closer to their station. It did. I researched some post offices in Nova Scotia (where we will be later in the week) and find one nearby. Email Jim to pick it up at the house and priority it to me. Hope I get it.
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| Emily and Dad at Fossil Beach (note the rocks on the wall in the background) |
After lunch it started to clear. We decided to head to a place called Cape Enrage. It is a peninsula with a great view of the bay and it is very high up. They have a place called Fossil beach with a million rocks. When you hike to the bottom, you only have about 10 feet of “beach” (high tide). We added our name to the rock wall and the kids searched for fossils in the rocks.
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| The Guthries' immortalized |
After dinner, we went on a bike ride in the campground. It is perfect for bike riding, just hilly enough for the kids and large enough to go out a while. They even have a “mountain bike” trail. It is perfect for Ryan, nice and smooth with some hills. He loved it. After we got back, he wanted to go out again, this time on his own. He had a blast.
Fire, smores, bed.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Arrival!!
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| Arrival |
We stop for lunch at a diner overlooking a bay and eat on the patio. Weather is gorgeous and the food is good. Nice to be back in Canada.
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| Hannah waiting for lunch |
After lunch we soldier on. As we approach the Bay of Fundy you notice a significant increase in the size and number of hills. As we approach the campground it becomes very steep, like lowest gear steep. Great, that will make towing the trailer out of here so much fun.
Finally we arrive! 3:15. Oops, apparently there was a time change somewhere in our route. Make that 4:15. Seems like we have been driving forever. The park is gorgeous and our site is very nice. The sites here are big and secluded. Heavily wooded between neighbours and we are relatively close to the washrooms. Well…. Ryan and I are always close to the washrooms.
It took us a couple of hours to set up while the kids explored and played on the playground. Apparently they have WiFi here. I’ll have to check that.
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| setting up |
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| skipping stones |
After we settle and have dinner we roast some marshmellows around the fire and it is early to bed.
Saturday, July 16, 2011
A Long Day
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| Ryan really tired in the morning |
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| Emily tired in the morning |
So now it is 11:00 and we are just hitting the highway. New York , Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine.
At 10:00 we were just passing Bangor, Maine when Mary Pat suggested we get a room here. I want to push on. What a mistake! The last hour to the Canadian border is a twisty-turny 2 lane dark, dark highway. After 20 minutes I give up and turn around. Again we get to bed late. Still 5 more hours to go. This seems like a really, really long dirve. MP doesn’t think so.
Friday, July 15, 2011
Lift Off
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| the car |
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| Ryan excited about long trip |
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