Had to chisel out this morning

We had freezing rain over night and a bit of snow/ice pellets.

It reminded me of living in Sault Ste. Marie where we often had to chisel out our windshields after the work day and how lucky I was to have a garage.

So Jeff’s new truck is all registered, insured, and now has its 2 year safety sticker. It is such a nice truck. Every bell and whistle you could hope for. Except coming when you whistle.

His old truck has sparked a few emails and phone calls but no sale yet. We were sure it would sell easily because it has 1.5 years left on its safety, but then Jeff found out the government here requires the safety to be valid within 30 days of a sale. Of course they do. Of course. This province has both hands in our pockets at all times. There may be an as-is/where-is option Jeff is exploring. It might not take much to safety, but why does he want to go to the expense when the truck is already likely to sell for so little?

A possible 5-10 cm of snow coming tonight and possibly again tomorrow.

I don’t mind it one bit. Winter is so sparse here – so easy. We don’t have to be in such a big hurry for spring. Although Jeff would really like to be on the lake fishing at the beginning of April like we were a couple years ago.

Tidal Bore in Truro, Nova Scotia

Jeff discovered the tidal bore in Truro was due to happen just after we had to drop Dad off at the train station this afternoon.

The tidal bore is the wave that comes when the tide reverses the direction of the water.  We had never seen it, so we thought we might as well while we were there.

Unfortunately, because of the time change last night, the time Jeff had from the internet was an hour off, but we killed the time doing a bit of shopping in Truro where stores are open on Sunday (hallelujah!)

Here is the video I took of the tidal bore as it came in.

Dad is choo-choo’ng his way home

Dad is currently on the train heading home.

I had a great week. Dad did SOOO much for us – painting our hallways, staircase, and my bathroom!!!

(more about my bathroom in a future post)

Here are a few more photos highlighting Dad’s visit:

Dad's gigantic lemon pie

Look at the size of Dad's pie! This is at the Irving truck stop in Truro before we took Dad to the train station.

Staircase

Can you make out the new paint colour? It's called 'Mountain Air' by Benjamin Moore. It's a shade off our kitchen colour. I love it. It's gray, but green at the same time. I'll take a better downstairs in the sunshine.

Dad's lunch

Dad went for a traditional Nova Scotian lunch when we stopped at a pub in Walton on Thursday - fishcakes and beans!

I went for my traditional - club house & fries & a Coke!

The pub had a really friendly bathroom!

Here is the owl Dad got great photos of. Barred owl we believe.

We hiked a short way on an old railroad track to see the Shubenacadie River.

I had to pee so bad, but really didn't want to venture far into the woods with all the coyote tracks everywhere and this sign saying there were traps in place. But I did anyway.

The short hike stops at the remains of an old train trussle crossing the river. We were thinking it might match the photo of an intact trussle in Grandpa Verkley's photos, but I don't think it is the same one.

Shubenacadie River

The Bay of Fundy and its rivers are a reddish muddy brown colour - and are full of reddish mud :-)

Lighthouse in Walton, NS

Bay of Fundy shore in Walton

Lighthouse - Built in 1873

On Friday night we were invited to a neighbour’s house for a little dinner party.  Dad was invited too. We had a delicious Arctic Char, and the biggest, thickest, richest, chocolate pie I’ve ever eaten.

Thanks for all the adventures Dad!! And thanks so much for painting and making our house pretty!

I can’t wait to hear how the train ride is going. He left around 1:30 this afternoon and isn’t due to arrive home until tomorrow night at 7pm!

Discovering Maitland, Nova Scotia

Dad and I visited Maitland, Nova Scotia this week.

In the 1940′s, Grandpa Verkley worked in Maitland, Nova Scotia. Dad believes he was in Nova Scotia twice and tore down 2 hangars after the war, one in Maitland, and one in Yarmouth.

Since I moved to Nova Scotia, I’ve grown more and more curious about the story and wanted to know more.

Uncle Joe Verkley scanned in Grandma and Grandpa’s photo albums several years ago, and there is a folder on that CD called “1i Halifax”. There are about 100 photos in the folder, black and white and sepia coloured images of houses, a covered bridge, a train trussle, a train station, the country side, many of an airport hangar being dismantled, and a couple of the wood being loaded onto trucks and on a ship.

I got serious this week about learning more. Since the train station photo has a sign with “South Maitland” written on it, I started tracking down Maitland. Only problem, there are several Maitlands in Nova Scotia.

I talked to a co-worker who grew up in Truro and I showed him some of the photos and he was pretty sure it was the Maitland on the Bay of Fundy. He said the town is famous for its ship building days and there are many big old historical houses there.

To make extra sure these photos were from that Maitland, I used Google map’s street view feature and matched a couple of the buildings from the main street.

Then I started researching the airport.

I found this:

Royal Canadian Air Force Detachment Maitland:

Opened in 1940 as a Relief Landing Field for No. 31 Operation Training Unit at Debert. As with all RLFs, the Detachment had a hangar, barracks and the standard triangle-pattern runways.

In January 1944, the Detachment changed functions when it became the home to No. 1 Aircrew Graduates Training School. No. 1 AGTS closed on 1 November 1944 and the aerodrome was abandoned.

All that remains today are the abandoned runways, now used for sports car racing, and the gunnery backstop.

Source material: “Abandoned Military Installations of Canada Volume III: Atlantic” by Paul Ozorak.

From http://www.militarybruce.com/history/base-history_11.html

So the airport was only there for 4 years and then sometime not long after, the material of the buildings were sold and a Dutch crew dismantled them to send back to Holland? Who had a camera in the 1940′s to take all these photos? Did Grandpa have a camera? Or was he given these photos to remember the work they did? At first we didn’t think he was in any of the photos, but after looking harder, there is one man in a few of the photos with Grandpa’s features that may be him.

Dad and I were keen on the adventure, and the weather forecast looked perfect. A forecast high of 13 with sunshine.

Maitland, Nova Scotia is only a couple hours or so away from our house. It is a quiet little town, along the shore of the Bay of Fundy. It looks like the town might have peaked in the 1870′s when William D. Lawrence built and launched the largest full-rigged ship to ever be built in Canada.

There are huge houses here, many with 3 stories. Most are from the 1800′s. How often do you see houses that are 150-200 years old!?!

We visited the little general store and got ourselves a drink and some nice date cookies. Then we started exploring.

After we drove the main street and the couple back streets, we headed past the town. Another coworker at work told me the day before he knew of the drag track, which was an old runway, and he said it was just past the next little town of Selma, between the road and the Bay of Fundy.

It was easy to find. It was snow covered, but we saw the old sign for a drag strip. There is a large flat area, and someone looked like they were working on making the edges even wider and was burning some debris. This definitely looked like it was big enough to be an airport.

We headed back into Maitland. I had all of the old photos on my iPad and was flipping through, trying to match the buildings on the main street.

I saw another match, and asked Dad to get out to take a photo of it. Dad started walking down the street, and a man who was taking the Christmas wreaths down off the poles told Dad to go ahead and go up around the corner to the Bed & Breakfast to take some good photos, because that was his house, and there was a good view from there.

I saw Dad disappear up around the corner, so I followed him in the car and took some photos on my own.

Dad eventually wandered back to the car and we went back to thank the man.

And then the serendipity kicked in.

A little touch of a Corner Gas plot.

The man was no longer alone. There was an older woman and man with him.

Dad and I walked up to them, and Dad asked if any of them remembered the hangar that was at the airport.

The older man immediately said, “Oh yes, the Dutch came and took it away after the war.”

Ding ding ding!

I grabbed my iPad and Dad and I picked the brains of the man taking the Christmas wreaths off the poles (in March), a lady from the Historical society, and man who was a school kid during the 1940′s and remembered the Dutch men being there!

I starting showing them the photos and the lady from the historical society and the younger man on wreath removal patrol were in awe. They not only had never seen photos of the town from that era, they wanted a copy!!

Within moments I was invited to their historical event in August when they reenact the launching of William Lawrence’s big ship.

The older man was nonchalant, but eager to tell stories. In fact some of them I had to get second hand from dad in the car later because between the 5 of us we had a couple conversations going on at once.

We had a picture showing the old gas station on the main street, and the older man said it is right here. You’re standing in front of it. That is where the sign was. It was my father’s. Every day after school, he had to join his dad at the gas station and had to start right to work on repairing the big stack of broken tires.

He said they had built 3 runways, and they were in a triangle pattern from the gravel pit. The trucks went in one way and out the other so they didn’t have to meet. He had to repair all of their tires.

Dad said he must have been one strong son of a gun to repair all those tires, and he said he was!

He said he remembers the Dutch men being there and said there was a big crew of them.

We’d show him a photo from the iPad and he would take a closer look and identify the truck or the building or the house. It was such a treat!! He said when Grandpa was there, there would have been an old snowmobile in front of the gas station with a airplane propeller on the front of it.

I said the photos show all the beams inside the hangar were all wood and they were all labelled with a number so they could, assumingly, be put back together. That is when he got a sparkle in his eye and a grin and said I have one of those beams. I came across it just the other week! We all chuckled thinking it would be like a jigsaw puzzle missing the last piece when it got back to Holland!

He said the entire big building was made of wood, and it was all fastened with bolts. He said he didn’t think he had any of the bolts, but it had a big square washer on each one that was bent over on the edges to grip into the wood.

He said there was big plans for the airport, but after the war, nothing was done. He said they didn’t even finish building the third runway and he wasn’t sure a plane ever landed there. He said after the war the troops came back and the barracks were used as a retraining facility.

Since then it has been a drag strip, and now the airport is a sod farm.

Most of the buildings in the photos he could recognize. Some of them had been moved. We had a photo of the big house the younger guy lives in that is now a B&B. The only house they couldn’t place was the one in several of the pictures. It looks like the men, or some of them, were staying in it.

Then the older man had to rush off for his lunch. He said he had to pick up 2 girls so he shouldn’t be late, but we were a good excuse.

We exchanged email addresses with the other two, and they’ve requested copies of the photos for their own interest and for the historical society.

I hope I can go back again some day, hopefully in August for their annual celebration.

Here are some photos:

Then:

Now:

Then:

Now:

Then:

Now:

Then:

Now:
In the 1960′s this house, now the wreath removal man’s B&B, had to be moved. It was getting too close to the cliff and was in danger.

Look at the old road sign:

None of us were too sure what these were:

Our best guess was it was some sort of heating system.

But then on our way home, not too far from Maitland, we spotted one! It was in a yard, that looked like a little working steam generated museum. It was hooked to a big spin wheel and steam power with pipes coming off.

I should have taken a photo. Luckily the fellow has a website! So here is what I spotted!

Everything worked out so perfect. Weather was perfect, and everything else fell into place. Meeting those 3 people. Spotting that steam boiler. And then an owl! Dad said just a couple weeks ago he was lamenting that he had never taken a good picture of an owl.

Just past Maitland, maybe 15 minutes or so, there was his owl. Sitting on the top of a spruce tree. We spotted and Dad was able to take many photos, progressively upgrading his camera lens. The owl didn’t really seem to care that we were there, but he wouldn’t look at us either, so I kept creeping the car back and forth so Dad could get a better shot.

Look how cute the owl was when a gust of wind came:

Visit Maitland’s website: http://www.maitlandns.com

Dad is a pro painter!

Dad’s job the last few years has been as a painter and a jack-of-all-trades handyman.

He decided to help us out, and while Jeff and I are working, he has been painting!!

He got two coats on the wall and the ceiling of our hallway from the side entrance to the front door yesterday!

Today he plans to head up the stairs and do the upstairs hallway too.

He is so good and so fast, and he even wears all white like painters on TV. Who would have thought Dad would have white jeans??

I have taken the next couple days off and we have an adventure planned.

We have Grandpa Verkley’s photos from when he was in Maitland, Nova Scotia tearing down an airport hangar in the 1940′s. We are going to head over to Maitland with the photos and match up the sites!

Sorry inanimate objects… I was running late…

Sorry alarm clock, woodstove, sink, tap, dishes, car, ice, wipers, wet pants, socks, shirt, keys, shampoo and every other inanimate object that I growled and grumbled at this morning.

But I was running late.

And the alarm clock came on too quiet so it didn’t wake me up right away, and the shampoo wouldn’t wash out of my hair fast enough, and the fire wouldn’t stay going, oh and today is pink shirt day, and I couldn’t find a pink shirt, and then I found one, and then I tripled my pink with pink underwear and a pair of pink/black/white striped socks (thanks Julie), and then the sink was taking too long to fill with water to put the pork roast in to thaw, and the tap wasn’t big enough to pump out more water, and the dishes were in the way because I didn’t wash them last night, and the car was at the bottom of the driveway because we got a lot of snow yesterday, and the car was ice covered and had to be chiseled, and walking through the snow down to the road got my pants soaked, and my keys were stuck in my pocket on my mittens, oh and then I locked myself out of my running car (but thankfully just the driver’s door was locked), and then I was stuck behind some person in a line of 10+ cars driving 40-50 km/hr all the way to town, when they KNEW I was going to be late…

And I’m sorry to the birds and the squirrels who will go hungry today because the bird seed is in my car and the car didn’t make it to the house. Please don’t starve and die. I’ll fill up your feeders this afternoon.

And I’m sorry Jeff that you are coming home from a work trip to a snow filled driveway and a messy kitchen.

It’s just so hard to go to bed early when I have the TV all to myself and I can watch girly shows.

Sincerely,
Lisa

P.S. Something Borrowed is a great movie.

Wanderlust

WanderlustI went to see Wanderlust at the theatre yesterday.

Jeff strongly opted out, so I went to New Glasgow and did a little clothes shopping before the movie.

As always, I made sure I got to the theatre super early so I could snag my favourite seat. Unfortunately there was another couple in the back row middle, so I took the left flank a few seats down.

For a 4pm Saturday show, I expected more people. I am not sure we made the double digits. I think I was the youngest. None of them laughed at anything, and one of them even asked a staff member to adjust the fan and heat levels before the flick.

Anyway, what did I think of the movie?

I like Judd Apatow movies. Wanderlust didn’t disappoint. It came complete with nudity (mostly male for once, although Jennifer Aniston does have a topless scene, although it was fuzzed out), drug use (even ayawaska), sex, crazy hippies, and to top it off – a “Babba Booey, Howard Stern” shout-out.

I wouldn’t say you have to run out and see it though. It is definitely a good movie for a DVD rental, or waiting for the Movie Channel airing on a rainy day.

The storyline was one-dimensional and predicable, but some of the scenes will stick with me for awhile (including the fly in the apartment, and the “I can fly” moment).

There were also several pop-culture references in this movie that could zip right over your head. Like a reenactment of that reporter who falls out of the grape stomper (see original). I caught a few of them, but I am not a Ray Liotta fan, so I don’t understand at all why he was in the last minute of the movie and what it was referencing.

I give it a 6/10.

Oops, I think I got someone in trouble

Yesterday I had to get my car’s windshield replaced.

I didn’t notice the crack until this weekend when I was sitting in the passenger seat, but a big long ugly crack appeared behind my rearview mirror. Looks like I probably took a big rock to the window. I swear I get hit with a rock a month on our highway, but I didn’t see the chip hiding behind the mirror to get it sealed on time.

Anyway, I dropped it off at Apple Auto Glass yesterday and they kindly drove me to work. And I rode in style in the van that scoots around with panes of glass on the side. I might have to double-check my bucket list, but I could swear that was meant to be on my list. Hey, I’m easily amused.

After work was over for the day, I walked back over to pick up my car.

It felt good to get out for a nice walk, until I split my legs like a wishbone the month after Thanksgiving, on a patch of ice outside their shop. I managed to tweak both ankles, a thigh, and my neck. I probably should have just fallen, but this girl has pride and I had to stick the landing.

Anyway, I paid up for the service and headed for home.

What stunning service. Not only did I have a sparkling new window, they vacuumed my car!! This was kind of embarrassing, because my car was becoming a bit of a biohazard with rocks and salt and food bits and dog hair all over the floor.

They even cleaned the dust off the front dash.

But I don’t think they were supposed to leave their nice shiny metal measuring tape and can of glass cleaner in my car.

This could have gone either way. On one hand, bonus! new measuring tape and I used to use that canned foamy glass cleaner when I worked for Hydro in T. Bay. Kicks Windex ass. Best stuff ever. I could use a can of that stuff. On the other hand, my conscience. I can’t keep something that isn’t rightfully mind. Oh the guilt! It was obviously an oversight and I’d hate to be that guy who was without a measuring tape, stuck eyeballing his measurements on the next windshield replacement.

So today at lunch I drove over to the shop and gave the manager at the front desk the tape and glass cleaner.

He immediately scowled. I was expecting a sweet thank-you and I’d be on my way. But instead he said how could this have happened? How can they say they did their checklist and inspection and not notice those were still in your car. Was your car vacuumed? I thanked him so much for the vacuum and said it was a nice treat. He was apologetic and said thanks, but then verified what vehicle from yesterday’s workboard was mine and headed into the shop.

Uh oh.

I hope my conscience didn’t get someone fired.

I hightailed it out of there, avoiding the slippery ice patch of pain in the parking lot, and headed back to work, wondering if I had done the right thing.