Thursday, March 31, 2016

NOVA SCOTIA- new wine country-French Acadians (loved by the Mi'Kmaq FIrst Peoples)- Nova Scotia- Atlantic Canada - incredible history- Canada- France-England wars- and the incredible gifts of First Peoples along with both agressors of new Nation of Canada (draft)-Canada's French Canadian Wine Country-Grand Pre Annapolis Valley Nova Scotia /links always/Canada Idles No More



Nova Scotians can raise a glass to the success of this industry. (STOCK)
Nova Scotians can raise a glass to the success of this industry. (STOCK)
Nova Scotians are starting to learn what sommeliers and travel writers have known for some time — we produce some pretty good wines in this province.
And our vintners have succeeded the hard way, by producing cold-climate wines from grapes grown in pint-sized vineyards.
There are no E. & J. Gallo-style wineries in Nova Scotia. The California-based Gallo family, the world’s largest wine producer, employs 6,000 people worldwide.
Nor can our wineries fall back on centuries of tradition. One legendary Italian winery, Barone Riscasoli, dates its production back to 1141.
It’s only in the last couple of decades that Nova Scotia has really developed a thriving industry — even if grapes have been grown in the province since shortly after Champlain settled into Port Royal in 1605.
Today, the sector boasts 23 wineries and 94 grape producers. Together, the grape growers and the grape stompers generate $7.3 million in wages annually. (OK, no one is stomping grapes underfoot in the Annapolis Valley, but wine-making is still a pressing business.)
This week, the Nova Scotia wine business took on more of a Bluenose feel when the province and the federal government put almost $500,000 into the establishment of a new wine laboratory at Acadia University in Wolfville.
Wines that were once shipped to Ontario and Quebec labs for analysis can now be sent to a university in the heart of Nova Scotia wine country.
The Acadia-winery partnership is apt, time-tested and true. Academics from Acadia and other Nova Scotia universities, have long helped neophyte winemakers identify the right micro-climates and the proper soils for producing grapes. In fact, grape-growing and wine-making are both knowledge industries of the first rank.
Understanding our soils and our climate were essential to the development of Nova Scotia’s ice wines, which have won awards nationally and globally.
Some of the province’s vintners have also earned their own appellation — Tidal Bay — for a distinct Nova Scotia white wine. (Think freshness, crispness and minerality.)
Travel writers and foodies are taking notice, too.
Lonely Planet praised the “boutique” wine-growing area along the Northumberland Strait, and named the Annapolis Valley one of its top travel destinations in 2012, based partially on the quality of its wines.
In short, wine is an industry that’s worthy of the modest government investment announced this week. Nova Scotians can raise a glass to the success of this industry.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/editorials/1353350-editorial-nova-scotia-vintners-are-winning-with-wine

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On the shores of a great wine region

Nova Scotia’s cool valleys, acidic soil provide unexpected haven for winemakers



THE CANADIAN PRESS


HALIFAX —
 Past the rocky, ocean-battered coastline of Nova Scotia is an unlikely tale of success: a burgeoning wine industry producing palate-pleasers that connoisseurs say can rival what Champagne, France has to offer.

Winemakers in the lush heartland of Nova Scotia’s wine industry, the Annapolis Valley, are embracing what might appear as an impossible set of conditions — cool temperatures and rocky, acidic soil — to create awardwinning white and sparkling wines that are capturing international attention.

“There’s this cardinal rule that basically dictates a great wine always has the ability to highlight the strengths of where it comes from," says Benjamin Bridge winemaker Jean-Benoit Deslauriers, who left the sun and surf of California in 2008 for Nova Scotia’s Gaspereau River.

One of about 20 Nova Scotia wineries, Benjamin Bridge is the only Nova Scotia brand selling bubblies throughout Canada. Its claim to fame is Nova 7, a pale, refreshing spritz made from grapes grown along the Bay of Fundy.

Deslauriers says part of Nova Scotia’s strength lies in its long grape-growing season where unspoiled vines can be plucked into November, allowing the fruit to retain its freshness at a moderate sugar content.

The province’s other strength is a collection of keen winemakers and proponents working behind the scenes to grow the industry, which the government said boasted sales of $15.4 million last year.

On Tuesday, Nova Scotia and Ottawa announced $487,960 over two years for a new wine research lab in the heart of the valley at Acadia University in Wolfville. The lab is meant to be a hub for food scientists, dietitians, biochemists, plant physiologists and producers of food and beverages as the province looks to make a bigger impact.

Making wine in Nova Scotia is a “high-risk, high-reward dynamic," says Deslauriers, a Quebec native
 who has also worked in Chile.

“We end up being somewhat of a specialized wine region much like some of the regions in Europe that are either really high in the Alps or in the northern parts of France and Germany."

Toronto wine critic Tony Aspler says the province’s wineries excel in sparkling wines and aromatic whites. Reds, however, “are more problematic in that climate."

That hasn’t stopped Nova Scotia wineries from dabbling in reds and learning what does and doesn’t
 work.

Gillian Mainguy of the Winery Association of Nova Scotia says early generation winemakers tried to compensate for the grapes they could grow during warm summers and long falls by producing wines that “were just way too sweet."

“It’s not unlike what both Ontario and British Columbia went through," says Mainguy, citing Ontario’s oft-ridiculed Baby Duck as an example. The sweet, sparkling, low-alcohol wine was popular in the 1970s but snubbed
 by connoisseurs.

She says a noticeable shift came in the early 2000s with the hiring of experienced winemakers who understood the terroir — a combination of climate, soil and terrain.

“We are making world class sparkling wines and aromatic whites that outside of a few other places in the world — Champagne, France and in the United Kingdom — can’t be rivalled anywhere else," she says.

Roger Dial is widely considered
 the founding father of Nova Scotia’s wine industry, having established what would become the Domaine de Grand Pre winery between the late 1970s and early 1980s.

There were “lots of doubters" in those early days, says Dial, who had previously owned a winery in California.

“We have some wonderful, huge assets now that we didn’t have back in the ‘80s and the ‘90s and that’s in the form of young, professional winemakers who are absolutely dedicated, not just to the profession and the craft, but to the place," he says.

“They want to be here, making history."

Many in the business agree a turning point came in 2012 with the creation of Nova Scotia’s very first appellation — a kind of geographic recipe. Known as Tidal Bay, it is a crisp white wine meant to accentuate the region’s cuisine, particularly seafood.

Using specific grape varieties, including 100 per cent Nova Scotia- grown grapes, a dozen wineries are producing a 2015 vintage of Tidal Bay under a strict set of standards that must be approved by an blind, independent tasting panel. Balancing the high acidity of the soil with residual sugars, Tidal Bay leaves “a nice pucker," says Mainguy.

Aspler says Nova Scotia’s wineries have shown a level of cooperation unseen anywhere else in Canada.

“To create something that could be marketed as a Nova Scotia wine, that would embrace all the wineries who want to participate, it’s a really interesting concept," he says.

Carl Sparkes, president of Jost Wineries of Malagash — the largest and longest-operating winery in Atlantic Canada — says it’s not surprising that the industry in Nova Scotia is tight knit.

“I think we are mostly farmers at heart and therefore behave through similar values," he says. “Farmers will always be there to help out a neighbour, but are not without their bickering. All in all, though, I think everyone wants to see the industry grow and prosper.





Lightfoot & Wolfville vineyard will be one of many affected by Ottawa’s announcement on Tuesday.


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Halifax drone maker SkySquirrel lands $1M

THE CHRONICLE HERALD
 April 1, 2016 - 8:17pm 

SkySquirrel attracts investment from both private, public backers
 Stephane Sogne, right, examines a SkySquirrel prototype in the company’s Inverness office in 2014.
Stephane Sogne, right, examines a SkySquirrel prototype in the company’s Inverness office in 2014.
Halifax drone firm SkySquirrel Technologies has closed a $1 million investment round from public and private backers.
The Hammonds Plains-based company, whose drones are used to inspect vineyards around the world, secured $500,000 from provincial venture capital agency Innovacorp and the same amount again from an undisclosed Ontario investor.
CEO and co-founder Richard van der Put told the Chronicle Herald that he planned to use the money this year to launch the next generation of drones, which will sport an improved infrared camera with four sensors able to better detect specific grape diseases and help farmers improve growing conditions.
“We’ll also be able to hit the gas on pursuing new customers in the U.S and Europe,” he said.
He said that while the company was unlikely to turn a profit for at least another year, SkySquirrel had hit its 2015 revenue target.
Founded in Cape Breton four years ago, SkySquirrel has seen its drones deployed in Canada, France, Spain, Switzerland, Chile and China.
The company, which employs eight full-timers, said its technology is similar to that used by NASA to detect water on Mars. Its drones take as many as 500 images during a single flight.
“Our clients send the images to us via the cloud and we combine them into a map,” said van der Put, an engineer who moved to Nova Scotia from the Netherlands in 2010.
“Then we use a specialized image algorithm that allows us to assess crop health. With the help of GPS positioning on their mobile devices, farmers can see where they are currently in the field and correlate that with the analysis — to pinpoint areas of concern,” he said.
Van der Put said one client managed to reduce water usage by one-third, while the technology has proven 97 per cent effective at detecting diseases like Flavesence Dorée, which mainly affects European vineyards.
It also picks up leafroll — a disease that can destroy 30 per cent to 50 per cent of a vineyard’s crop.

http://thechronicleherald.ca/business/1353535-halifax-drone-maker-skysquirrel-lands-1m
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Wine lab being developed at Acadia University


Wendy Elliott, Kingscountynews.ca
Treasury Board of Canada president Scott Brison chats with Dr. Anthony Tong at Acadia University March 29 about the new wine lab.
WOLFVILLE - Nova Scotia's growing wine industry won’t have to wait for laboratory results from Quebec and Ontario in a few months.
The industry will benefit from a new research lab at Acadia University in Wolfville thanks to funding announced March 29 from the provincial and federal governments.
"Nova Scotia's wine industry has potential for tremendous growth that will lead to more jobs and more exports and our goal is to assist it where we can," said Premier Stephen McNeil.
"It's important to have quality lab services, especially as we look to the future of export," he said, speaking of the need to bring home research and development.
McNeil, Treasury Board of Canada president Scott Brison and Agriculture Minister Keith Colwell joined Acadia president Ray Ivany and Stewart Creaser from the Wine Development Board to announce an investment of $487,960.
"Canada is an emerging player in the global wine market and is already recognized as a world leader in the production of ice wines," said Brison. "This investment will support the wine industry in Atlantic Canada, leading to future growth."
Brison called the grape growing and wine making the fastest growing agricultural industry in Nova Scotia.
“With the climate and soil of this province,” he noted, “we have the potential to go to a whole new level.
According to Brison, not enough grapes are being produced in Nova Scotia. He called for specific immigration programs for European countries where wine has a long history and more efforts to marry to wine industry to tourism.
"This new lab will allow us to contribute even more to the award-winning wine and agri-food industries in our region," said Ivany.
"We are pleased to have this new capacity at Acadia for the benefit of our industry partners and our faculty and students performing research in this field.," Ivany said of the collaboration that led to the lab’s approval.
The Acadia president called the Annapolis Valley the third great grape growing region in Canada and “we’ve got to extract its maximum potential.”
The joint financial contribution over two years is being channeled through the Growing Forward 2 program. Growing Forward 2 is a five-year framework agreement for agriculture, which is cost-shared 60-40 between the federal and provincial governments.
"Having access to lab facilities here in Nova Scotia has been identified as a priority by the Nova Scotia Wine Development Board," said Colwell. "They know this will help to build knowledge and expertise right here that can help the industry grow."
Winery owners Hanspeter Stutz and Pete Luckett were pleased by the partnership that stretches from Ottawa to Halifax and over to Wolfville.
“It’s very exciting,” said Luckett, “this is a giant step toward the future production of world class wine.”
The lab, run by Dr. Anthony Tong, will be located in the chemistry building, Elliott Hall. It will be used for both academic research and industry collaboration and is scheduled to open in June or July.
Did you know?
There are 23 wineries and 94 grape producers in Nova Scotia and the industry accounts for $7.3 million in wages annually. Wineries are important to tourism with 100,000 visitors to winery properties in 2014.
Nova Scotia's wineries produce about one million litres of wine annually and had sales of $15.4 million in 2015.




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BLOGGED:

CANADA- NOVA SCOTIA- HUMAN RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS- A BIT OF HISTORY OF NOVA SCOTIA - 1500s onwards /NELSON MANDELA Canadian Citizen loved our Canada and the 1960s Bill of Rights /First Peoples-Mi'kmaq/Acadians/Gaelic.../Crimean War/Segregated Schools Nova Scotia









d'Aulnay Hangs La Tour's Men, Mme la Tour watches
13 April 1645
Painting by Adam Sheriff Scott 

Source:  http://www.nelson.com/nelson/school/discovery/images/evenimag/pre1760/daulnay.gif


For an account of this event, see:
History of Nova Scotia Book #1: Acadia, by Peter Landry
Part 1, Early Settlement & Baronial Battles: 1605-90
Chapter 8 — The Battling Barons of Acadia 

       http://www.blupete.com/Hist/NovaScotiaBk1/Part1/Ch08.htm



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Agriculture in Canada: Pamphlet No. 5, January, 1917.

agrienvarchive.ca/download/agric_in_canada1917.pdf
Probably, never before, was the future so promising. The necessary ... expulsion of the Acadians) and augmented by the. Loyalists ... Nova Scotia School of Agriculture, then a faculty of the Normal .... grapes are grown only to a limited extent.
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Say It With Sailors! > Vintage Wings of Canada

www.vintagewings.ca/VintageNews/Stories/tabid/116/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/462/Say-It-With-Sailors.aspx
USS Valley Forge (CVS-45) pays a visit to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with her crew lined .... Here, two days before entering the harbour at Sydney, Australia, her crew stands to .... It looks to be formed by the purple-shirted members (called Grapes) of the ..... The French Acadians, having been expelled from the Canadian Maritime ...
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The Other Poutine — FEAST: An Edible Road Trip

edibleroadtrip.com/blog/2014/1/28/the-other-poutine
Jan 30, 2014 ... Poutines râpées, for example, were our gateway into the Acadian culture. ... settled in various parts of what is now New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. ... and peaceful community, were eventually expelled by the British. ... Yes, that's right, the Acadians were onto this whole sweet/savoury combo long before ...

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QUOTE:

THE ACADIANS.--These people, perhaps, outnumbered any other one branch of the early settlers of Iberia parish; therefore everything pertaining to them will be found of interest to the general reader. The following newspaper article contains some interesting historical facts of the early Acadians: "The province of Acadia, in the peninsula of Nova Scotia, was ceded by France to England in 1713. The inhabitants, however, continued to expect and ,desire reunion with France. In 1755 an expedition was fitted out in Massachusetts, and sailed for Nova Scotia, May 20 of that year, under the command of Gen. Moncton, and landed in June, and soon conquered the whole of the peninsula. The Acadians doubtless sympathized with their countrymen of French descent, and gained thereby the enmity of the British governor, who required every one of them to take the oath of allegiance to the British crown, and at the same time renounce allegiance to France. This the Acadians refused to do. The British general then ordered them to instantly go oil board the British ships and be transported to other climes. They were driven at the point of the bayonet from their homes, and transported in British ships to Louisiana, which then belonged to France, settled along the coast, the bayous, rivers and lakes of Southwest Louisiana. In the hurry of embarkation, friends and relatives were separated, and never saw each other again until they found each other in their new home; and perhaps some were never united again on earth. The story of 'Evangeline,' by Longfellow, was true as to its main features. Last summer we were shown the tree under which Evangeline is said to have rested while she was engaged in hunting for her lover. It stands upon the banks of the beautiful Teche, and forms part of a picturesque grove of live- oaks. The Acadians, who were brought to this country against their wills, were descendants of French people, who emigrated from France in the seventeenth century. Their education, opinions and principles where provincial rather than French, by reason of their long absence from the Mother country. Hence they brought with them to Louisiana ideas and habits formed after the provincial pattern. Being so different in many respects from those inhabitants of Louisiana who came to this country direct from France, they did not mingle with them to any considerable extent, but formed communities of their own, and lived a quiet, peaceful, and uneventful life. The name Acadians, by which they were first known, was soon contracted or corrupted into the term 'Cajan,' by which they are frequently known. For some reason unknown to us many of these people object to the name Cajan. There is certainly no disgrace in being a descendant of the innocent people who were driven from their homes in Acadia and settled in this country; and we can see no reason for being ashamed of the name, or of its contracted form, Cajan. The Acadians who are still in this region are a quiet, hospitable and accommodating people. They are entirely distinct from the descendants of those who came to this country directly from France; but they have some of the French characteristics, among which are politeness, vivacity, hospitality, etc. Their educational opportunities being very meagre, many of them are uneducated; but they show commendable zeal in availing themselves of the improved and increasing facilities for educational advantages. They also readily adopt the new methods and new machinery introduced by the Northern immigration of the last few years, and are rapidly accumulating wealth and increasing in intelligence.

 http://files.usgwarchives.net/la/iberia/history/perrin.txt


History of Iberia Parish

files.usgwarchives.net/la/iberia/history/perrin.txt
These vines produce a bountiful crop of grapes every year. ..... Next came the Acadians, descendants of the French, who had long before settled in the ... The story of their expulsion from Nova Scotia by the English is~ already told in the ...


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Canada & Colonial America: Quebec City to Ft Lauderdale ...

www.cruisecritic.com/memberreviews/memberreview.cfm?EntryID=91376
Nov 8, 2011 ... ... for 200 years to the French Acadians before being unceremoniously ... Some of these Acadians wound up in Louisiana where they became ... a unique pleasure to encounter these "cold weather" grape vineyards and taste their wines. ... Sydney, Nova Scotia, (not on the list) was our first port-of-call after ...


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The Isthmus of Why We Speak English | GypsyNester | Celebrating ...

www.gypsynester.com/nova-scotia.htm
... began deporting all of the French-speaking settlers of the area in the first expulsion of the Acadians. ... The Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia ... Eight different grape varietals grow on thirty-five acres of hillside that provides the ... A horrific storm blew the Hector off course before a safe landing at Pictou in Nova.
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  'I cried at the beauty of the land they lost': Archaeological dig connects Acadian descendants to tragic past

| | Last Updated: Jan 26 12:44 PM ET
More from Special to National Post
Expulsion of the Acadians
The first thing Clara Darbonne did when her car reached the Nova Scotia border was to ask the driver to stop, so she could kiss the ground.
Within hours, she was touching history, joining an archaeological dig to explore the remains of an Acadian homestead in what was known as Village Thibodeau before its inhabitants were forcibly ejected by the British two and a half centuries ago.
“I wanted to put my feet on the soil that my ancestors walked on,” the 75-year-old from the heart of Louisiana’s Cajun Country says in a soft voice, her face beaming. “I was so happy.”
I wanted to put my feet on the soil that my ancestors walked on
But, she adds, there was sadness as well. “I cried at the beauty of the land that they lost.”
That soil still clings to her latex gloves as she takes a break from helping to excavate a farmer’s field near Windsor, N.S. The archaeological dig is giving Ms. Darbonne and other descendants of the Acadians, early French-speaking settlers deported from the province in the 1750s, a rare opportunity to connect with their family’s tragic past.
About 30 members of the Thibodeau clan converged on the Shaw farm from as far away as Florida, Louisiana and California last month.
Dean Jobb photo
“I feel like it’s a chance of a lifetime, to be here, finding, seeing, touching articles from ancestors, personal items that they’ve used in their lives,” said Stephen Thibodeau, a computer systems engineer from Santa Rosa in California’s Sonoma Valley, as he photographed an array of buttons, rusted nails, shards of china and other treasures coaxed from the ground.
The invitation came from archeologist Sara Beanlands, whose family has farmed the rolling fields overlooking the muddy St. Croix River, about 45 minutes’ drive northwest of Halifax, for seven generations. The 160–hectare spread is now split between her uncles, David and Allen Shaw.
Incredibly, only two families have lived on the property since Pierre Thibodeau arrived in 1690: the Thibodeaus, until the 1755 expulsion by British forces scattered them and thousands of others to seaports in the American colonies to the south; and the Shaws, descendants of New England planters who settled the Acadians’ vacant lands.
Ms. Beanlands has been eager to explore the site for almost a decade, to confirm family stories an Acadian home was still standing on this spot when the Shaws arrived from Rhode Island in 1760.
Courtesy Sara Beanlands
She suspects her ancestors expanded the building and lived there for many decades before it was moved uphill and became a barn. It was still standing in the 1980s — she remembers playing inside as a child.
“When you think about the long history between the Thibodeaus and the Shaws, it’s quite fitting that at some point we actually lived in the same home,” she says.
This land — and, if she’s right, the remains of a single farmhouse — gives two families and two cultures a shared history that spans more than three centuries.
“I didn’t want to do [the dig] without them because everything that happens here, it’s a shared experience,” adds the 41-year-old bundle of enthusiasm.
“I wanted to come for so long,” says Sister Yvonne Thibodeau, 77, of Tracadie, N.B., a former nurse, as she wields a V-bladed trowel to scrape away soil from a line of foundation stones.
Dean Jobb
“We’re so grateful to the Shaw family to be able to get on their land.”
Tears glisten in her friend Gisèle Lavoilette’s eyes as she puts her feelings into words.
“It’s like you lost someone and, just by doing this, you’re kind of getting them back,” says the retired teacher from Charlo, N.B., whose Thibodeau ancestors escaped deportation and fled to Quebec, where disease thinned their ranks.
“Just by touching the dirt, it’s like saying, ‘You existed, and we’re sorry it happened and we’re trying to get you back on the map.’ ”
And it was a map — a crude rendering of the area drawn the year after the expulsion — that linked the Thibodeaus to this spot. It shows a cluster of houses identified as “Vil. Tibodeau” at a bend in the river.
.S. Archives and Records Management
The sketch led Dick Thibodeau from his home in Kennebunk, Me., to the Shaw farm in the 1980s. Ms. Beanlands, then a teenager, learned of his visit many years later and, together, they have documented the history of the land.
An impromptu gathering of about 150 Thibodeau descendants here in the summer of 2004, when Nova Scotia hosted the World Acadian Congress, cemented ties between the families.
“It’s a little bit overwhelming,” admits Dick Thibodeau, now 79. “Here we are, back together, on the land of our ancestors.”
Distant relations from Pine Hill, Me., Katy, Tex., and Melbourne, Fla., huddle over a patchwork of rectangular trenches on a sunny afternoon. They work with the giddiness of children, teasing one another and shouting with joy each time a new artifact comes to light.
Dean Jobb photo
Dick Thibodeau’s ancestor, Alexis, lived here and was deported to Pennsylvania, where many exiles died of disease or hunger; his branch of the family wound up in Quebec before settling in Maine.
While other Thibodeaus who joined the dig have no direct connection to the site, they feel the same emotional attachment.
Don Thibodeaux, a former accountant from Baton Rouge, La., (Cajuns — Acadians who migrated to Louisiana after the deportation — add an “x” to the surname), traced his line to a spot near Moncton, N.B., only to discover it’s now a bowling alley parking lot.
Hopefully this site will be remembered as an Acadian site
“So this is my land,” explains the lanky 73-year-old. “Hopefully this site will be remembered as an Acadian site down in history, so future generations can enjoy their heritage.”
The goal of Ms. Beanlands’ work this summer is to flesh out that history. Professional archeologists are overseeing the Thibodeau volunteers for the week-long family portion of the dig, and every artifact will be catalogued, studied and preserved. Some are destined for a display case at the nearby Avon River Heritage Museum.
Jonathan Fowler, a specialist in Acadian archeology, says fragments of china and other objects found so far date to the mid-18th century, and most are likely from the Planter era. But the site has also yielded tell-tale chunks of hardened clay mixed with grass. Rob Ferguson, a retired Parks Canada archeologist helping with the dig, says Acadians used the material to insulate the walls of their homes.
Dean Jobb photo
More artifacts from the earlier Thibodeau occupation should be found as digging progresses. They promise a better understanding of the Acadians, who left few written records, and their lost world.
“This kind of research fills in the gaps,” notes Mr. Fowler, a professor at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax.
“The stories that come out of the ground … can really change the way we see history.”
Some Thibodeaus spent a day or two at the dig before moving on to look up relatives and friends or to visit other Acadian sites.
The stories that come out of the ground … can really change the way we see history
Ms. Darbonne, who wore a blue and white bonnet hand-sewn by her mother, a Thibodeaux, as she searched for artifacts, stayed only one day so she could make the most of her first Nova Scotia visit. Others lingered, eager to see what would emerge as their trowels probed deeper into their family’s history.
Theresa Hebert Cronan, a retired college professor and granddaughter of a Thibodeaux, made the trip from Fayetteville, Ark., after learning of the dig from a message posted online. She was startled to meet Louis Mier, who hails from her hometown of Rayne, La., for the first time. She was even more surprised to discover his nephew is married to her niece.
Her first day as an archeologist netted a nail, two fragments of animal bone, a few shards of china — and something else.
“I found a lot of companionship,” she said.
National Post

http://news.nationalpost.com/news/canada/i-cried-at-the-beauty-of-the-land-they-lost-archaeological-dig-connects-acadian-descendants-to-tragic-past


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Nova Scotia: A small province that's big on adventure, culture and indulgence

With river rapids, fine wines, fresh seafood and a fascinating history to explore, you can pack a lot in to a trip, says Sarah Barrell 
 This had better be good. It's 30C and I'm wearing a boiler suit, a life jacket and a pair of battered trainers that, if they have seen better days, those days were a long time ago. As I slide down the muddy banks of Nova Scotia's Shubenacadie River, a tidemark of thick red clay is oozing steadily up my legs. Along with sounding somewhat scatological, brown-water rafting so far lacks the cool factor of its white-water counterpart. But I'm willing to give it a go. The "Shubie" opens on to the Bay of Fundy, home to the world's highest recorded tides which, in about 15 minutes, will funnel a bore wave down the river's narrow channel at about 18 miles an hour.
Shubenacadie in the local First Nation's Mi'kmaq language translates as "place where wild potatoes grow", and as the Zodiac chugs out of the Tidal Bore Rafting Park past brown banks, brown sand bars and brown clay cliffs, high-octane thrills seem a distant promise. Less prosaic is local Mi'kmaq legend, which tells how the river illustrates just how deeply the earth inhales and exhales, twice a day. Our skipper, Amber, is reverent about this tidal respiration. "I love brown water! It's so much more unpredictable than white rapids." Amber hears the rumbling of the wave long before we see it and guns the boat towards the head of the bore, which we bump over like a sleeping policeman. I begin to wonder what all the fuss is about.
Seconds later we plough into the oncoming swell and it's abundantly clear what the fuss is. I'm making much of it, although only after swallowing a face-full of salty water do I realise I'm screaming. Ten feet high chocolate pudding waves are pounding down on the boat's seven passengers, leaving us waist-high in water that threatens to float us overboard. We're drenched, disorientated and grinning like demons. For the next hour, Amber expertly rolls us into the oncoming waves and, having released our inner child, ends the ride at the steep banks of a muddy creek where we belly-slide into the water and chuck handfuls of sludge at one another. The buzz, and the muddy residue, lasts all day but once back on land, amid the serenity of the Annapolis Valley's farms and orchards, I begin to see just how varied Canada's second-smallest province is.
From whale-rich waters and Celtic villages in the northern highlands of Nova Scotia to the vibrant, even edgy, culture of its capital, Halifax, down to the blond sand beaches of the south, this Atlantic province is culturally hard to pin down. Around Fundy Bay, marshland and mudflats recall the Suffolk coast, albeit on a giant New World scale. Inland among the Annapolis Valley's clapboard houses, apple orchards and corn silos, I could be in New England. Indeed, Boston is just a day's drive away and the province often doubles for America's East Coast in movie shoots. Yet in many ways it could not be more Canadian. In the Annapolis town of Windsor, ice hockey was born on a frozen pond behind the country's oldest private school. Quirky sports abound here. Billboard posters flanking the town's maple-shaded pavements advertise a Thanksgiving river boat race, a root vegetable regatta with craft carved out of giant pumpkins.
Pumpkins aren't the only things to thrive in Nova Scotia. On the same latitude as Bordeaux, the province also produces award-winning wines. Most of its vineyards are concentrated in the Annapolis Valley. At Domaine de Grand Pré, a vineyard fêted for wines made from the local acadie grape, I stop for a tasting. "Historically, Nova Scotians are rum drinkers," says vintner Hanspeter Stutz. "It comes from a maritime tradition – all that trade with the Caribbean. When I came here in the 1990s, Canada was known for ice wine, but things are changing fast." I try everything from big reds and a refined sparkling, to award-winning whites such as Tidal Bay and l'Acadie Blanc, the latter perfect with local scallops, according to Hans.
Seafood is something Nova Scotia truly excels at. Just north of wine country, at Hall's Harbour, rolling agricultural landscape gives way to an expanse of blue; sea and sky spiked with fishing boat spinnakers. At the Lobster Pound, I select a wriggling crustacean from a rudimentary tank, which is promptly cooked to order and served on the dockside deck. Before I tuck into the modest half-pounder – the Bay of Fundy lobsters often reach 6lb – Lowell, my waiter, demonstrates how to stroke a lobster to sleep. He wakes the creature to have it crack muscle shells like an overzealous castanet player: dinner and a show. From the terrace of this sunny restaurant life appears pretty laid back. But the job of a fisherman, while potentially lucrative, is still tough.
"Licences for lobster traps don't come cheap: 100 traps cost C$10,000 [£6,666]," says Lowell. "Add fuel and labour ... you have to be out there every minute the weather allows."
In season, a fisherman's family sees very little of them for months on end. Or, as many of the local history books in the Pound's shop attest, they're never seen again. Along with big tides come big storms and treacherous conditions. It was off the coast of Nova Scotia that Titanic went down. The province played a big part in the recovery of the ship's victims, the moving details of which can be uncovered in the museums and graveyards of Halifax. But Nova Scotia's maritime heritage dates back to long before this fated ocean liner set sail. As early as the 17th century, its ports were gateways to the New World.
Twenty minutes east, at Grand Pré I explore the undulating coastline landscaped by French settlers in the 1600s. Then, Nova Scotia was part of Acadia or "Acadie", a region of New France that stretched from modern-day Québec through the Atlantic provinces to Maine. Nova Scotia's Acadians were ingenious agriculturalists, building a vast network of mud-bank dykes to reclaim the saltwater marshes and transform the land from bog to breadbasket. During the Seven Years War, the final battle in a century-long fight between the English and the French for dominance in North America, Acadians were forcibly removed from their promised land by the English. This summer, Grand Pré Historic National Historic site won Unesco World Heritage designation for its significance to Acadian culture.
The lively onsite museum tells the story behind the expulsion of some 10,000 Acadians in the late 1700s, harrowing tales of families separated for a lifetime over something as arbitrary as how many people the English forces could cram on to their ships. In the grounds, visitors gather around a statue of Evangeline, the heroine of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem. This emigration epic tells the tale of young Evangeline going in search of her lost lover, Gabriel. It encouraged a rare sense of identity across disparate Acadian cultures; many had migrated as far south as Louisiana, giving birth to America's Cajun culture (the term "Cajun" a derivation of Acadian).
At Trout Point Lodge, a luxury wilderness retreat in the forests of southern Nova Scotia, I meet a group that made the reverse journey. Daniel Abel, Charles Leary and Vaughn Perret have come from Louisiana to "Acadia" driven by a desire to bridge the two cultures and their cuisines. An organic farmer, cookbook writer and restaurateur, this trio represent three of only a handful of Americans who are members of the French Cheesemakers' Guild. Their commitment to culinary cultural exchange is putting Trout Point Lodge on the map for gourmet tourists. I take a tour of the property's smokehouses where local fish is cured in fragrant spruce. In the vegetable gardens native staples such as blue potatoes and Jerusalem artichokes thrive before being transformed with Cajun spices in the kitchens.
After an indulgent five-course supper we grab torches and head to the river's landing deck to stargaze under the guidance of Michael Holland, Trout Point's resident astronomist and a local astrophysics student. The surrounding Kejimkujik National Park became a Dark Sky Preserve in 2010 and we are treated to a black canopy, pebble-dashed with dense sprays of stars, momentarily lit by the faintest glow of the Aurora Borealis on the horizon. The following morning brings more natural wonders. Set on the confluence of two boulder-strewn rivers, the lodge offers misty dawn swims in an expanse of silky, peat-tinted water. I watch the sun rise over old-growth Atlantic forest before warming up in the outdoor hot tub and barrel sauna.
Later that morning, I make my way deeper into the heart of "Keji", along the narrow, forest-fringed channels of the Mersey River. In a couple of weeks' time, this red maple flood plain will be ablaze with autumn colours. For now I'm content with the forest's greens perfectly reflected in the "Mersey Tea", the same deep tannin-stained waters found at Trout Point. A great blue heron sails up out of the tall grass, hanging above us like a child's kite. "Nova Scotia is a flyway for the great bird migration," says our park guide, Paul Lalonde. The park is home to exotic species such as snowy owls, as well as local ones including black bear, white-tailed deer, beavers and muskrat.
I'm hoping for a sighting of Canada's most elusive mammal, and once we cross the Canso Causeway into Nova Scotia's northern highlands I'm granted just that. The Atlantic almost entirely surrounds this province, but for the narrow isthmus where it joins New Brunswick. It feels nowhere more castaway than Cape Breton. Here place names are Celtic (Scottish immigration dates back to 1622), and vast pods of migrating whales skirt the shore. On the Skyline Trail, one of 26 hiking routes through the boreal forest of Cape Breton Highlands National Park, I'm treated to a sighting of moose: mother and calf calling through the trees with a distinctive sound that's part "moo", part old man's cough.
After nearly two decades of travels to Canada, this is my first wild moose sighting. The fact that it's in the scrubland near the car park only adds to my glee; at the end of a three-hour hike, I'd given up hope. But surprise is something I'm coming to expect of Nova Scotia. This is a place where a visit to McDonald's is something of a gourmet experience (the McLobster sandwich is packed with fresh crustacean), and though it's just a five-hour flight from the UK, its landscape could not be more New World-exotic.
I spend my final night in Halifax, head filled with Titanic history brought to life in the superb Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, home to one of the world's largest and finest permanent collections of artefacts from the ship. In the hype surrounding 2012's Titanic centenary, Nova Scotia has become synonymous with the sinking – but for travellers that get beyond the capital, the province offers so much more.
Travel essentials
Getting there
Sarah Barrell travelled with Bridge & Wickers (020-7386 4610; bridgeandwickers.co.uk) which can arrange one-week fly-drive packages to Nova Scotia from £1,695 per person, including return Air Canada flights from Heathrow to Halifax, seven nights’ accommodation and car hire. A two-week fly-drive itinerary costs from £2,580 per person.
Staying and visiting there
Trout Point Lodge (001 902 761 2142; troutpoint.com) has doubles from C$185 (£120), room only. Tidal bore rafting (001 800 5657 238; raftingcanada.ca) costs from C$69 (£45) per person for a two hour trip.
More information
Canada Tourism Commission: uk.canada.travel

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Culinary Travel Guide Vacation Cooking Schools

www.foodvacation.com/
We had gone there before; always arriving in taxi, we had left once on foot, trekking .... Trout Point Lodge hosts the summer and fall Nova Scotia Seafood Cooking School ... covering Acadian, Creole, and Cajun styles along with the fundamentals of .... to fore in Granada, born from the carmen after the expulsion of the Moors.


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Blogged:

Kentville Farm Markets-Nova Scotia Farm Markets, Kentville Library, LIBRARIES AND BEAUTY- Nova Scotia-Garden hints and resolution for new growing year/Kentville Farmer's Market- Annapolis Valley/RE-LOVED Jewellry-EmilyLynnFisher/ Kentville Library-Annapolis Valley Regional Library... do not stick us in abasement whilst u fight over new quarters...some of us won't live to see it if u do this- Pls Town/County- do better /OPEN ARMS - Kentville Feb. 20th- Coldest Night of the year Walk and fundraiser-please sign up and/or walk roll those chairs for homeless and hurting


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BLOGGED:

NOVA SCOTIA- The Order of Good Cheer 400 years celebrating booze and food -Canada's First Cooks and Recipes (First Peoples)/ Celebrating Nova Scotia Peoples history-First Immigrants /Celebrating our Mi'kmaq historical culture/Come visit getcha Nova Scotia Canada on/CANADA students youngbloods- getcha Canada history on /Canada's First Order of Good Cheer Trail visiting history, wineries, breweries and fun- bring your kids and grannies 2

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On the shores of a great wine region

Nova Scotia’s cool valleys, acidic soil provide unexpected haven for winemakers



THE CANADIAN PRESS


HALIFAX —
Past the rocky, ocean-battered coastline of Nova Scotia is an unlikely tale of success: a burgeoning wine industry producing palate-pleasers that connoisseurs say can rival what Champagne, France has to offer.

Winemakers in the lush heartland of Nova Scotia’s wine industry, the Annapolis Valley, are embracing what might appear as an impossible set of conditions — cool temperatures and rocky, acidic soil — to create awardwinning white and sparkling wines that are capturing international attention.

“There’s this cardinal rule that basically dictates a great wine always has the ability to highlight the strengths of where it comes from," says Benjamin Bridge winemaker Jean-Benoit Deslauriers, who left the sun and surf of California in 2008 for Nova Scotia’s Gaspereau River.

One of about 20 Nova Scotia wineries, Benjamin Bridge is the only Nova Scotia brand selling bubblies throughout Canada. Its claim to fame is Nova 7, a pale, refreshing spritz made from grapes grown along the Bay of Fundy.

Deslauriers says part of Nova Scotia’s strength lies in its long grape-growing season where unspoiled vines can be plucked into November, allowing the fruit to retain its freshness at a moderate sugar content.

The province’s other strength is a collection of keen winemakers and proponents working behind the scenes to grow the industry, which the government said boasted sales of $15.4 million last year.

On Tuesday, Nova Scotia and Ottawa announced $487,960 over two years for a new wine research lab in the heart of the valley at Acadia University in Wolfville. The lab is meant to be a hub for food scientists, dietitians, biochemists, plant physiologists and producers of food and beverages as the province looks to make a bigger impact.

Making wine in Nova Scotia is a “high-risk, high-reward dynamic," says Deslauriers, a Quebec native
who has also worked in Chile.

“We end up being somewhat of a specialized wine region much like some of the regions in Europe that are either really high in the Alps or in the northern parts of France and Germany."

Toronto wine critic Tony Aspler says the province’s wineries excel in sparkling wines and aromatic whites. Reds, however, “are more problematic in that climate."

That hasn’t stopped Nova Scotia wineries from dabbling in reds and learning what does and doesn’t
work.

Gillian Mainguy of the Winery Association of Nova Scotia says early generation winemakers tried to compensate for the grapes they could grow during warm summers and long falls by producing wines that “were just way too sweet."

“It’s not unlike what both Ontario and British Columbia went through," says Mainguy, citing Ontario’s oft-ridiculed Baby Duck as an example. The sweet, sparkling, low-alcohol wine was popular in the 1970s but snubbed
by connoisseurs.

She says a noticeable shift came in the early 2000s with the hiring of experienced winemakers who understood the terroir — a combination of climate, soil and terrain.

“We are making world class sparkling wines and aromatic whites that outside of a few other places in the world — Champagne, France and in the United Kingdom — can’t be rivalled anywhere else," she says.

Roger Dial is widely considered
the founding father of Nova Scotia’s wine industry, having established what would become the Domaine de Grand Pre winery between the late 1970s and early 1980s.

There were “lots of doubters" in those early days, says Dial, who had previously owned a winery in California.

“We have some wonderful, huge assets now that we didn’t have back in the ‘80s and the ‘90s and that’s in the form of young, professional winemakers who are absolutely dedicated, not just to the profession and the craft, but to the place," he says.

“They want to be here, making history."

Many in the business agree a turning point came in 2012 with the creation of Nova Scotia’s very first appellation — a kind of geographic recipe. Known as Tidal Bay, it is a crisp white wine meant to accentuate the region’s cuisine, particularly seafood.

Using specific grape varieties, including 100 per cent Nova Scotia- grown grapes, a dozen wineries are producing a 2015 vintage of Tidal Bay under a strict set of standards that must be approved by an blind, independent tasting panel. Balancing the high acidity of the soil with residual sugars, Tidal Bay leaves “a nice pucker," says Mainguy.

Aspler says Nova Scotia’s wineries have shown a level of cooperation unseen anywhere else in Canada.

“To create something that could be marketed as a Nova Scotia wine, that would embrace all the wineries who want to participate, it’s a really interesting concept," he says.

Carl Sparkes, president of Jost Wineries of Malagash — the largest and longest-operating winery in Atlantic Canada — says it’s not surprising that the industry in Nova Scotia is tight knit.

“I think we are mostly farmers at heart and therefore behave through similar values," he says. “Farmers will always be there to help out a neighbour, but are not without their bickering. All in all, though, I think everyone wants to see the industry grow and prosper.





Lightfoot & Wolfville vineyard will be one of many affected by Ottawa’s announcement on Tuesday.


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BBC-



The tragic story behind Canada’s newest World Heritage Site

A place made of equal parts persistent human enterprise and epic human devastation, the Acadian settlement of Grand Pré is now using its fertile land to look to the future.


It is the landscape that recently won this tiny Nova Scotia farming community a place on the prestigious Unesco World Heritage List. Grand Pré, North America’s most recently inscribed site, at first glance seems like little more than a picturesque patch of the Annapolis Valley on the shores of the Bay of Fundy. But there is far more here than so pleasantly meets the eye. 
To get to this rural settlement, take Route 1, also known as the Evangeline Trail, 90km north from the Nova Scotian capital of Halifax. The road is named for the fictional character of Evangeline, immortalised in the epic poem Evangeline, A Tale of Acadie, published in 1847 by American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The story follows an Acadian girl as she searches for her love Gabriel, following the deportation of their people from these lands.
The Acadians were settlers who arrived in what is now Atlantic Canada in 1682, most from Poitou, a coastal province of France. They settled on the lands around the Bay of Fundy, known then as Acadia and today as New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Marshland farming became the mainstay of the Acadian economy, with locals hand-digging dykes against some of the world’s highest tides, linking the island of North Grand Pré to the mainland and forming the east and west shores of the manmade peninsula.
A peaceful place dominated by fields of crops and farmsteads, today Grand Pré is home to small wineries and bustling restaurants. However, the main attraction is the Grand Pré National Historic Site,  several acres of former farmland containing landmarks and monuments important to Acadian history. Start your exploration at the modern but unobtrusive visitor centre, where the epic story of the Acadians, their lives and their deportation is told.
An epic history
For 73 years, the French settlers worked hard, building farms on land once covered in forest and sea – then the Arcadians got caught up in the struggle between England and France for control of North America. Because they would not swear allegiance to the British crown, in 1755 the British deported many Acadian settlements, with Grand Pré becoming the symbol for the region-wide extradition.
Over the next eight years, le Grand Dérangement, or Great Expulsion, saw some 11,500 Acadians shipped off across the Bay of Fundy to neighbouring New England, while British authorities confiscated their property, divided families and burned their crops and homes. En route, about a third died of disease and drowning. When peace returned in 1763, many Acadians left New England for destinations as far flung as the Caribbean, France and the southern United States, including Louisiana where they became known as the “Cajuns”, a derivative of the word “Acadian”. By the following year, the British allowed Acadians to return to Maritime Canada. Many did, settling in small groups across the region and founding what is today a string of French-speaking Acadian communities.
Explore the land
While few Acadians live in contemporary Grand Pré, the area is full of references to its history. The fields are owned by descendants of the Acadians turned New Englanders, and the dykes are overseen as they have been for centuries, by the Marsh Body, a collective of farmers who apprise government of the need for upkeep and repair.
The most immersive way to explore these historic and fertile lands is by bicycle; bring your own or hire one from Freewheeling Adventures. The first stop is a statue of Longfellow’s heroine outside the visitor centre, forlornly gazing over her shoulder at the church behind her, an open-to-the public memorial with many commemorative works of art and fascinating artefacts, including a replica of the ledger that lists all who were deported.
The flat country roads that run east and west from the visitor centre lead to 9km of historic dykes, passing through fields of corn, oats, barley and alfalfa. These crops are planted on deep, fertile soil hard won from the sea. Hard-packed dirt trails line the tops of the dykes; you can imagine the hard-at-work settlers building them one shovelful of soil at a time and farming the land they claimed back from the bay. Flocks of thousands of shorebirds such as plovers and sanderlings fly in unison, swinging this way and that in waves over the mud flats, attracting birdwatchers in search of a late summer spectacle.
Another interesting route is along Grand Pré Road, an easy 3km cycle from the visitor centre across flat farmland and past farmhouses to Evangeline Beach. Several small roads with names like Plover Lane, Eagle Lane and Sandpiper Lane lead down to the brick-coloured sands. At low tide when the water recedes half a kilometre into the bay, the mud flats shimmer like frosted cakes and become an endless source of ammunition for good natured mud fights that erupt among groups of shrieking kids.
A modern take
Grand Pré is not all about history. Within the past three decades, vintners have planted grapes on hills around the area, taking advantage of rich soil, a suitable microclimate and southern-facing slopes. Cycling along Route 1, stop off at the Muir Murray Estate Winery, which pays homage to the lore of Grand Pré with wine names such as 755 Reserve and Fundy Tide. The on-site restaurant, appropriately named the Perfect Blend, offers up local fare, including favourites such as seafood chowder and lobster rolls.
About 1km east along Route 1 is the award-winning Le Caveau Restaurant at the Domaine de Grand Pré winery, which specialises in grapes such as L’Acadie Blanc, developed for growing conditions like those in Nova Scotia. Now the grape of choice for winemaking in this region, the tart whites produced are comparable to a crisp chardonnay. The winery has quickly racked up a long list of award-winning vintages, taking gold at the 2012 All Canadian Wine Championships for Tidal Bay, a blend that includes L’Acadie Blanc and muscat. The result is a bright, fresh, full-bodied wine, which the vintner claims reflects the coastal breezes and the cool climate.
Another 1km east along Route 1 is the rustic Tangled Gardens, a herb and flower garden that specialises in chutneys, vinegars, liqueurs and jams as well as herb jellies with such inspired flavours as garlic rosemary or raspberry lavender. With a small onsite art gallery, this is a delightful place to stop and wander about, drinking in the aromas of the herbs and the whimsy of the artwork, some of it placed about the gardens. Next door is Just Us Coffee, the last stop along Route 1 before leaving Grand Pre. This unique coffee shop is Canada’s first fair trade coffee roaster, where you can learn about fair trade at the in-store interpretive museum, and try coffees from countries as diverse as Guatemala, Ethiopia, East Timor and Rwanda.
From the roastery, the road rises steeply back toward Halifax. Dismount and look back, perhaps longingly like the statue of Evangeline you can see down below. It is as if she is searching in vain for a bygone place and time made of equal parts persistent human enterprise and epic human tragedy.















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FROM FIRST NATIONS - MI'KMAQ NATION


Acadian Church
ACADIAN EXPULSION FROM NOVA SCOTIA: July 28, 1755
The French authorities were well aware of the travesties the English could inflict upon another race or culture. A report the French Governor and the Intendent at Quebec had submitted in 1745, ten years before the Expulsion, stated:
















"We cannot imagine that they could entertain the idea of removing those people [the
Acadians] in order to substitute Englishmen in their stead, unless desertion of the
Indians would embolden them to adopt such a course, inhuman as it may be." Though these French authorities could not imagine such an inhuman act, the English could. The event made famous by the American poet Longfellow in his poem "Evangeline" was soon under way. In early 1755 the Acadian Deputies were summoned to Halifax by Governor Lawrence and ordered to swear an oath of allegiance to the British Crown. They refused, contending, as they had with Cornwallis in 1749, that if they did so the French would set the Indians against them and they would be massacred.
The English lost no time in responding. On July 28, 1755 Lawrence got the full approval of Nova Scotia's Colonial Council to start dispersing the Acadians among the American Colonies. He sent Colonel Robert Monckton to Chignecto and Chepody, Lieutenant Colonel John Winslow to Minas, Pisiquid, and Cobequid, and Major John Handfield to Annapolis Royal to carry out the orders.
Colonel Robert Monckton rounded up the Acadians in Chignecto, while Colonel John Winslow ordered those at Minas to assemble at Grand Pré. They were loaded into the holds of ships and scattered to the four corners of the world. Families were separated, never to see one another again, and untold numbers died in transport. This included those who had sworn allegiance to the British Crown, there were no exceptions.
The Mi'kmaq faithfully stuck by their Acadian allies to the bitter end. Some of the Acadians tried to escape and were aided and protected by them to the best of their ability. They also joined forces with them to drive back the British, as was reported by the French Governor:
The British burned the Village, including the Church at Chipoudy and was responded
to thus. Mr. Boishebert, at the head of 125 Indians and Acadians, overtook them at
the River Pelkoudiak, attacked and fought them for three hours, and drove them
vigorously back to their vessels. The English had 42 killed and 45 wounded.
Mr. Gorham, a very active English Officer, was among the number of the wounded.
We lost 1 Indian, and had three others wounded. Many Acadians went into hiding among the Mi'kmaq and remained with them until the British and French ended their hostilities in 1763. A group of several hundred were hidden by the Mi'kmaq in the area known today as Kejimkujik National Park.. See the story of Jacques Morrice, the name the English used for him, in We Were not the Savages for more details.
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Text: Charles Lawrence's Acadien expulsion orders
to
Captain John Handfield


Halifax 11 August 1755 Instructions for Major Handfield, Commanding his Majesty's garrison of Annapolis Royale in relation to the transportation of the Inhabitants of the District of Annapolis River and other French Inhabitants out of the Province of Nova Scotia.
Sir,
Having in my Letter of the 31st of July last made you acquainted with the reasons which Induced His Majesty's Council to come to the Resolution of sending away the French Inhabitants and clearing the whole Country of such bad subjects, it only remains for me to give you the necessary orders for the putting in practice what has been so solemnly determined.
That the Inhabitants may not have it in their power to return to this Province nor to join in strengthening the French of Canada in Louisbourg; it is resolved that they shall be dispersed among his Majesty's Colonies upon the Continent of America.
For this purpose Transports are ordered to be sent from Boston to Annapolis to ship on board one thousand persons reckoning two persons to a ton, and for Chignecto, transports have been taken up here to carry off the Inhabitants of that place; and for those of the District around Mines Bason Transports are in from Boston. As Annapolis is the place where the last of the transports will depart from, any of the vessels that may not receive their full compliment up the Bay will be ordered there, and Colonel Winslow with his detachment will follow by land and bring up what stragglers he may meet with to ship on board at your place.
Upon the arrival of the vessels from Boston in the Bason of Annapolis as many of the Inhabitants of Annapolis District as can be collected by any means, particularly the heads of families and young men, are to be shipped on board of them at the above rate of two persons to a ton, or as near it as possible. The tonnage of the vessels to be ascertained by the charter partys, which the masters will furnish you with an amount of.
And to give you all the ease possible respecting the victualling of these transports, I have appointed Mr. George Sauls to act as agent Victualler upon this occasion and have given him particular instructions for that purpose with a copy of which he will furnish you upon his arrival at Annapolis Royale from Chignecto with the provisions for victualling the whole transports; but in case you should have shipped any of the Inhabitants before his arrival you will order five pounds of flour and one pound of pork to be delivered to each person so shipped to last for seven days and so until Mr. Saul's arrival, and it will be replaced by him into the stores from what he has on board the provision vessel for that purpose.
The destination of the Inhabitants of Annapolis River and of the transports ordered to Annapolis Bason:
To be sent to Philadelphia such a number of vessels as will transport three hundred persons.
To be sent to New York such a number of vessels as will transport two hundred persons.
To be sent to Connecticut such a number of vessels / whereof the Sloop Dove, Samuel Forbes, Master to be one / as will transport three hundred persons.
And To be sent to Boston such a number of vessels as will transport two hundred persons, or rather more in proportion to the province of Connecticut, should the number to be shipped off exceed one thousand persons.
When the people are embarked you will please to give the master of each vessel one of the letters of which you will receive a number signed by me of which you will address to the Governor of the Province or the Commander in Chief for the time being where they are to be put on shore and enclose therein the printed form of the Certificate to be granted to the Masters of the vessels to entitle them to their hire as agreed upon by Charter party; and with these you will give each of the Masters their sailing orders in writing to proceed according to the above destination, and upon their arrival immediately to wait upon the Governors or Commanders in Chief of the Provinces for which they are bound with the said Letters and to make all possible dispatch in debarking their passengers and obtain certificates thereof agreeable to the form aforesaid.
And you will in these orders make it a particular injunction to the said Masters to be as careful and watchful as possible during the whole course of the passage to prevent the passengers making any attempt to seize upon the vessel by allowing only a small number to be upon the decks at a time and using all other necessary precautions to prevent the bad consequence of such attempts; and that they be particularly careful that the Inhabitants carry no arms nor other offensive weapons on board with them at their embarkation. As also that they see the provisions regularly issued to the people agreeable to the allowance proportioned in Mr. George Saul's instructions.
You will use all the means proper and necessary for collecting the people together so as to get them on board. If you find that fair means will not do with them, you must proceed by the most vigorous measures possible, not only in compelling them to embark, but in depriving those who shall escape of all means of shelter or support by burning their houses and destroying everything that may afford them the means of subsistence in the country, and if you have not force sufficient to perform this service, Colonel Winslow at Mines or the Commanding Officer there will upon your application send you a proper reinforcement.
You will see by the Charter partys of the vessels taken up at Boston that they are hired by the month; therefore I am to desire that you will use all possible dispatch to save expense to the public.
As soon as the people are shipped and the transports are ready you will acquaint the Commander of His Majesty's Ship therewith that he may take them under his convoy and put to sea without loss of time.
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Lawrence's incursion

The following year, on Friday, 20 April 1750, Charles Lawrence with a fleet of seven warships, decided to make an incursion into the Basin of Chignecto in order to assess the state of the place and the reaction of the Habitants. He had with him Charles Leblanc of Grand Pré and Mr. Landry, the deputy of the Basin of Mines, who Lawrence forced to come aboard in order to have him try to convince the Habitants of the region to co-operate with the English. But the expedition was a failure.
In order to assure docility of his "guests", Lawrence had ordered Captain Handfield, who was still commander of the Grand Pré's fort, to place in custody Mrs. Landry and her children. Some hostages! The adventure ended with the return of the ships on April 26 and the release of the hostages
The text and Lawrence's incursion were quoted from: http://www.handfield.ca/documentsen/appendix1.htm
CLICK http://www.danielnpaul.com/NewBrunswickCreated-1784.html to read about an incident where a New Brunswick Acadien family was killed and scalped by British Rangers
Acadian Museum - Erath, Louisiana: http://www.acadianmuseum.com
Click to read about American Indian Genocide
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Hometown travel: Annapolis Valley wine country, Grand Pré’s Acadians, and Hall’s Harbour


Update June 30, 2012: The Grand Pré Landscape has been named a UNESCO World Heritage Site!
A trip through Nova Scotia is incomplete without a visit to my other home, the Annapolis Valley. Best known as the agricultural heartland of the province and the centre of Nova Scotia’s rapidly-growing wine industry, there is easily many days’ worth of adventure to be had. When given another perfect sunny Saturday by the spring weather gods, I recruited my friend Trish (a knowledgeable wine enthusiast and road trip fan) to join me in another official Operation Hometown Traveler trip. We had a vague plan, some targets to hit, but above all, wanted to pack in as much fun as possible.
Our first stop was kind of a wrong turn down a rough road that may or may not have been mostly washed away (sorry, car rental folks!) to look for access to a nearby walking trail. We never found it, however, we did find this spectacular view of Blomidon as the morning fog burned off.
Blomidon Annapolis Valley Nova Scotia

The wines of Domaine de Grand Pré

Our first proper stop was Domain de Grand Pré, timing our arrival to coincide with one of three daily tours. It was a perfect day for a wine tour (or three), and we learned a lot from our friendly and knowledgeable guides, particularly about the different kinds of grapes that fare the best in our climate to eventually become wine.
Grand Pre wine nova Scotia
The tour was part of a $7 package, which included a tasting of six of Grand Pré’s wines: 2010 Seyval, 2011 Tidal Bay (read more about Nova Scotia’s new signature appellation), 2011 Rosé, 2009 Pete Luckett Leon Millot, 2010 Castel, and Pomme d’Or, Grand Pré’s unique dessert wine offering, made entirely from Annapolis Valley apples.
Domaine de Grand Pre wine tasting Nova Scotia
Domaine de Grand Pré is also a part of the Économusée, a network of artisanal heritage destinations across Atlantic Canada. In the museum section of the winery, there is a scent station, which let you test your nose against the various scents you discover in Grand Pré’s offerings.
Domaine de Grand Pre wine scent wall Nova Scotia

Rediscovering my Acadian heritage at Grand Pré

In addition to improving our minds with knowledge about Nova Scotia wines, we took advantage of the nearby location to improve knowledge of Nova Scotia history at Grand Pre National Historic Site. Grand Pré shares the story of daily life of Nova Scotia’s Acadian community prior to its expulsion by the British in 1755, the deportation (le grand dérangement), and the modern impact. Full disclosure: I had been there before on a school trip, but it is definitely time to get closer to my Acadian roots. My grandmother was Acadian, and while my Acadian French is mostly awful, I love the Acadian people, their resilience, and their food.
Grand Pre National Historic Site Nova Scotia
We took our time going through the impressive interpretive displays, describing the history and struggles of the Acadian people and the ingenuity of their farming practices on rich land that remains the breadbasket of the province. The site is currently under consideration for a World Heritage Site designation by UNESCO, which would be an exciting development for the region and the community that has developed around the site.
It was such a beautiful day, we had to get out and spend some time wandering around the well-maintained gardens. I used to live in the Valley, and speaking from past experience, we were well into summer on this particular day, with virtually-cloudless skies, bright sun, high temperatures, and no wind.
The grounds of Grand Pre National Historic Site Nova Scotia
The focal point of the grounds is the Memorial Church, approached through a series of well-cultivated paths, passing a sculpture of Evangeline, the heroine of Longfellow’s epic poem about the Acadian deportation.
Evangeline Memorial Church Grand Pre National Historic Site Nova Scotia
Stained glass Memorial Church Grand Pre Historic Site Nova Scotia
Back out in the garden, we got to see the full force of spring with some of my favourite flowers, poppies, and lupins, which should be Nova Scotia’s signature road trip flower, since the sides of our roads and highways are practically blanketed in them this time of year.
Gardens Grand Pre National Historic Site Nova Scotia
A blacksmith shop and small working garden round out the site. The potager kitchen garden was a staple of Acadian farm life, and while many of the vegetables are still in progress, the herbs were up and ready to use.
Potager garden Grand Pre National Historic Site Nova Scotia

Finding the Deportation Cross

Funny coincidence, when we got lost earlier in the day looking for the walking trail, we were basically on the road to the Deportation Cross, commemorating the point at which Acadians were loaded onto boats and sent off to other parts of North America. The cross is at the end of a country road, so we parked the car and walked in, along a herd of particularly curious cows. One was far more interested in us than her million-dollar view.
Cows Blomidon Nova Scotia
The cross itself is a simple tribute, along the peaceful river. It certainly wasn’t a long visit, but it helps complete the story of le grand dérangement that starts over at Grand Pré.
Deportation Cross Grand Pre Nova Scotia

Phonebox in a vineyard at Luckett Vineyards

After a quick bite to eat, we made our way to Luckett Vineyards, one of Nova Scotia’s newest wineries. On the approach, you cannot miss a most unique feature: a red British phonebox among the vines.
Luckett Vineyards Wolfville Nova Scotia
Upon further inspection, I found Luckett’s wines literally calling to us. The phonebox holds a working retro-style payphone from the era of Maritime Telegraph & Telephone (long gone). The best part? You can make a call gratis to anywhere in North America! I called my parents, who live on the other side of the Valley, to tell them I was in a field. It was completely charming and exactly the kind of unexpected experience I hoped to find.
Phonebox Luckett Vineyards Wolfville Nova Scotia
Inside the shop, we became better acquainted with Luckett’s extensive range of wines and fruit wines. The shop is, in fact, where the winemaking happens, and it was interesting to see both sides of the business coexisting in the space.
Luckett Vineyards Gaspereau Nova Scotia
For the tasting, we took advantage of Luckett’s “5 tastings for $7” offer. It was my first experience with Luckett wines and I found some  new favourites. Despite the order in the image below, we did drink them in proper tasting order, from white to red to dessert.












Wine tasting Luckett Vineyard Gaspereau Nova Scotia
L-R: Cordelia dessert wine, Triumphe d’Alsace, Ortega, Muscat, and Tidal Bay

Gaspereau Vineyards

For the loveliness of its surroundings, Gaspereau Vineyards is one my favourite Nova Scotia wineries. Situated on the “floor” of the Gaspereau River valley, the vines extend across the grounds and up the hill. For future travel reference, if the stars align and the conditions are right, you can rent an inner tube from any number of local entrepreneurs and go “tubing“, spending the afternoon floating down the Gaspereau River. Be sure to stop in for a bottle of wine when you’re done for the day!
Gaspereau Vineyards Nova Scotia
Gaspereau Vineyards Nova Scotia

Low tide at Halls Harbour

Halls Harbour is a little oove at the end of a lovely drive. Before our visit, we consulted the tide table to plan our visit around low tide. Since the harbour is on the Bay of Fundy, it sees dramatic fluctuations in water level between high and low tides every six hours or so. Low tide is amusing, because the water drains out of the harbour. The boats end up sitting on dry ground, tethered to the wharf to keep from falling over, until the tide returns and they’re bobbing in 10 metre-deep (approximately 40 ft) water again.
Halls Harbour low tide Nova Scotia
Low tide Halls Harbour Nova Scotia
If you’re hankering for a seafood feast, head to the lobster pound, where you can pick out, and subsequently eat, the lobster of your choice.
Halls Harbour Lobster Pound Nova Scotia
There is an amazing wealth of things to do with a day in the Valley. We spent the whole day seeing the sights and drinking some fine wine, missing several other items that were a part of our vague itinerary. Oh well, I guess I’ll just have to return!

Wines of Nova Scotia’s Passport to Wine Country

What’s travel without a passport? I have fallen hard for the Wines of Nova Scotia‘s passport program. So much so, one of my top goals of the summer is to visit the twelve member wineries and obtain all of the passport stamps. So far, so good, three down, nine to go and it’s only mid-June!

Experience it for yourself:

Domaine de Grand Pré: 11611 Highway #1 (Exit 10 off Highway 101)
Grand Pré National Historic Site: Exit 10 at Highway 101
Deportation Cross: Exit 10 at Highway 101
Luckett Vineyards: 1293 Grand Pré Road, Gaspereau (Exit 9 off Highway 101)
Halls Harbour: Route 359 outside of Kentville (Exit 12 off Highway 101)

http://bitesizedtravel.ca/2012/06/08/hometown-travel-annapolis-valley-wine-country/

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 BLOMIDON














Our History

The Canning area was once known as Rivière de Vieux Habitants, due to its proximity to the Rivière de la Veille Habitation (Habitant River) and named for the residents of Acadie (Habitants) who cultivated the land in the region.  Following the Acadian expulsion in 1755, the land was re-settled by New England Planters.  This area, along the shores of the Minas Basin, was once a well known area for shipbuilding and the famous Annapolis Valley orchards.  In fact, Canning was once known as Apple Tree Landing.


Th0010-001e first vineyards were planted on our site in 1986.  At that time, the owners of the property sold all of the grapes to Jost Vineyards in Malagash, NS.  After some tumultuous years of ownership, the property was purchased by the owners of Creekside Estate Winery in Niagara, ON, who were responsible for constructing the winery and extending the vineyard plantings.  The wines were first commercialised under the Habitant Vineyards label, before being rebranded as Blomidon Estate Winery in 2002.


ThWinery (1 of 1)-4e Ramey family purchased the winery in 2007.  Since taking over, they have focused on investing in the facility and increasing the production of the winery, all while improving the quality of the vineyards and the wines.  Blomidon Estate Winery is now one of the rising stars of the Nova Scotia wine industry, producing exciting, terroir driven wines perfect for our local cuisine.  As Craig Pinhey, Atlantic Canada’s Wine, Beer and Spirits Writer, noted in The Coast “Exciting things are happening at Blomidon these days.”

 http://blomidonwine.ca/about/history/

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An Acadian/Planter aboiteau in Kentville

Published on June 05, 2013

 

History column by Ed Coleman

This old aboiteau sluice, recently discovered jutting from the banks of the Cornwallis River, suggests either Acadians or Planters dyked land in the town of Kentville. - Ed Coleman
Two events – one of major importance taking place in 1995, the other a recent discovery that seemed insignificant at first – may be related.
In 1995, the Terry-Young house at 229 Main Street in Kentville was designated a heritage property. About 200 years old, the house may have been built on an Acadian cellar. Eaton’s history of Kings County mentions the Acadian cellar on which the house stands; this, to me, suggests the possibility Kentville was the site of other Acadian homesteads.
The other event was discovery this spring of an object protruding from the claylike banks of the Cornwallis River in Kentville.  Kings County Museum curator Bria Stokesbury noticed the object while walking in Miner Marsh and decided to investigate.
“Something caught my eye sticking out of the bank on the opposite side of the river from the marsh,” Stokesbury wrote in an e-mail. “I finally took my camera and got some pictures. It looks like an aboiteau to me.”
When I looked at the photographs Stokesbury e-mailed me, my first impression was the same as hers - that I was looking at an aboiteau sluice.  An aboiteau is a sluice with a one-way valve the Acadians used to prevent flooding of land they dyked. The aboiteau allows water to drain from dyked fields, but prevents tidewater from flooding them.
Intrigued by photographs of what appeared to be the remains of an aboiteau sluice, I decided to take a closer look at it. I walked down the side of the river the sluice was on, and when I got close. I was surprised by what I found. First of all, the object is an old sluice of the type once commonly used by the Acadians to make an aboiteau functional. The sluice appears to have been handmade, hewed out apparently from a log. This alone would indicate it is old, but how old is difficult to say.
Secondly, the sluice protrudes from the bank of the river about a meter below ground level, meaning it has to have been buried for a long time, perhaps since the Acadian or Planter period. The ground nearby is really marshy, the type of tide-flooded marsh the Acadians would have tried to reclaim by putting in dykes and aboiteaus.  
Now, as for the connection between the Terry-Young property and the old sluice, let’s speculate that the house confirms an Acadian presence in what is now the town of Kentville. The marshy area where the sluice was discovered isn’t far from the Terry-Young house. If Acadians had settled in this area and had decided to reclaim land from the tides, the nearby marshy area was a logical place to start. Evidence of this dykeing should show up from time to time and it has with discovery of the old sluice.
There’s more to the story. The marshy land where the sluice protrudes from the banks of the Cornwallis River is owned by Jim and Sally Haverstock; part of this marshy land is also the property of the Town of Kentville. The Haverstock land, which is behind their Chestnut Place house, is bordered on the east side by Mill Brook and on the north by the Cornwallis River.
Jim Haverstock discovered an old aboiteau on Mill Brook decades ago and you can still see the ancient trough jutting from the bank. There’s also the remains of an old dyke on this property, which is separate from the running dyke constructed and maintained by the Department of Agriculture.
The Haverstock meadow was cattle pasture at least a century ago.  The late Garth Calkin recalled herding cattle when he was boy on the meadow, then known as the Calkin Meadow, about 100 years ago.
This land was once part of a Planter grant. On Feb. 19, 1766, Jonathan Darrow received a grant of 500 acres, land Arthur W. H. Eaton mentions in his county history as including some of downtown Kentville. About six months later, Darrow sold the land to James Fillis and Joseph Pierce. Fillis farmed his land, part of which today is the town’s business section. According to Eaton, Fillis built a house smack in the town’s business district, about where Centre Square is today.
To sum up, from what Eaton has to say, the area in and around downtown Kentville was farmable land we can speculate would have interested the Acadians. Furthermore, the aboiteau on Mill Brook discovered by Jim Haverstock and the aboiteau sluice found recently by Bria Stokesbury indicate the area close by the town’s business section was dyked and at least two aboiteaus were constructed. We also know, from the Terry-Young house, that Acadians once lived close to this land. 
Early attempts definitely were made on the Haverstock/town property to reclaim tidal marsh from the Cornwallis River; but was it Acadians or Planters who were responsible? Unless further investigations are made in that triangle of land formed by the Cornwallis River and Mill Brook, we may never know.

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ED COLEMAN: Kentville house with Acadian connections

 

 

Published on October 22, 2011
BY ED COLEMAN
Remarking on possible Acadian homesteads around Kentville and New Minas in his Kings County history, Arthur W. H. Eaton notes George Terry built a house "over a French cellar," located on what was once the Post Road.
This property at 229 Main St. in Kentville, the Terry-Young House, was designated a heritage property in 1995.
It's uncertain if George Terry actually built this house, but evidence gathered from deed searches indicates he likely did. This would make the house nearly 200 years old, establishing it as one of the oldest homes in Kentville.
Early in the 1990s efforts were made to determine the history of this old residence and chronicle its Planter and possible Acadian lineage. Elizabeth Tarrant-Young instigated the search around 1992, culminating in the house being designated as a provincial heritage property in 1995.
The deed search mentioned above was conducted by a local historian Heather Davidson. Davidson determined the Main Street property was part of a farm lot first deeded to John Bishop Jr. in 1761. Over the years the property changed hands several times.
In 1819, George Terry purchased a small section of the property and is believed to have built the house that now stands there. As mentioned by Arthur W. H. Eaton, the house was constructed on the remains of an Acadian cellar. The cellar, described in several reports as a fieldstone "curved Acadian cellar," is part of the east side basement of the house.
In the report she prepared for the Department of Tourism and Culture, Davidson's deed search doesn't mention any Acadian connection with the Terry-Young house. When she profiles the various owners of the property since 1761, however, Eaton's reference to the Acadian cellar is quoted. Eaton may have been speculating about the origin of the cellar but it isn't likely. According to several sources, Eaton had a hands-on approach to the history of Kings County; that is, he often walked the land once occupied by the Acadians, doing a few "digs," and was able first hand to pinpoint old homesteads.
We have to assume Eaton was correct about the Acadian origin of the basement wall in the Terry-Young house. This makes the house unique and it probably was one of several factors that lead to it being declared a heritage property.




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THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE RICE INDUSTRY IN THE LAKE ...

ereserves.mcneese.edu/depts/archive/FTBooks/levee.htm
More than a century elapsed after De Soto's exploration before anyone again .... It is a natural fruit country for peaches, pears, grapes, apricots, oranges and figs. ..... settled by the Acadians after their expulsion from Nova Scotia by the English.
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Say It With Sailors! > Vintage Wings of Canada

www.vintagewings.ca/VintageNews/Stories/tabid/116/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/462/Say-It-With-Sailors.aspx
USS Valley Forge (CVS-45) pays a visit to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with her crew lined .... Here, two days before entering the harbour at Sydney, Australia, her crew stands to .... It looks to be formed by the purple-shirted members (called Grapes) of the ..... The French Acadians, having been expelled from the Canadian Maritime ...



Say It With Sailors!



By Dave O’Malley

The flight deck of an aircraft carrier is perhaps the most dangerous place on earth to work. The Navy ratings who work there risk death in any number of ways—propeller strikes, engine intake ingestion, ordnance explosion, fuel fire, arrestor cables removing limbs, aircraft losing control and on and on. Every few minutes a 35,000 pound airplane literally crashes to the deck, airplanes are moving, propeller discs are threatening decapitation or de-limbing. People are everywhere. Flame, heat, deafening noise, fumes, toxins and danger are omnipresent. On top of all this are layered high winds, driving rain, a heaving deck and even the dark of night. It’s not the place to be if you are preoccupied by something other than the one part you have in this choreographed mayhem. It’s not the place to be if you are not aware of your surroundings.

So why, then, is it that the aircraft carrier’s flight deck can also become a thousand foot long, thousand sailor-strong, sentimental Hallmark greeting card? How can the most dangerous working environment also be the same place that a crew can send a message to a little boy dying of cancer, or birthday greetings to a Queen, or even just letting their mothers know they are thinking of them? I am speaking of the long-entrenched and truly weird practice of the aircraft carrier spell-out. Tim Dubé, military historian and former Navy cadet, explains the history of the spell-out: “This is an evolution of the custom of ‘manning the rails,’ itself an evolution of ‘manning the yards’ when sailors would climb the masts and position themselves along the spars or yards to render honours. It’s also done as a form of honour when entering a harbour to show no hostile intent—if you are manning the rails, you can’t be manning the guns. With aircraft carriers not really having rails, it would make sense to ‘say it with sailors,’ particularly if there was a bridge to pass under like the Golden Gate Bridge at San Francisco.”

The art of arranging large groups of sailors on the deck of an aircraft carrier is a practice long entrenched in the world of carrier operations. It is not known when this practice began, but a recent article in the Smithsonian’s Air & Space website suggested it may have started around the end of the Second World War. To be fair, they admitted it may have been earlier, but they were not sure. In my quest to find photographs of aircraft carrier flight deck spell-outs, I came across one photograph of the USS Lexington (CV-2) with her decks cleared of aircraft and a few hundred of her sailors turned out in dress whites and lined up quite artistically to spell-out the word NAVY. I probably will never know if this is the first example of a spell-out on a carrier deck, but the date is nearly ten years before the end of the war—1936 to be exact. The early date and the fact that they are spelling out perhaps the most simple of all words a navy crew could spell (NAVY) leads me to postulate that this may be one of the first deck spell-outs.


This is the earliest image I was able to find on the internet of an aircraft carrier carrying out a “flight deck spell-out.” Here, USS Lexington (CV-2), the first of the Lexington-class carriers, spells out NAVY—the most basic of words known to the United States Navy. It is possible, because of the simplicity of the message and the early date—17 September 1936—that we are looking at one of the first, if not the first, examples of the flight deck spell-out. Lexington is dead in the water off Long Beach, California. Photo: U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph (# NH 67420) via navsource.org
The practice has come a long way since then. Today, it is a tradition that every carrier in the US Navy, and indeed in most aircraft carrier-equipped navies of the world, carries out. The first time it was thought of, I can imagine the Captain of the ship (let’s just say it was Lexington) thinking to himself, “I’ve got a floating parade ground 888 feet long and 107 feet wide. I have 2,800 bored sailors and airmen. I have a ship’s photographer and any number of aircraft that can climb above this deck. What can I do to create a photo that will get attention for the Lady Lex, the Navy and my crew?” My guess is it went something like that but now, nearly 80 years later, it is a tradition practiced by every crew of every aircraft carrier in every navy. Even the submariners are doing it... but one can imagine the limitations a submarine forces on creativity. Not so the carrier.

In the 1930s, as it still is today, the aircraft carrier was the height of technology, a magnet for the press, politicians, the curious, the young ladies and the young men of America. Just as soon as the first flight deck spell-out photo was taken, there is no doubt that it appeared in Navy magazines like “All Hands” and was a huge hit with local and national newspapers. Copying the idea was guaranteed to happen. By war’s end, carriers returning home were sending flight deck spell-out messages to their home ports or new ports of call.

My earliest memory of seeing a carrier flight deck spell-out was the now famous image of America’s first nuclear-powered carrier and her attendant nuclear powered task force steaming together at high speed across the ocean with the massive deck of USS Enterprise hosting a thousand or more sailors in brilliant white uniforms formed up to spell out E=mc2, the famous mass-energy equivalence formula, first proposed by Albert Einstein and considered a fundamental formula of the Nuclear Age. Alongside steamed two other ships of the line that were also powered by the atom—USS Long Beach and USS Bainbridge. The ships were demonstrating the capabilities on the new Navy by circumnavigating the planet without refuelling. Enterprise’s deck was immense, the aircraft—Vigilantes, Crusaders and Skyhawks—were all arranged in an artistic arrowhead design. The formation of the letters and number was perfection. The sun was shining. It blew my mind.

Over the past few months, I had been researching a couple of stories about aircraft carriers and began to come across many photographs of this strangely compelling practice of getting ship’s crews to form letters on the decks to send messages to people on shore. I started collecting them in a folder. Then I came across a page on Wikipedia where someone had collected scores of these photographs in one place, many of which I had in my folder. These photos also had US Navy press release-style captions attached, indicating that the media or public affairs people of the US Navy often got involved in these spell-outs... at least after the fact.

I also went repeatedly to a site called navsource.org, an excellent unofficial website which has collected statistics, cruise logs, photographs and anecdotes of nearly every ship ever to sail with the United States Navy. It is an astonishing collection of information and images and certainly one of the better, if not the best, site of this type I have found. I highly recommend a visit to the site, as it will draw you in for hours on end.

Scouring the entries for every aircraft carrier, I found many fine examples of the spell-out. I also noticed a few things. Escort carriers rarely were the canvas for a spell-out. Spell-outs on decks devoid of aircraft are not nearly as impressive as ones with aircraft. Some were exquisitely perfect, while others were remarkably sloppy. Some carriers were more active in the practice than others. The one thing that was common to all of these images was the clear message of pride in one’s ship and one’s navy.

Here now, for your enjoyment, are only some of the many photographs of aircraft carrier spell-outs I was able to discover over the past year. Every day I find others, and perhaps this can be the repository for as many as people can find. If you have other examples and would like them added to this story, send me a shot (700 pixel wide minimum) and a caption that tells what ship, where, when and possibly why and I will endeavour to add them.

There is an old marketing slogan used by florists worldwide that has been in use for years: “Say it with Flowers!” The carrier-equipped navies of the world have a better way to express sympathy, love, admiration, pride, patriotism and commemoration—they SAY IT WITH SAILORS!


Dave O’Malley, with thanks to Navsource.org and Kevin Nesdoly



The Port Of Call Shout-Out

For me, the greatest and most powerful of the great carrier flight deck spell-outs are those that give a massive shout-out to the ports of call they are arriving at or departing from. They are crowd favourites indeed. Like a rock star who shouts out “Hey Ottawa! We’re happy to be here tonight!” or “Hey Des Moines! Those Iowa girls are the cutest!” or “What’s up Green Bay, how about them Packers?” a carrier shout-out is never interpreted as manipulative and is always embraced by the community. Often the carrier creates the spell-out while approaching the city, passing under her bridges, below her lofty buildings. This is designed to get as much attention as possible... perhaps to get the word out to the pretty girls.

The ship usually puts up their own aircraft or helicopter, but sometimes newspaper photographers will take their own photographs from a bridge or high point. Regardless, the photographs are soon to appear in the port’s daily newspapers and, more often than not, are picked up in others across the country.

Here, starting with some good old hometown Canadian shout-outs, are some of the finest I could find on God’s gift to the curious—the internet.

When I started searching for aircraft carrier flight deck spell-outs, I was hoping to find a few that related to Canada. The Royal Canadian Navy operated only three carriers after the Second World War—Warrior, Magnificent and Bonaventure. While I found a couple of deck spell-outs on HMCS Bonaventure, I would also have to rely on American carriers for some Canadian content. Here USS Coral Sea (CV-43) pays a friendly visit to Vancouver, British Columbia in 1960, shortly after her recommissioning, and her crew makes us proud by spelling out a shout-out to their neighbours from the north. Photo: US Navy and usscoralsea.net



I added this image of the same deck spell-out of USS Coral Sea in Vancouver to illustrate why 90% of the photographs in this story are taken from the port side of the carrier—the island superstructure blocks out the message, making for a poor photograph. Photo: US Navy and usscoralsea.net


USS Valley Forge (CVS-45) pays a visit to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with her crew lined up in navy blue uniforms and white gob hats spelling out “HELLO HALIFAX” on her flight deck, 10 July 1959. Valley Forge, flying the flag of Rear Admiral John S. Thach (creator of the Thach Weave, a combat flight formation that could counter enemy fighters of superior performance, and later the big blue blanket, an aerial defense against Kamikaze attacks), was accompanied by the rest of Task Force ALFA, including seven destroyers and two submarines. Altogether, about 4,000 US Navy sailors were in Halifax for the six-day visit. The bars down by the waterfront must have been hopping during those six days. Photo: US Navy via history.navy.mil





In the summer of 1962, aircraft carrier USS Intrepid (CVS-11) sailed up the St. Lawrence River and paid a port visit to La Belle Ville de Québec. Certainly the young sailors aboard must have enjoyed this most beautiful of all Canadian cities and its beautiful girls. On leaving, most of her crew turned out on deck to spell out MERCI QUÉBEC—even remembering to add the “accent aigu” over the first E of Québec. On deck are aircraft of Carrier Anti-Submarine Air Group 56 (CVSG-56). You can bet this photo was in Québec’s newspapers the next day! Photo: US Navy

http://www.vintagewings.ca/VintageNews/Stories/tabid/116/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/462/Say-It-With-Sailors.aspx

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Thomas Chandler Haliburton as a Historian

journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/Acadiensis/article/viewFile/12225/13069
teristics of Nova Scotia", which ran in The Acadian Magazine; or Literary Mirror ( Halifax) in ... and by the latter as the land of the olive and grape".7 Such exaggerations were, .... Before 1824 was out, Haliburton wrote to Wiswall, "I feel like the man ..... expulsion of the french neutrals in 1755 may afford material f...


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The Colors of Fall in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley
by Colleen Fliedner

Close your eyes and picture a place that’s so beautiful, so full of fall colors that it takes your breath away. Imagine lakes and rivers that look like a Paul Bunyan-sized painter dipped his giant brushes in them – crimson, orange, gold, and green, swirled by currents and rippled by the wind, melding them into an exquisite artist’s palate.

I went to Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley in early October because I was told that the fall in this part of Canada was especially picturesque ; and I was not disappointed! This region of Canada’s Atlantic province is where the harvest season is celebrated with dozens of special events and festivals. Quaint towns separated by countless miles of fields, an amazing array of some of North America’s oldest historical sites, rustic fishing villages, gorgeous inns, wineries, and excellent restaurants bring visitors to the region year-round. But during the fall months, add to that appealing assortment of attractions the splendor of vibrantly colored leaves and a plethora of pumpkin fests, and you have a perfect holiday in northwest Nova Scotia. But would I find my ideal autumn backdrop in this delightful area?
I arrived in Halifax on a rainy day in early October packed for cold weather. By the next morning, the sky was clear and the temperature had warmed to the high sixties (about 18 Celsius). After walking around the waterfront, I joined friends for lunch at Salty’s, a lovely waterfront restaurant with sweeping views of Halifax Harbor.
This was my second trip to Nova Scotia. Peeling off my jacket as I walked back to my rented car, I remembered that it had been comfortably warm here three years earlier when I came on vacation in late October. Not that it doesn’t rain in Nova Scotia this time of the year. Bring an umbrella and warm jacket to be on the safe side.
THE BAY OF FUNDY COAST
The locals say that you’re never far from the sea, no matter where you are in Nova Scotia. It’s no wonder, then, that fishing has played such a tremendous role in the local heritage, culture, and economy. Seafood is abundant, both in restaurants and markets throughout Canada’s “Seacoast province”; and its lobster meat is famous for its delicate flavor because of the cold ocean temperatures.
Heading northwest from Halifax, only a slight detour from my final destination in the Annapolis Valley, I was determined to visit a genuine fishing village. Less than an hour later, I was at Hall’s Harbour, a seaport community of about 40 residents on the Bay of Fundy Coast. At the Lobster Pound and Restaurant overlooking the water, a brief lesson in all-things-lobsters is given to visitors: how and where they’re caught, how they’re cooked, and how to identify fresh versus pre-frozen lobsters. There’s a fish-themed gift shop, and the restaurant features all sorts of seafood, though lobster sandwiches — the tail meat, sauce, and lettuce on a big hoagie roll, remains the favorite. Tourists from the cruise ships come by the busload to dine at the rustic, knotty pine walled seaside eatery.
Besides the Lobster Pound and Restaurant, Hall’s Harbour Village has several artists’ studios, a small nautical museum, and a quaint general store. A half-dozen fishing boats are tied up at the wooden docks, their crews making necessary repairs before their next stint at sea.
The Bay of Fundy is truly one of the wonders of the natural world, as this is where the highest tides on Earth are found. When the tide is coming in, the water can rise as fast as an inch a minute, reaching a depth of over 50 feet in a relatively short time. When the tide is out, fishing boats in places like Hall's Harbour lie on their sides on the muddy bottom until the water returns. It’s truly an amazing natural phenomenon.
WINDSOR
My stomach filled with lobster and French fries, I headed west. My next stop was Windsor, called the “little town of big firsts,” located about 45 minutes from the heart of Halifax. It was in Windsor that hockey was reportedly born more than 200 years ago. There’s a fun museum dedicated to the fast-paced sport, where visitors can learn everything about hockey’s beginnings, and as Canada's national sport.
In October, Windsor is a sleepy and community-oriented village that definitely gets into the Halloween mood. Houses and businesses are decorated with pumpkins, strings of orange lights, and most amazingly, with pumpkin lanterns for street lights. Locally grown giant pumpkins are carved and displayed in the business district. White church steeples poke above a forest of green, yellow and orange trees. This is the quintessential postcard town that I had hoped to find. Passing by neighborhoods of historic houses — Victorians, clapboard, and small mansions once owned by sea captains, identifiable because of the “widow’s walk” architecture — I was reminded of how few really architecturally and hnd historically significant homes are left in Southern California where I live. These weren’t the mass produced, tract-style houses I’d grown up with. Each was beautifully crafted, with immaculately manicured gardens and bursts of marigolds in the planters. Pumpkins, cornstalks, and hay bales decorated the front steps and the porches.
This was Canada’s Thanksgiving weekend, and the Halloween goblins and witches would join the fall decorations once Thanksgiving was over. With so many amenities and less than an hour's drive to Halifax, it’s no wonder that people from all over North America are retiring to Windsor, or at least, buying second homes there.
After enjoying a blueberry beer at the Spit Fire Arms British Pub, I drove to a rural area to visit the home and pumpkin farm belonging to Howard Dill, the man who has become synonymous with growing the giant orange gourds. He was the first farmer to perfect the art of raising pumpkins to gargantuan sizes, winning competitions with 400+ pound pumpkins for years — another first claimed by this rural community. Seeds from Dill’s monstrous pumpkins are sold around the world. Not only can visitors see the pumpkins growing in the patches, there’s a delightful gift shop where pumpkin products and even seeds are sold.
This part of the Annapolis Valley is home to the annual Windsor-West Hants Pumpkin Weigh-Off, a popular festival held in early October that includes live entertainment, music, and lots of contests. For instance, there’s a competition for pumpkin carving, pumpkin painting, and pumpkin desserts. (The latter is my personal favorite!). The highlight of the festival is the weigh-off and awards presentation.
And what, I wondered, do they do with all of those huge pumpkins after the Weigh-Off? Howard Dill explained that the following weekend, the pumpkins are cut into globular boats and hauled to a nearby lake for…what else? An annual pumpkin regatta! Not surprising is that there’s even more celebrating going on, with music, dancing, crafts, a parade, a scavenger hunt for the kids, and, of course, the race itself, when contestants hear the famous words, “Gentlemen and Ladies. Start Your Pumpkins!”
The Pumpkin Festival and its wide-ranging array of events continues throughout the month, ending with Halloween.
WOLFVILLE
As much as I hated to leave Windsor, it was time to move onto my next stop: Wolfville, a charming town situated in the middle of a patchwork of green and gold fields. Apples, blueberries, pumpkins, and wine grapes grow abundantly in this fertile agricultural region of Nova Scotia. A trip to one of the many farmers’ markets is a great addition to the day. This is the home of Acadia University, founded in 1838. The town is filled with historic properties, and a walking tour map is available from the local Tourism Bureau (or by visiting the town’s website).
It’s easy to see why Wolfville is a popular weekend getaway for residents of Halifax. For the rest of us who are just visiting the area, it’s a great place to spend a few days. In fact, it’s location makes it ideal as a hub for day trips to the Annapolis Valley.
GRAND PRÉ
And speaking of day trips, a short drive from Wolfville is the historic site of Grand Pré. Between 1682 and 1755, this area was a large Acadian settlement. (The Acadians were the first and original settlers in what was then La Nouvelle France, a French Colony in North America.) The Grand Pré Museum chronicles the lives of the Acadian people and their expulsion from Nova Scotia by the English from 1755 to 1762, an extremely poignant story and one of the skeletons in the cipboard of Canadian history. I had heard about the Cajuns of Louisiana — love the music and the food — but I didn’t realize that their ancestors were among the Acadians deported from this part of Nova Scotia.
The next stop was at Fox Hill Cheese House, a family-owned and operated farm that raises its own cows and produces its own delicious brand of cheese. It’s a small operation with a tasting room, where their cheeses and yogurts can be sampled and purchased. Unfortunately, they don’t mass produce their products, nor do they ship them to the United States! I bought a small block of my favorite flavor, sundried tomato and herbs fused into white cheddar, munching on it until it was time for lunch.
There was one more stop to make before proceeding to a well-known restaurant, Between the Bushes, which is literally situated smack in the middle of blueberry fields that stretched as far as I could see. I had read about a wonderful sweet apple wine that was available at Domaine de Grand Pré, a winery owned and operated by a family of Swiss immigrants. I had to check it out. It was fall, after all, and apple wine somehow seemed appropriate for the season. After tasting numerous types of the Domaine de Grand Pré’s wine, it was their ice wines and that “apple pie in a bottle,” produced only by this winery, that were my favorites.
Before returning to the inn to rest, I drove to the historic Prescott House Museum, named for Charles Prescott, who was responsible for bringing over 100 varieties of apple to the province. Remarkably, many of his groves still exist. Museum staff and volunteers busily prepared for the big Halloween party that was to be held that evening at the house.
On my way back to the Blomidon Inn, the striking historic mansion where I stayed for several nights (see Inns below), I saw a sign for “The Tangled Garden.” I simply had to check it out! The Tangled Garden is a lovely art gallery, herb garden, and gift shop, where you can purchase jellies, vinegars, oils, and other products that have been fused with the herbs grown in owners’ gardens. It’s well worth a visit.
KENTVILLE
This area celebrates the Annapolis Valley’s Pumpkin Festival by creating “Pumpkin People.” There were a couple dozen displays scattered around town during my visit, though it was still early in October and others were likely to pop up throughout the month. The Pumpkin People are literally that: scarecrow-like, stuffed clothing with carved pumpkins for heads. Some are quite elaborate, like a wedding scene on the lawn of one large home. The local park has an elaborately “dressed” group of Pumpkin People marching in a parade, complete with “horses” and a band.
Kentville is just over an hour from Halifax and has become the province’s most populated town. And for good reason! Not only is it gorgeous country, the houses that sprawl across the town’s hills are beautiful. Kentville celebrates the Autumn Festival with numerous events that can be found at The Valley Pumpkin Fest.
ANNAPOLIS ROYAL
About an hour west of Wolfville is Annapolis Royal, the earliest permanent settlement in North America. The town was established over 400 years ago by French colonists, who built Port Royal, a fur trading colony on the Bay of Fundy coast. Costumed interpreters, some of whom are direct descendants of the first settlers, explain the area’s fascinating history and lead tours of the Habitation, a re-construction of the settlement established in the area by Samule de Champlain.
Located at the water’s edge in the heart of town, Fort Anne is Canada’s oldest national historical site. Fort Anne is located in the downtown district and within easy walking distance of most of the inns. There are tours of the building and grounds, where numerous battles between the French and British took place during the 17th and 18th centuries.
I thoroughly enjoyed the night time cemetery walk at the adjacent Garrison Graveyard, the oldest English cemetery in Canada . Under the light of the waning moon, I joined a group of about 50 men, women, children, and a half dozen leashed dogs. Our guide, Alan Melanson, was dressed in a black cape and French felt cap. He began the tour with dramatic flair. “Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,” he said, opening his hand to reveal a dark gray mound. A boy in the front row, approximately 12 years of age, gasped. “Those aren’t some dead guy’s ashes, are they?” he asked, his eyes wide with worry. The crowd roared with laughter, as the guide reassured him that they weren’t. Then Alan added in a dire tone that all of us eventually succumb to the earth. With that, we silently followed him for the short walk to the cemetery, carrying lanterns to illuminate the way. This wasn’t a ghost walk by any means; nor was it scary. It was simply a way for the guide to share stories of the people buried there. Of course, it was the Halloween season, and imaginations can run wild. More than one person in the crowd swore they saw or felt something strange going on.
The Historical Association of Annapolis Royal offers walking tours of the town. There are historical museums, theaters, historic mansions, an old lighthouse, and more to hear about on these excursions. This organization has done a phenomenal job saving historical properties, and a stroll around Annapolis Royal is evidence. In a community of just over 500 residents, there are 131 historical buildings.
With so much to see and do in this area, it’s difficult to pick and choose when you’re on a tight schedule. But the Historic Gardens are wonderful, and I highly recommend allowing at least an hour to walk through the 17-acre botanical collection. Don’t miss the snack shop, the rose maze, and the ponds. The interpretive center contains displays showing how the Acadian people constructed massive dykes out of materials, including chunks of soil and roots from the Salt Marshes, to reclaim the land from the sea. Then take the “Dykewalk” along Allain’s River salt marshes, surrounded by remnants of old Acadian dykes. In spite of the fact that it was October, there were still quite a few flowers in bloom.
KEJIMKUJIK NATIONAL PARK
By now, the weather was a glorious 75 degrees (about 22 Celsius); perfect for a hike. While I had seen countless landscapes that were beautiful, I was still hoping to find that perfect place that I had imagined. My “ah ha” moment came at Kejimkujik National Park (nicknamed Keji for obvious reasons), which is about a 30-minute drive from Annapolis Royal and a must-see for anyone in the area. The Mersey River winds through the area, tumbling over piles of granite rocks, creating small waterfalls.
As I walked along the trail that skirts the river, I was suddenly swept back into my daydream. The images I had envisioned of autumn in Nova Scotia were real, right there in the Kejimkujik National Park. The changing leaves — brilliant red, gold, and carrot-orange — reflected on the ponds and across the pools of water at the head of the waterfalls. It was too late in the season for the usual groups of canoers and kayakers, so the dark green water was undisturbed, except for the ripples created by the cool morning breeze. I snapped countless photos, pictures that would hopefully capture at least a smidgen of the beauty that spread out before me in a glorious carpet of color. This was a place where one could sit and contemplate; picnic; write poetry or a novel; or spend a day with loved ones in the utter quiet of nature. This was truly beautiful Nova Scotia.
On the edge of the National Park, the Mersey River Chalets offer cabins and teepees (yes, the “Indian” kind) for rent in a beautiful setting. And each cabin — in fact, the entire resort — is set up to accommodate people in wheelchairs. Not only are the cabins and their bathrooms wheelchair accessible (they have wheel-in showers), there’s a dining room overlooking the river for those who prefer not to cook their own meals.
There were plenty of campers throughout the park. Most amazing were the Halloween decorations at each camp site, an annual contest sponsored by the Friends of the National Park. But it was time to leave this piece of paradise and head back to Annapolis Royal.
All good things must come to an end, and the next morning I had to drive back to Halifax. This time, I traveled along the Atlantic Coast, making a few brief stops at the ubiquitous Tim Horton’s dougnut shops for coffee and a snack. I’ll return to Nova Scotia again next year for the fall foliage, pumpkin fests, and wonderful food, but will allow more time to explore some of the wonderful seaside communities on Nova Scotia’s Atlantic Coast.






THE INNS
There are hundreds of inns throughout the Annapolis Valley. I stayed at three and highly recommend all of them. Be aware that B&B’s are smaller than inns and often don’t have their own bathrooms. Go to www.novascotia.com to find listings.
Halliburton House Inn, 5184 Morris Street, Halifax
Located in Halifax’s downtown only a block from the water’s edge, this lovely inn is convenient to the harbor area and many of the finest restaurants in the city. Speaking of restaurants, Stories, the small restaurant located inside the inn, is reportedly excellent, though it was closed by the time I checked in. By the way, the almond scones served for breakfast were terrific.

Blomidon Inn, Wolfville. (902) 542-2291
Built in the 1880s, the Blomidon Inn was once a privately-owned mansion. With the old-world charm of England, the Blomidon is furnished in period décor. Each room has a small television and a whirlpool bathtub. The restaurant is open for dinner, featuring specialties prepared by the owner’s son, award-winning chef, Sean Laceby. Jim Laceby, who owns the inn with his wife and sons, explained that the Blomidon is a “Signature Inn,” which means it has received top ratings for both the accommodations and the restaurant. The Laceby family is a very hands-on team, and they made my stay quite memorable.

Hillsdale House Inn, 519 St.George St., Annapolis Royal (902) 532-2345
This lovely old inn is remarkably big and conveniently located to the downtown district. It’s about a 5-minute walk to the Historic Gardens, and about 10 minutes to the heart of town. The rooms are beautifully furnished and include flat screen televisions, a modern touch that contrasts with the rest of the antique furnishings. The inn’s proprietors, Paul and Val, offer the best breakfasts I’ve had in a long time. Everything is homemade, including the breads and several types of jams. Val’s apple-sausage breakfast quiche is fabulous!

THE RESTAURANTS
Between the Bushes, off of Highway 101 in the Annapolis Valley. (902) 582-3648
This Southern Californian has never had tastier quesadillas than the smoky chicken version of this Mexican dish served at Between the Bushes. The restaurant is literally in the middle of fields of blueberries. Needless to say, many of the offerings include blueberries, like the blueberry compote served with each lunch and the blueberry vinaigrette salad dressing that came with the quesadilla. Good food. Oh, and did I mention that blueberries are good for you?

Blomidon Inn, Wolfville, 1-800-565-2291
The food is excellent and includes gourmet dishes prepared seasonally. Pumpkins, blueberries, and apples are incorporated into sauces, dressings and delicious desserts. A must when visiting this region.

Garrison House Inn, 350 St. George St., Annapolis Royal (902) 532-5750
This historic inn has seven guest rooms and a lovely restaurant downstairs that’s open to the public. The food is excellent and incorporates seasonal produce and fish caught in local waters. I enjoyed the seared scallops: big, fresh, and tender in a delicious sauce. Eating in the historic surroundings provides an ambiance that’s like stepping back in time. Located directly across the street from Fort Anne, how about dining at the Garrison Inn, then going to the Graveyard Tour at the Fort? It’s a great way to spend the evening.

Hall’s Harbour Lobster Pound, 10 miles north of Kentville on Route 359 (902) 679-5299
A favorite stop for tourists and locals who want an excellent and reasonably priced seafood meal. The restaurant is closed during the winter.

Hillsdale House Inn, 519 St.George St., Annapolis Royal (902) 532-2345
While the Hillsdale doesn’t have a regular restaurant, be sure to check with them to see if they’re having one of their international dinners or other food-related events while you’re in town. The food is delicious, and Paul and Val regularly offer special evenings that include serving dinner.

M & W Restaurant (and Variety Store), Route 8, ¼ mile from Kejimkujik National Park
On the way back to Annapolis Royal from Kejimkujik National Park, I stopped for lunch at M & W Restaurant, a roadside diner and variety store that services campers who need groceries, firewood or other supplies in the nearby national park. The food was good, homemade, and includes a selection of vegetarian dishes. The African peanut soup was wonderful, as was the apple blueberry pie. Would you believe there were peanut butter and onion sandwiches on the menu? Hmmm….

Salty’s Restaurant, 1869 Upper Water St., Halifax (902) 423-6818
Waterfront dining at its finest. Sweeping views of Halifax Harbour, one of the deepest natural harbors in North America. Very good seafood of all types, and delicious desserts, too.

Tempest Restaurant, 117 Front St., Wolfville (902) 542-0588
This is the most upscale restaurant in the area, with a menu filled with the chef’s unique specialties. The menu included a great deal of fresh seafood caught in local waters. The food is excellent and well worth the slightly higher prices.


http://www.ttrn.com/dccolleenfliednerfallannapolisvalley.htm

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THE SUNRISE TRAIL
Crossing over from New Brunswick into Nova Scotia, I turned onto the Sunrise Trail - the road along the south shore of the Northumberland Strait from Tidnish to the Canso Causeway. It derives its name because as you're driving along it in the morning, you go the whole way with the sun in your eyes. Whether or not that is the reason, I'll certainly vouch for it being a fact. I wondered that if you drove along it in the opposite direction, whether it would be called the Sunset Trail.
Along here were several wineries - presumably vinyards one would think. Imagine that, growing grapes in areas where the temperature is capable of falling well below minus 30 degrees Celsius.

As I drove along the Sunset Highway, I encountered a large ocean-going ship sailing towards me up the Northumberland Strait in the general direction of Prince Edward Island and the upstream St.Laurence area. It was too far away for me to get in a good shot, but after a few miles, fate intervened and presented me with a small road on my left that looked like it might go down to the shoreline.

It goes without saying that I went to find out and after a short distance, during which my little road had transformed itself into a typical Canadian dirt track, I fetched up on the shoreline at Heather Beach, between Tidnish and Port Howe.
One day, and pretty soon I reckon, I'm going to have to treat myself to a decent SLR digital camera with telephoto lens and the like, because then I can make the most of the distance shots that present themselves. My little Fuji is okay for many occasions, but it's just not up to photos like this, unfortunately.
(In fact I had to pass through many stages of despair and wait longer than anticipated - January 2007 - in fact, before a digital SLRhttp://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=erichall-20&l=ur2&o=1" came into my hands)
At least the weather was keeping fine though, as you can tell. What you can't tell is just how freezing cold windy it was. Mind you, it was right at the end of November so I guess I was lucky that it was like this and not six feet deep in snow.


These next two photographs show the beach itself and the wooden holiday chalets that abound all around here at Heather Beach. You can see the place was totally deserted. There wasn't a soul around at all.
I imagine it would be a totally different story in the middle of summer.


Heather Beach is the kind of place that looks like it would be absolutely heaving with people. Taking one's summer holidays in November and December does have some things going for it.
While I was parked up here, I carried out a quick inventory, and came to the conclusion that supplies were getting rather low, and that ready cash was even lower. I needed to find a bank and some shops.

PUGWASH

Although there were isolated pockets of Europeans living amongst the Mi'kmaq here, the area was settled in the mid 18th Century by colonists from New England. This trickle became a flood after the American War of Independence, and the town of Pugwash was founded here on this tidal inlet.
 
Its wealth was based on shipbuilding and lumber, but the shipbuilding didn't last for very long. The railway arrived here at the end of the 19th Century but the expected prosperity didn't arrive with it. Finally, a series of four major fires and a devastating flood destroyed what wealth remained.
 
The wealth of the town today comes mainly from lobster fishing. The inlet marks the frontier between two fishing zones whose periods of exploitation do not overlap. Hence the residents just move their boats across the inlet and apply for a licence in the second zone, and they can fish for twice as long. Licenses here that cost a couple of hundred dollars have been known to change hands for as much as 100,000 dollars
 
There's also an underground salt mine here. It's the only salt mine in Nova Scotia and with the demise of the coal industry, it's the only underground mine here these days. It made me feel quite at home because as you know, I used to live in Winsford, and my father worked for many years at "British Salt" in Middlewich. The mine is probably the largest employer here, and they reckon it can keep working at its current output for over 100 years.


One thing that I found quite remarkable here in Pugwash was that the street signs are all bilingual - in English and Gaelic! However no-one was speaking Gaelic in the town as far as I could hear and there were no adverts in Gaelic in any of the local shop windows.
Another thing that was remarkable was the range of shops. The good side was that I found a hardware shop that sold inter alia some screwdriver socket driver bits of quarter-inch, three-eights, and half-inch. I've been looking for these for years. Now the shop has two sets less, and Paul and I have one set each. The bad side was that there didn't seem to be a decent grocer's shop where I could buy some of my lunch food. And I had a good look around as well!

One thing though about Pugwash - I was unable to find any trace of Seaman Staines and Roger the Cabin Boy. There was no point in hanging around waiting so I set off in search of food.
I drove out of town along the river and then rejoined the main highway to follow the coast through the Gulf Shore Provincial Park out to Fox Harbour. This would bring me back to Highway 6 via the Fox Harbour Provincial Park.
Fox Harbour itself is the typical collection of chalets, caravans and so on all hidden in a pine wood. It looked really nice there and would be a really great place to stay in summer I reckon. Now, it was absolutely deserted.
On the way down to here though was a forest surrounded by a thick metal fence which gave it the air of being a government establishment or similar place given the amount of money having been spent on the fence. I'd certainly give a dollar to find out what's going on behind it. If you have any ideas, then.

TATAMAGOUCHE

One thing I noticed on my travels was that there are very few active railway lines in the Maritimes. Prince Edward Island has none at all, as far as I'm aware. All the non-trunk lines seem to have been closed down, such as this abandoned railway line that I came across near Tatamagouche.
 
The line was known as "The Short Line" and was built in the 1880s from Oxford Junction, about 50 kilometres away between Truro and Amherst. Its purpose was to feed the industry and the lumber traffic around the Northumberland coast, as well as to connect with the Prince Edward Island ferry at Pictou. Passenger service ceased in 1960 and freight in 1972, long before the great cull of rural railway lines in Canada in the 1980s. The last train on the line actually passed by in 1986, appropriately bogging down in a snowdrift.


A little way further down the road is the town of Tatamagouche. Here, the old railway station building is still standing, together with about 200 metres of track and 7 or 8 assorted cabooses and carriages. At first glance I reckoned that it was some sort of museum or exhibition. There weren't any engines, unfortunately. In fact, I didn't see a single preserved railway locomotive during my entire journey around Canada, which contrasted rather poorly with my trip around the USA the previous summer when I couldn't move without tripping over them.
In fact, it turns out that the carriages and the station building form a hotel where travellers can stay in "deluxe accommodations reflecting the age of the railway car" according to the hotel's website. It's clearly way outside my price bracket, though, and in any case there's bags of daylight and I had a lot to do.

On the main road just up the hill from the railway station was a reasonably-large supermarket. At last I was able to buy myself a baguette and some salad. I was pretty hungry by now.

WOOD ISLANDS FERRY
Thirty miles further on from Tatamagouche is the small town of Caribou. This was where I was heading, and for an obvious reason. I said previously that there was another way than the Confederation Bridge to cross over to P.E.I., and this is by the seasonal ferry that plies its trade between Caribou and Wood Islands for the "Northumberland Lines". In November and December it's still sailing, so I couldn't resist the opportunity to make the crossing by boat.
If your thing is for Nova Scotia and Nova Scotia only, then you just read straight on. Those of you following me on the optional excursion to Prince Edward Isle need to come this way. We'll all meet up back here in a short while.

PICTOU
So now that we're all back at Caribou after our little trip to Prince Edward Isle, the first task was to find a motel for the night. It was quite late, and it had also begun to absolutely lash it down with this cold, icy rain. The New Glasgow - Stellarton conurbation looked like it might be the best bet, so that was the direction that I took. However on arriving at the roundabout at the top of the hill (rare things in North America, roundabouts. I've only ever encountered one other in the whole of my travels around the USA) where there is the turn-off to Pictou, I discovered a motel that had not closed for the season. No sense in driving any further. Wise decision too - the Lionstone Inn did me a good deal - 49 dollars plus tax - and was good value for money.

There was a pleasant restaurant "the name of which I've forgotten" in Pictou where I had an excellent meal. There didn't seem to be very much else going on in the town however.
One thing, though. I reckon that the Monty Python team must have visited northern Nova Scotia. Go into any restaurant around here and ask for the menu. They don't have menus in this part of the world but simply explain what's on offer. And it's easy.
Eric
"Well, what've you got?"
Waitress
"Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and fish; egg bacon and fish; egg bacon sausage and fish; fish bacon sausage and fish; fish egg fish fish bacon and fish; fish sausage fish fish bacon fish tomato and fish; ...."
Vikings
"fish fish fish fish..."
Waitress
"...fish fish fish egg and fish; fish fish fish fish fish fish baked beans fish fish fish..."
Vikings
"fish! Lovely fish! Lovely fish!"

One thing I noticed though was the awful smell. I wasn't sure what it was, but it seemed to be coming from here on the left. You'll need to ... er ... enlarge the thumbnail (click on it) to see it properly.
Yes - it was dark around here. And still raining quite heavily.
The town of Pictou played a very important role in the history of the Maritime provinces. Visited regularly by the French in the early days of their explorations, it was a settlemnt of the Mi'kmaq indians. The first European settlers were actually transplanted from New England in 1767 in much the same way as happened at Pugwash, but its fame dates from 1773 when the first Highland Scots, who gave this area much of its character, arrived on the "Hector" after their displacement from Scotland following the Jacobite revolution of 1745.
 
It was at one time quite an important seaport, but in modern times the increasing size of shipping as well as the general decline in coastal trade means that those golden days are over.

Apart from the "Hector" Pictou has another claim and not surprisingly it involves fish - well, seafood at any rate. In 1924 an American team of flyers led by Lieutenant Lowell Smith set out from Seattle to be the first to circumnavigate the globe by air. They flew westwards via Asia and Europe, and Pictou was their first landfall back on the mainland of North America. They celebrated by buying two dozen lobsters - at a cost of one dollar.


Next morning I went back into town to get a better view of whatever it was I saw, or rather, smelt the previous evening, and take a photograph if it was anything interesting, which it was and so I did, as you can see.
I bet you are still none the wiser? It is in fact a pulp and paper mill, owned by Kimberley Clark, across on the other side of the inlet from Pictou harbour. It's probably where the paper in your toilet and the rolls in your kitchen come from.
I'm still not sure why I didn't take any photos of the town or of the motel where I stayed. It was still raining quite heavily, but that can't have been the reason. After all, it's never stopped me before. But thinking about it again, I'm not sure what there was to photograph. Probably I should have photographed my restaurant, which I seem to recall was a nice, heavy granite type of Scots Victorian construction of the type you'd see in Inverness or Aberdeen.

Leaving Pictou, I drove over the causeway in the direction of Trenton, Port Glasgow and Stellarton. These towns were formerly big mining communities with some of the thickest seams in the world, and renowned for steel making, but the heavy industries have long since gone leaving the towns dependent on small manufacturing and service industries.
My interest however was in the "Albion" - a steam locomotive of 1854, "Samson" - a steam locomotive of 1839 and the oldest in Canada, and the three old locomotives from the heyday of steam power in the Maritimes, all of which are on display somewhere around here. However, after two hours of searching and not seeing a single signpost or other clue, I lost patience and headed back eastwards and up the coast in the driving rain.
I must have been in a bad mood that morning.

But be that was it may, seven years later I was back in New Glasgow. In much better weather and in much better health, I made much more of a determined effort to find these steam locomotives. And do you know what? I actually found them as well . and wasn't it worth the wait?


Meanwhile, back in 2003 again I drove up along the coast heading eastwards in the vague direction of Antigonish, through the townships of Lismore, Knoydart and Arisaig, the latter township and harbour which you can see in the photograph on the left. This was taken from the road at the top of the hill overlooking the bay.
The names of the townships around here bear witness to the Scottish Highland origins of the settlers who came here after the clearances subsequent to the failed Jacobite rebellion of 1745.
But in much of this area of Canada, it has to be said, the Scots participated in their own version of the clearances, taking over the land and the farms of the French Acadian settlers who were expelled from the area following the fall of Canada to the British. All of this is reminiscent of more modern events where European Jews, fed up of being kicked about all over Europe, avenge themselves by invading another country and start to kick the innocent and defenceless inhabitants about all over Palestine. Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose.


ARISAIG
On the left is a photograph of harbour at Arisaig, looking back up the hill to where I'd taken the previous photograph. It's yet another harbour totally empty of boats.
The township of Arisaig was first settled by a party of Scottish immigrants from the Morar region of Scotland who came here towards the end of the eighteenth century. The town is named after the Arisaig that is a small township on the west coast of Scotland at the southern edge of the White Sands of Morar, near the seaport of Mallaig.
 
Here at Arisaig in 1792 was founded the first Scottish Catholic church in Nova Scotia, and its site in the harbour area is today marked by a cairn. The large modern-day church is situated a couple of hundred metres inland by the side of the main road in what constitutes the modern township.
 
The area is today renowned for its mineral rocks and fossils, which have fascinated collectors over the centuries.


Just a couple of miles further down the road is Malignant Cove. This was named after a British warship, the "Malignant", that ran aground here during the American War of Independence. Although most of the crew survived the wreck, many died of exposure before they reached safety up the coast at Pictou. Its name was officially changed to Milburn in 1915, but it never caught on.
Here I turned off the main road to follow the coast road to Antigonish. It had been raining throughout the morning, but you can see on the photograph that a famous storm was brewing up and it was very shortly to get even wetter. This last day or so I'd been really unlucky with the weather when you consider how nice it had been just two days earlier
Standing in the middle of the road and acting as if he owned the place was a rather large deer. I didn't know who was more surprised, the deer or myself, but he had the wits about him to amble off fairly sharpish before I could get the camera ready. And I was to have an even closer encounter than this with members of the Canadian wildlife later on on my journey, but more of this anon.


Next stop was along the coast at Cape George Point. This is at the mouth of St.George's Bay which lies between North-East "mainland" Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island and provides a sheltered anchorage for Antigonish and the Strait of Canso (in the days when you used to be able to sail through the Strait).
Looking down the coast from here you can see out and across St.George's Bay to Cape Breton Island and some of the many coves on the north-west coast of the island around Judique, Port Hood and Mabou. Mind you, the rainfall, mist and low cloud make visibility really poor, and you need to click on the thumbnail to see the enlarged version of the photograph to get a better appreciation of the view. They reckon that on a really good day you can see over to Prince Edward Isle. Not much chance of that today, unfortunately.

CAPE GEORGE POINT LIGHTHOUSE

At Cape George Point there's also a lighthouse. In fact there's been a lighthouse on this site since 1861, when the first one was built as a sort-of appendage to a wooden house. It burnt down in 1907 and the second was built in 1908 at a cost of $3098, and included a separate keeper's house. It was completely reconstructed in 1968 to form the one in the photograph.
 
The lighthouse was automated in 1968 and the keeper's house was demolished. Interestingly, throughout its period of operation of 107 years as a manned station, it only ever had four lighthouse keepers.
 
I have to say that it's an excellent spot to build a lighthouse - we're 360 feet above sea level here. The lighthouse itself is 54 feet 6 inches high.

The road from Cape George Point down to Antigonish was really nice and curvy, going up and down round bends through trees. It was really picturesque and would have been quite impressive in decent summer weather. But, of course, not much chance of that today either.


Here's a photograph of Ballantyne's Cove in St.George's Bay, just a short distance down the road. It's named for a Scottish immigrant, David Ballantyne, who settled in the area in the early years of the nineteenth century. Situated on the quayside here is the Bluefin Tuna Interpretive Centre which, needless to say, was closed for the season.
This reminded me of the eternal dispute I'd been hearing on the radio during my voyage concerning tuna fishing rights - how the Nova Scotia fishermen had been allocated more tons of tuna per licence than the Prince Edward Islanders, a fact which had caused a great deal of upset for the latter. There are supposed to be 24 boats which work full-time out of here but I haven't a clue where they all were when I called here
Maybe they're all out full-time working.
D-oh!

Ballantyne's Cove is also well-known for its contribution to the pioneer days of the local Co-operative movement, there being even today the "North Bay Fishermen's Co-op" here.

By now the storm that had been threatening for the last hour had broken with a vengeance and the rain was coming down in sheets. There was no way I was getting out of the car for a wander around Antigonish - that would have to wait for the way back. I was certain that I'd be coming back this way.
Nevertheless, I drove into the town from around the back and across the railway line, and made a brief stop at a "Subway" for a sandwich and a coffee. Then I set off out of the town to pick up the road back around the other side of St.George's Bay. A temporary upset as I had to wait in an enormous traffic queue on Highway 104 waiting for a major road accident to be cleared. The rain was so fierce it gave the car a really good wash.


The road around the bay brought me to Bayfield Beach.
This area was formerly settled by the Acadians in the early days of the 18th Century. It's claimed to be a very popular, well sheltered beach, but it wasn't today, as you can see from the photograph. Nothing but storm, and rain and spray, and grey clouds. If you're concerned about the lack of photographs of the journey, ask yourself the following question - "would you get out of your car to take photographs on a day like this?".
It goes without saying that there's a Provincial Park here, with all the usual camping facilities for RVs and campers that that entails.


It was only mid-afternoon but in the storm the light was going fast, as you can tell. So I left Bayfield Beach and drove along the old highway, passing through Tracadie, which was settled by Acadians in the latter half of the 18th century, and Monastery, which is famous for its monastery of the Augustinian order founded in 1825. From here, I had to follow the old road around a series of diversions before eventually arriving back at the Trans Canada Highway, Highway 104. This was the road that was going to take me over the Canso Causeway and onto Cape Breton Island.
Right turn at the end of the road, driver!
Right- ho!





 http://www.erichall.eu/2003c030.html
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Significant Historical Happenings By Year: 1500s.
-1492-
§Columbus' discoveries.
-1493-
§Pope Alexander VI issues a bull dividing the world in half.
-1497-
§Cabot plants a flag at the foot of Sugarloaf Mountain, Cape Breton.
-1518-
§The Frenchman, Baron de Lery, landing cattle, attempts to settle Sable Island.
-1522-
§A French corsair off the cape of St. Vincent takes a Spanish ship sailing home from New Spain; the source of Spain's riches is thus discovered.
-1524-
§Gómez and Verrazzano make their voyages up the Noth American coast.
-1534-
§April 20, 1534; Jacques Cartier sails from St. Malo.
§May 27, 1534; Cartier enters the Strait of Belle Isle.
§July, 1534; Cartier is off Prince Edward Island.
§September 5th, 1534; Cartier and his men are back at St. Malo.
-1535-
§May 19th, 1535: Cartier sails from St. Malo for his second trip to the new World; this time with three ships and 110 men; this time they took 50 days to cross the Atlantic.
§Cartier over winters at Quebec.
-1536-
§July, 1536: Cartier is heading back to St. Malo.
-1541-
§Cartier is back at Quebec and overwinters once again.
-1542-
§Spring of 1542: Cartier returns back to France leaving his co-adventurer, Roberval, to spend the following winter (1542-3) at Quebec.
-1563-
§"Unsuccessful" (1583-65) Huguenot colony in Florida.
-1582-
§Richard Hakluyt publishes Divers Voyages which brings to the public's attention (to a greater extent) that discoveries are to be made by sailing over the great ocean to the west.
-1583-
§Sir Humphrey Gilbert (1537-83), the English Muscovy Company, the Squirrel and the Golden Hind, and an English expedition to Newfoundland.
-1584-
§Sir Walter Raleigh dispatches Captain Philip Amidas and Captain Arthur Barlow to America and Virginia is discovered.
-1585-
§April 9th, 1585: The English expedition under Grenville sails from Plymouth and there is established the short lived Roanoke Island settlement.
-1587-
§May of 1587: Another group of 117 English settlers arrived at Roanoke Island; no one knows what happened to them, presumably they perished.
-1593-
§The French king, Henry the IV, hithertofore a leader of the protestant forces, signs the Edict at Nantes. In the process, Henry formally professes himself to be a member of the Church of Rome.
-1598-
§Marquis de la Roche in an abortive attempt to colonize New France, on sighting Sable Island, dropped off 40 men from his small crowded boat with a view of going back to get them once his smaller crew had located a more likely spot in New France; a storm blew up and de la Roche, in a very wrecked condition, arrived back in France. Five years later, finally, somebody in France thought to go check, and, during September, 1603, 17 wretched survivors were found and returned to France.
-1599-
§The East India Company and Sir Thomas Smith.


Significant Historical Happenings By Year: 1600-4.
-1600-
§Conditions in England as the 17th century enters: Locke and Bacon.
§The entire eastern coast of American consisted of three geographical districts: Acadia, Virginia and Florida.
-1601-
§Ships of the East India Company, having set sail in 1601, arrive off the shores of Sumatra during June of 1602; by September the ships are back at England filled with "cinnamon, pepper and cloves."

-1602-
§Captains Bartholomew Gosnold and Bartholomew Gilbert set sail for the Americas in the Concord and Dartmouth. They visit Martha's Vineyard.
§Sebastiÿn Vezcaíno, a Spaniard, sails the Pacific ocean, and up the coast of present day California.

-1603-
§This year, 1603, marks the death of Queen Elizabeth and the end of the period brilliant Tudor period, a period during which England emerged as a world power.
§March 20th, 1603: The English captain, Martin Pring, sets the sails of the Discovery and the Speedwell and during the summer explore the Long Island Sound area. By October these small sailing vessels were back at their home port, Bristol.
§September, 1603: The 17 wretched survivors of the de la Roche's 1598 abortive expedition are taken off Sable Island and returned to France where they gain an audience with the king and proceed to tell him of their five years on that barren island of sand off the coast of Nova Scotia, Sable Island.
§December 18th, 1603, royal letters patent is received by Monsieur de Monts.
-1604-
§February 8th, 1604: De Monts forms a fur trading company.
§March 7th, 1604: De Monts sails from Havre-de-Grâce (Le Havre).
§May 6th, 1604: De Monts arrives at Le Port du Rossignol.
§May 19th, 1604: Champlain sets off from Port Mouton in a long boat with a small crew, leaving de Monts and the larger vessel behind; his instructions are to find a temporary winter quarters for the expedition. Having gone as far as the future site of Port Royal, Champlain returns within three weeks time to Port Mouton.
§June 24th, 1604: de Monts arrives at the mouth of the St. John.
§August 31st, 1604: Poutrincourt sails for France leaving de Monts, Champlain and their men (79 in total) to spend the winter at St. Croix.

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