How many times have you said to someone, 'You should write a book!"? I know we all know someone with a real story to tell about an experience , a life lived, or a career of note. About two years ago a good friend showed me a book she had published about her family history. She published it online with a site called CreateSpace.com. She offered a short course on publishing and it inspired me to write a book.
Monday, October 25, 2010
I"m not just a writer, I'm an author!
How many times have you said to someone, 'You should write a book!"? I know we all know someone with a real story to tell about an experience , a life lived, or a career of note. About two years ago a good friend showed me a book she had published about her family history. She published it online with a site called CreateSpace.com. She offered a short course on publishing and it inspired me to write a book.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
A Rewarding Experience

Saturday, September 4, 2010
City of Halifax, Nova Scotia
After my recent trip, I was planning to post at least three entries detailing what I had learned on my informative tour. But I have made an executive decision ( I'm all alone here, so I am the executive and I am allowed to make all the decisions.) My decision is to leave it alone for now.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Fort Louisbourg, Nova Scotia
Canada certainly has an interesting history! Since I can’t even remember all I learned about American History, it has taken me several weeks to make sense of the Maritime Provinces and their beginnings.
Canada was officially made a country in 1867. But it was not until 1982 that The Canada Act severed all constitutional and legislative ties with the UK. Can you believe that? Just 28 years ago!
In 2009, the population of Nova Scotia was 940,000. Almost 80 percent of Nova Scotia's population trace their ancestry either wholly or partly to the British Isles. French origin ranks second: 16.7 percent of residents have some French ancestry. The next largest groups by ancestry are German and Dutch. Residents of Nova Scotia are also of Polish, Italian, Chinese, and Lebanese descent. Over 6,400 residents of the province have African origins. About 28,560 residents have Amerindian origins, and primarily belong to the Micmac Nation.
Up there they are referred to as “First Nations people”.
So, it was difficult for me to unravel the tangled history of the Fortress at Louisbourg on the eastern shore of N.S. In 1713, mainland Nova Scotia was ceded to the British, and the French build the fortress on Cape Breton Island. In 1745, the fort was captured by a force from Maine. Later it was destroyed by the British and it was left in rubble. Because it was on a sheltered body of water it lay undisturbed for many years.
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The government of Canada has now restored this fort in Nova Scotia,, to the state as it would have been in 1744. Thanks to documented inventories of the fort, archaeologists and historians were able to reconstruct the fort and outer buildings using much of the original materials into a condition that impresses one as being 'authentic.'
It’s good location offered ready access to fishing and links to colonies in the FrenchWest Indies, North America and France, so the settlement became a thriving town and seaport. It became one of the most significant fishing and commercial ports in North America
The fortress of Louisbourg became a National Historic Site in 1928. In 1961, Parks Canada began reconstruction of approximately 25 percent of the fortified town.
While we toured the fort, we were amused and intrigued by the ‘people of the village.” They were local residents, of course , and a fair number of college kids working there on summer vacation. Each person is given a role to play and they are trained in the habits, customs and events of the time. All that we encountered were excellent in answering our questions about what life was like for the soldiers inside the fort and for the townspeople who manned the taverns, bakery, blacksmith shop, and finer homes for the officers’ families. These are some of the photos I took which gives you a glimpse into the reinactment.
As we looked out over the harbor, we tried to imagine what it would be like at the end of a cold winter, when the ice melted and one kept a constant lookout for ships ,arriving with long awaited supplies from England or France..
Monday, August 30, 2010
Cape Breton and the Cabot Trail, Canada
My trip to Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island
What is the difference in a province and a territory? How many of each
does Canada have? What are the maritime provinces? These, and many more questions circled through my mind as I began my tour of Nova Scotia and the two adjacent provinces, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.
The territories of Canada have no inherent jurisdiction and only have those powers delegated to them by the federal government.
The federal government of Canada also has a responsibility over Native and Inuit peoples, who happen to be in a majority in the territories. It does not have the same obligation towards people in the provinces.
There are ten provinces and three territories. I visited three of the maritime provinces. I did NOT get to Newfoundland.
Although I flew into Halifax, NS , my tour bus took us immediately up the island to the northwest corner and out toward Cape Breton National Park. Traveling on the Cabot Trail, a 300 kilometer ride where we saw spectacular water views and beautiful, fir covered mountains.
At the beginning of the trail , we stopped at the Acadian village of Chéticamp on the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The Appalachian-like mountains sloped gently down to the sea. I have never wanted to ride a motorcycle before, but the gentle slopes and curves of the coastal mountains are a bewitching invitation to many motorcycle fans and they were welcomed at restaurants and hotels as warmly as we who rose buses or drove cars. Indeed, there is a summer event known as the Atlanticade motorcycle festival in the town of St. Andrews, where seven meter tides ebb and flow agains New Brunswick’s shore. Thousands converge on the little town and they are a boon to hotel owners and restaurant owners.
We stayed two nights at Chéticamp, a fishing community of almost 4,000 residents . A large number of them are Acadians as well as English. Chéticamp was once a fishing station used only during the summer months by a man from the Isle of Jersey. At one time, the town was a cashless society, with the fishermen being paid in skip that could be used in the company store, just like the miners in West Virginia used to do.
Fishing has declined somewhat and tourism has become the primary industry. They depend on Acadian music and food, whale watching ships, hotels and restaurants, and two local museums to bring in dollars. There is also an international Dance Festival.
Two local museums caught my fancy and , while I don’t have any photos of them, I’ll tell you what interested me.
One was a hooked rug museum. That is not the most exciting thing in the world to see, but when one visits the museum and sees how one woman started a cottage industry in this small, one can only admire her inventiveness. One gets the idea that every woman in town is a “hooker’, as they jokingly call themselves and makes a few nickels selling their wares at local shops.
From Wikipedia: “In its earliest years, rug hooking was a craft of poverty. The vogue for floor coverings in the United States came about after 1830 when factories produced machine-made carpets for the rich. Poor women began looking through their scrap bags for materials to employ in creating their own home-made floor coverings. Women employed whatever materials they had available.”
To read more about them use the following link:
http://www.cheticamphookedrugs.com/museum
or type “ hookers of Chéticamp” on Google.
The other fascinating museum (and story!) was The Centre de la “Mi Carême”. This is a tradition passed down from the French since the Middle Ages. On the third week of lent, people make masks and costumes and parade up and down the town streets, visiting homes and trying to make the hosts guess their identity. Hosts offered them food and drink. Sometimes there was dancing. Festivities went on throughout the night.In an area of a hard and simple life, this festival becomes the bright spot of the year.
Check it out at : http://micareme.ca/en/index.php
or type in "Mi Carême” on Google for more information and photos.
Houses in this little town were very simple. They have steep, gabled roofs ot let the show slide off in winter. Although they told us they had very little snow last year, they also mentioned that winds off the ocean can get up to 150 miles per hour. I think that is why the houses had very small windows and not many of them. Only rarely did we see plants of any kind. The one pictured is right along the main road and perhaps was given more attention
The soil is very shallow there, and the trees cling precariously to the rocks. The predominant tree was fir. However, we saw many trucks bearing loads of lumber, so timber must be big there, so there must be deciduous trees too.
As we left the area, we went across the rolling mountains over the Cabot Trail. We drove 105 Km (60 miles) journey through the western edge of the park which borders the Gulf of St. Lawrence. This is a jagged coastline with mountains up to 300 metres. Over the top and across large areas of forests. we descended on the south side to more beauty as we approaced the town of Ingonish. We saw many, many motorcycles and , again, I felt how it must be wonderful to be free of the confines of a bus when passing through this beautiful country.
Note: I have trouble placing photos in Blogger, so my photos are not in the story where I wanted them. If any of you bloggers can tell me how to do that, I would appreciate it.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Happy to be Three
The youngest grandson had a birthday party this week. He was three, and is proud of it, although he loves to hold up four fingers and grin mischievously as he tells you how old he is.
The party for him was held outside and the guests were mostly three year old friends from Day care who had brought their parents with them. There was wine and cold drinks, juice for the kids,fresh water , and lots of snacks to munch on.
I had three sons of my own back in the day and I mused on the idea of how little parties have changed in 45 years! There were balloons and whirlygigs. There were bikes and trikes to ride. Chalk to draw on the pavement. A rope swing and a swing set. And, thanks to the wonder of life in Florida, fresh air and sunshine in April.
The #1 favorite thing was the swing. "Push me higher , Daddy". There was also a plastic water/sand table which was the second favorite thing. Sam, the "big brother" tried his best to organize the reckless and recalcitrant pint-sized participants to no avail. Undaunted, Sam went into the house, and in his own best first grade printing, made a sign that said:
WARNING!
LAW # ONE:
Do not put water in the sand table.
LAW # TWO;
Do not put sand in the water table.
This dire warning went largely ignored. Sam moved on to bigger things. He and the several other big brothers found great glee in racing at breakneck speed around the driveway , narrowly missing the feet of parents and occasionally flattening an innocent bystander.
At one point, I went into the house and found, off in a corner, the birthday boy, playing happily with an old , favorite toy....all by himself.
I gave him emergent reading books by Eric Carle and he has memorized them already.He spends all day Monday at my house and we read lots of books together!
What a joy it is to be a grandparent!
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Late start
wow! the last post was in October of 2009!