Monday, 26 May 2014

Bent but not broken

Our last post had us on our way to Cheticamp for some hiking and sight seeing. Well we almost made it there...... We stopped at a beach along the way near Margaree Forks. There was a breakwater there that Kelly decided to checkout. It was a clear sunny day and the rocks were dry so we hopped our way out to the end.
This picture belonged on the last post  ooops.

At the end of the breakwater

The scenery was great and we watched several Lobster Fishermen returning to the harbour.
You can just see the whole in the big rock formation in the foreground

It took us about 20 minutes to work our way out on the rocks and about 2.5 hours to get back. June landed poorly on one of the rocks and fell. We think she twisted her right ankle on the rock and when falling punted another rock with her left foot.

It all happened very quickly one minute we are talking and the next Kelly turns around and there is no June. I knew we were in trouble when I got June righted and sitting and she said "I've done some damage". We spent the next 2 hours with June sliding on her rear end from rock(Boulders really) to rock as she was unable to put any weight on her left foot and her right one was starting to swell. Once we got to the beach Kelly flagged down a fellow tourist from Quebec City and we carried June up the beach and over the sand dune to his car. The truck was parked about 200 yards away up a hill so our Great Samaritan drove us up the hill. There is a general store right where the the truck was parked and the owner called the local towns to see which hospital was open and could X-ray Junes foot. We ended going back to Invernes and went straight to the emergency department. Hospitals on Saturday of the long weekend are the same all over Canada busy and under staffed. It took us about 10 minutes to get to an exam room and about 4 hours to find out that the were some hairline fractures on June's left foot. The on-call doctor told us to call his office on Tuesday after the Radiologist took a look. So it was back to Port Hood for a couple days of Tylenol 3s and rest.

We left Port Hood on Tuesday and by 3 pm we had the results from the Radiologist. "No fractures or dislocation no cast needed." This was good news so we decided to continue the trip. June has proven once again that she is one tough woman. If it had been me I would have been crying like a baby waiting for the helicopter to come and get me.

We have good internet here so there will be another post or two to get caught up.

Take Care

Junkel



Friday, 16 May 2014

On the Road Again

I know it has been awhile since our last post so lets get going. We have spent most of the last three weeks with Kelly's family in Amherst NS. He has been re-introduced to the most interesting game of cards known as auction 45's or just 45's. It is a game that is played only on the east coast between Newfoundland and Maine. They tell me it was invented years and years ago I think a couple of "Stoners" invented the rules because they make very little sense. On Fridays Kelly plays 45's with his 97 year old grandmother and his Uncle Aunt and Cousin. They play bingo for 45 minutes first then 8 rounds of 45's and after that around 1015pm they have a "lunch" which consists of quartered sandwiches and sweets. It has been good to get caught back up with them.
After three weeks we were anxious to get back on the road. None of the campgrounds around Nova Scotia open until the Victoria Day long weekend so on Thursday we set out for Cape Breton Islands. 
Our first stop was Pictou. It is a small fishing village with a very strong Scottish background. The first Scotts landed here in the late 1700's and did well so boat after boat  of them kept coming.
Mural of the Scotts coming ashore


Replica of the "Hector" which brought the first Scotts to Pictou


A closed maybe for sale Seafood restaurant right on the water in downtown Pictou............Opportunities abound.

We walked around Pictou for about an hour which included 20 minutes talking to an ice-cream vendor who was just setting up shop before Kelly arrived. Twenty minutes and some free ice-cream later we moved on. On the main drag there is a building that was the old post office, according to the sign it is the only building in the world that has a window in the chimney.

Window in the Chimney Why???????

We left Pictou this morning and took the scenic route to Port Hood on Cape Breton Island. Now I am not saying the road was rough because that is just not fair to rough roads. I spent more time dodging pot holes than breathing. The "Scenic Route" we were told was there so you could avoid the traffic and enjoy the scenery at a slower pace. They were right because if you drove faster than 60 km/h you were "bounced" off the road. We stopped at Cape George lighthouse for lunch and it was a very nice.

Cape George Lighthouse and June

We arrived in Port Hood around 3pm and found the campground no problem. We are parked across the street from the Al MacInnis recreation centre. Yup Al MacInnis of the NHL 3rd all time scoring defenceman was brought up in Port Hood. A few years ago he donated 100,000 dollars to the arena fund so they named it after him. There is a great sandy beach just below the campground and it was about 22 degrees today so we hit the beach for the afternoon.

Tides out more room for us


Feels good on the tootsies.

We were told that the sunsets here were spectacular so after dinner we went back to the beach to check it out.


"Jedi June" holding up the setting sun


Ok but we have seen better.

We are off to Cheticamp tomorrow for a couple of days as there are some hikes we want to do. Wifi gets sparse over the next 4 or 5 days so I will update when I can.

Hope things are ok with you all and thanks for reading and sharing in our adventure.

Junkel