Tuesday, August 06, 2013

We are in Innisfail visiting with Barry's brother and his wife.  They have a trailer that is stationed at their favourite spot, Wilderness Village, in west central Alberta.   We have been spending time walking, bicycling and sitting around the camp fire, one of Bruce's enjoyment in life.  We have also gone out golfing twice.  While we couldn't be described as anything but hackers we have managed to play 27 holes in the last week.  Our first foray was to Nordegg which is an old coal mining town and we played golf in the shadow of the Rockies.  It was a very scenic if somewhat rustic course.  Today we were at Eckville, where my jeans on the course were not frowned upon and best of all it was $10.00 Tuesday.  We had many laughs at each others expense as we shanked balls into ponds, deep bogs and bounced them off of fences and trees.  Fun was had by all!!

Monday, July 29, 2013


In my rather esoteric collection of pictures of signs I think this one will rate pretty highly.  Not too many places in the world you would come across this sign. It will go in the collection along with the elephant crossing and the kangaroo crossing signs. The thing about those signs is that I did not have my two oldest grandchildren in the picture with me so this make this picture extra special.  I love our vehicle in the background with the canoe on the top, that beautifully rounds out the scene, I don't thing you can get much more Canadian than that!!! I am truly disappointed that I was unable to get Barry to stop to take a picture of the penguin crossing sign we came across in Simonstown, South Africa, that would have been a good one. 
                         Eli with another mighty pike.                              
We have spent the last two weeks engaging in outdoor pursuits with our family. We have gone fishing about half a dozen times. Our friends in the sailing community came through and took us out sailing on two occasions, Eli came with us the first time around and took his turn at the helm. 

Aboard Pendragon, along with captain Kevin Quinn. Thanks for the lovely time Kevin. 


Cassidy and I were invited to be crew for the Wednesday night races.  We managed quite well and Cassidy did a great job on the controlling the main and has garnered herself the name of Mainsheet Specialist. She gave her number to the boat owners who we crewed with and hopefully they will give her a ring so she can do some more sailing this summer.
We all spent a windy afternoon down at the local beach.  The kids and Heather went in for a swim but I couldn't find the enthusiasm to join them.  We also played a rousing game of something that is a precursor to volleyball, tossing the ball over the net trying to toss it to an empty space so your opponent can't catch it.  The sand was flying as players were sacrificing their bodies trying to get the rather beat up old ball that was being blown about by the wind, fun indeed.  

Heather and I heading out on a fishing trip one day when the kids couldn't come. I managed to get one on the line and was greatly relieved when he spit the hook out before I could land him.  Barry wasn't with us and that would have necessitated one of us plying the pliers in the region of a fish 's mouth, not something I like to indulge in if I don't have to. 
We are heading to Edmonton tomorrow to go and visit with Bruce and Marg, Barry's brother and his wife.  

Sunday, July 21, 2013

      BACK IN YELLOWKNIFE WITH FAMILY

Our grandchildren, Cassity, 14 and Eli, 12.
Our youngest daughter Heather

A great view of Great Slave Lake with 2 of my favourite people.

We drove up to Yellowknife 2 days after Karen's wedding.  After the first day of driving we ended up at the Alberta/NWT border where we spent the night.  We woke up in the morning to a record low on July 15 of 4 degrees, youch! We crossed the new bridge across the Mackenzie River for the first time. Yellowknife is no longer cut off at spring breakup having year round access by road.
On the road from the bridge we passed a number of bison on the road.  Thankfully none of them decided to cross the road while we were driving by, they are big creatures. 

We have been very busy meeting old friends and spending time with our grandchildren.  The other day we met the kids down at the basketball court, after a fairly sedate game of horse we decided to try out Eli's new soccer ball.  I haven't seen Barry move so fast in over a decade, he was running around like he was a 40 year old.  I got the ball and slowed the game down to a slow trot so Barry and I could walk the next day.  Eli's ball control was amazing and his athletic ability shone as he ran up and down the field. 

                          

Today we took them out to Reid Lake, about an hour's drive east north east of Yellowknife.  We borrowed a canoe (thank you Lorraine and Paul) and had a great day out on the water.  We paddled across to a set of rapids, it had been about 20 years since we had been there, 
Girl power, three generations under a canoe. 
did a short portage and then caught two jacks as we paddled around the area below the rapids. 

If you look closely at the end of the line you can see that there is a fish at the end of the line. It was a very small jack fish which we let go.  
I had a great time paddling around in the waves below the falls, once when I did it I didn't time it quite right and got a little sideways.  The kids were a little freaked when the canoe rocked a bit but I didn't dunk anyone this time around. 
Here, Barry is being a Good Samaritan. This guy must have got hung up on this curb and his front bumper was hanging off on one side.  Barry used a pair of pliers try and pull the rest of the bumper off, another fellow came by with a leatherman and lent a hand and the two soon had the bumper off.  The fellow who owned the car was using a cane so Barry figured he wouldn't be able to help.  
This is our buddies Ian and Helen's boat.  They bought it in San Diego and trucked it up to Yellowknife.  It has spent the last four years in this shed being metamorphosed from a tired old boat into a thing of beauty.  The shed was made out of fibreglass insulation and they just cut the sides apart and a crane lifted the parts of the shed down.  The amount of work they have done is unbelievable, we just hope they have many years of pleasure sailing her.

Here is a piano that has been in our family for at least 60 years being transferred into the house where Heather is living.  We would like to thank Ian and Helen for storing it at their place over the last five years. Having it out of the way is just one more hurdle they have cleared on their path to the west coast. I hope Heather enjoys the music that she can make on that wonderful instrument. 
We have another week in Yellowknife and hope we can continue to make connections with old friends throughout the week.  Send me a message at ann_lange@yahoo.com if you are in town and would like to see us.  

Sunday, July 14, 2013

karen and craig mccauley
we had a delightful time attending karen and craig's wedding this past weekend.  the party started off with a rousing game of family feud at the rehersal dinner.  craig set up a computer survey and sent it out to his friends and had the two families try and figure out what were the best answers.  it was great fun.  
 here is karen in front of the screen which would show the answers and how many points each of them were worth.  the next morning we went to the wedding venue at the university of alberta's faculty club and decorated the tables for the dinner. apparently the shade of purple to be used was a real bone of contention between the bride and groom.  



the bride's mother actually performed the wedding ceremony, she did a wonderful job, her words were very heart felt and moving, it must have been very special for karen to have her mother say them to her.  we had a great dinner and afterwards there were great speeches and much dancing. 

 the lange family, it was great that all the four family members could be there. 
 mom and i on canada day
prairie first nations peoples on canada day

a street performer doing his thing for the canada day crowds

 checking out the fishing boats on  hecla island

with my bridesmaid from 39 years ago. 

friends and fellow sailors the skopyk's from uranium city days

 i have been wanting to take pictures of falling down barns since ontario, i got a chance when we visited the malloys in leduc, alberta,

please excuse my lack of capitals, those keys won't work on this poor computer which has been subjected to the marine environment for too long. 

Friday, July 12, 2013

We are currently in Edmonton.  We will be attending my nieces's wedding tomorrow.  We had a great time with my Mom.  We spent about 6 days up at a cottage on Lake Winnipeg, north of Gimli.  The weather co-operated very nicely.  One day we went up to Hecla Island and visited the old Icelandic settlement there.  We saw remnants of the fishing industry that existed and saw a typical home that was restored to about the 1920's.  We spent Canada Day at the forks of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers in Winnipeg.  The spot where the fur traders initially built the fort where everyone would come to trade their furs. I lived in Winnipeg for 10 years and I don't think I had ever seen the spot where the two rivers meet before.
I sewed a bimini for the boat, buying fancy UV resistant thread in Wpg. and purchasing the sunbrella material in Nova Scotia.  I had brought bits of the old bimini with me so that I could get the dimensions correct and I spent about three days at Mom's sewing up a storm. I would take up her whole living room when the bimini was laid out on the floor.  It's a good thing she sews and quilts because she never complained once.  Her machine was great and I managed not to break it.  I am pretty happy with the finished product.  I just have to have some grommets and snaps but on it on the West Coast and then it will be good to go.
We visited old friends from Uranium City, 1977-1980 years Terry and Gerry Skopyk at their home in Saskatchewan.  They have a boat that is in Panama at the moment so we have lots in common and had a great time talking about yachting life.  We are visiting some more old Yellowknife buddies, Dennis and Sylvia Malloy, we curled in the mixed Friday night league for years.  We played some bridge last night for old times sake and it was girls against the boys and the women prevailed once again!!
I will have to download the pictures later.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Here we are zip lining in Renfrew, ON. We had a blast, it is just a new facility and very inexpensive so I decided to give it a try.  Another customer was just finishing as I was getting suited up and Barry decided that it looked like fun and away we went.  There were 3 sections of the course which totaled almost a kilometer of zipping.  You know what they say, "When is the last time you did something for the first time!" 
                           

We had a lovely visit with Lucy and Mark.  Lucy is Barry's first cousin, they met for the first time at Sherran's wedding about 10 years ago.  We got along famously and really enjoyed the area where they have their fifth wheel, we saw loons, turtles, catfish, red winged blackbirds and a baby robin.  We met a set of friends that had cruised in the Caribbean for a number of years so exchanged sailorly yarns. From Renfrew we drove across to the middle of the east shore of Lake Huron and visited our old buddies from Tungsten days, the Crawfords.  
From left to right, Val, Pat, me Crystal, Hank and Bailey 
Pat had retired from working at the Sifto Salt Mine in Goderich, but went back to work 3 years later and is now working 2 weeks in and 2 out at a mine in Northern Saskatchewan.  They have a lovely home and their daughter Crystal, aka Toad, married a local farmer and is living the life of a farmer's wife about 20 minutes away from her parents.  Toad and Hank have about 280 head of sheep and they grow corn, soy beans and hay.  I was astonished at how all the barn animals got along, the cat below tolerating getting put in it's place by a duck.  I don't know isn't that pretty demeaning for a cat!?!

The view from the ferry when leaving Toblemory. 
We headed north from Goderich and took a ferry from Toblemory to Manitoulin Island across Lake Huron where Georgian Bay narrows.  It cut off a lot of driving but with the time spent waiting for the ferry, we may have gotten their faster if we had driven.  Ontario is a huge province and we drove and drove and ended up a 12 hour day at the wheel with about 1100 kilometers to go until we reached the Manitoba border.  We tented on the north shore of Lake Superior and walked along a lovely sand beach that was on fresh water. We actually saw two moose on this trip, on while driving through Algonquin Park, the other north of Lake Huron.  
The view across Lake Superior, the mark on the left side of the picture is a squashed Canadian bug
on our  windshield we are glad we could get rid of one, there are millions and they bite, and then itch and itch. 

Our last stop in Ontario was at Lee and Sarah Berry's place near Eagle Lake, which is between Dryden and Kenora, ON. They had a lovely home on the lake shore, a two story 3 bedroom home with a gazebo, their own private dock with a storage hut/fish shack at the lake's edge.  They retired from Yellowknife a couple of years after we did and we spent the evening catching up and reminiscing about track meets in our past and people that we knew in Yellowknife.  In Ontario we visited five sets of friends and family and enjoyed every minute of it.  Isn't it grand to be able to take the time in our lives to renew acquaintances and make new ones. We are now visiting my Mom and hope to stay in Winnipeg for about 2 weeks.  We have past the longitudinal center of Canada so we are now closer to the west coast than the east one.
I hope everyone in Canada enjoys a wonderful Canada Day and for those of our Canadian buddies still sailing in other countries, invite your friends over, fly your Canadian flag high and have a party.  Last year we were in Mauritius with Tagish, Cat Mousses and Erica celebrating in style. 

Thursday, June 20, 2013

 We rounded the tip of the Gaspe and had some beautiful vistas with lighthouses at the tips of points.  That night we stopped at a camp ground on the edge of the St. Lawrence and it was pretty calm and benign.  The next morning we woke up and it was just howling down the river, the waves were crashing against the shore and we figured that if we had been trying to go up to Quebec City on the boat we would have waited in whatever safe harbour we were in because you would have been crashing into the wind and the waves and possibly fighting the current, not a good place to be in a sailboat, but in our little red SUV life was good, safe and we had no problems driving into the wind.  


Quebec has invested in some wind energy and there were several large wind farms along our route, about 100 km north of Quebec City.  There was an average of 15 windmills in each park and they must  put out a goodly amount of power. There were the closest we had seen to dwellings. 


This is the bridge across the St. Lawrence when we crossed in Quebec City. I am the navigator in the car and I was madly trying to reprogram the GPS so we could go to the Old Town and Barry was driving along, he headed off to Montreal because he did not realize we were in Quebec City, he said he thought the signs that said "QUEBEC" just meant we were in the province of Quebec, I will have to make sure he has a clue where we are in the future!!!  


Anyway, after a bit of driving around, trying to find a map we ended up on Plains of Abraham and spent the better part of the day exploring the old town.  We walked through the Chateau Frontenac, (pictured below) which was very impressive. We visited a maple syrup museum and learned the finer points in tapping maple trees.  One fact was that it took about 40 litres of sap to get one litre of maple syrup, I was astounded!


Barry figured he had found a street named after him, but figured out shortly afterwards that it just meant the road was closed. 
For Quinn!  It is full sized, I should have stood by it so you could see how big it is!
We headed to Ottawa to visit my Aunt Marianne.  We found her in pretty good health and a pleasure to spend an evening with.  We have pictures of her on my phone but I have yet to figure out how to put them on my computer, I can put them on Facebook and perhaps I will try that. My brother said there is an app that I can get to load them on blogger, so may have to see about that! We visited the National Science and Technology Museum and found it very much geared towards the younger generation and sadly out of date, although it is a museum.  They had a number of full sized railway locomotives, you could even climb up inside this one. 
                               
We met another of Barry's cousin's for lunch, Ken Lange, Robert's younger brother was able to meet us and it was great getting to know him.  He is very much interested in the Lange family history and took the particulars of our children and grandchildren to add to the family tree.  He is very involved with ultimate frisbee and has been on  two national championships teams, quite the accomplishment. We decided to visit the National Museum of Civilization.  It had a gallery that took you through Canadian History from the early explorers to the present day.  Much to our surprise at the end was a full sized replica of the Wildcat Cafe, which is located in Yellowknife and where we have eaten numerous times.  The thing was, the replica is bigger than the original, there was more space across the middle than the one up north.  
You can't leave the capital without taking a picture of the Parliament Buildings.  The Museum of Civilization is directly across the river so we had a great view of Parliament as we left. We found our way out of Ottawa easily following the directions of the syrupy voice on the GPS. We camped about 40 km out of town and are planning to visit Barry's cousin Lucy tonight.  The we are hoping to visit some old friends from Tungsten days in Goderich, ON on the shores of Lake Huron.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Lange B & B called Island Tree Farm

The first night out we stayed with Barry's cousin, Robert Lange at his bed and breakfast about 50 km. from the causeway to Cape  Breton Island.  We had a great visit and in the morning Robert showed us his Christmas Tree Farm.  They had lots of beautiful trees to pick from, but Robert said the money was in making wreaths, not in selling trees, he could make a wreath in an hour and sell it for $25.00, when he sold the trees to a lot he only got $4.00 a tree, cut and delivered to the lot.  He showed us an example which was in great shape considering it had sat there for 5 months.  
 From the farm we headed over to take the ferry to PEI, Barry had never been, we just missed a ferry so had 3 hours to fill.  We headed into Pictou, NS and toured an exhibit about the Herbert, a boat that brought over a load of Scotsman, that were the first settlers in the area. They had removed the tree masts and all the rigging in order to check them out and they unbelievable as they laid outside the building.  I am in the background to give a scale, as you can see they are huge. 
Landing in PEI
The red earth was in full view as we landed at Wood Island.  It was a bitter day, threatening rain and the temp. was supposed to go down to 8 or 9.  We both decided that tenting was not an option so we drove around until we found this lovely Inn in Georgetown.  I had some strange thought that Georgetown would be a big place, probably because of the other Georgetown's in the world, but it was quite small, but we managed to find a lovely spot to spend the night.  They had a great restaurant inside the Inn and we had a lovely dinner, dining on chowder, mussels and crab.  
We drove into Charlottetown and visited the spot where Confederation began.  The building is very well preserved and the PEI legislature stills meets in the building.  It was interesting to learn the nuts and bolts about how Confederation began and to see a re-enactment of the ball that took place after the talks.
The meeting room where Confederation was hatched. 

                          
 We headed across the new bridge between PEI and New Brunswick and headed north and east around the Gaspe Pennisula.  Our first night in the tent was cold, I had my towel draped over me and was still cold whereas Barry in his new Canadian Tire sleeping bag was very comfortable.  Our stove worked fine and heated up a great can of pork and beans, not just any but Libby's Deep Browned Pork and Beans, not that is camping.  The next morning we stopped at Maugish National Park. It has one of the world's best collection of fossils.  There are cliffs along the Baie de Chaleur that have layered sandstone that have fantastic fossils.  There are 3D fossils of fish as well as great plant and tree fossils, we spent a couple of hours learning about this very interesting spot.  
 We drove east along the shores of the Gaspe, it is rather like the Cabot Trail in Nova Scotia, a road squashed between the water and the mountains. The Appalachian run all along the middle of the Gaspe. and at times come right down to the water.  Once we had rounded the eastern tip and were travelling along the north shore we saw the famous  Roche Pierce.  It is quite the site, the sea was very calm today and it made a lovely picture.  We have continued west and at the moment we are almost  at the end of the peninsula.  I had a better night last night covering myself with both of our fleecies, and I don't think it was as cold.  Last night we had a salad, with a spaghetti dinner and I sipped a glass of red wine as we watched the sun set over the St. Lawrence River. Life is good!!