• To Travel is to Live...
  • Matthew Meier
  • To Travel is to Live...
  • Matthew Meier

Canadian East Coast 2018

September 2018 Meer informatie
  • Het begin van de reis
    1 september 2018
  • FIND IT - Road trip game

    1 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    Found this online before the trip. Let's see how long it takes us to complete the list! Or will we complete it?

    Which item do you think we will have the hardest time finding?

  • Airbnb #1

    1 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    We have various different types of accommodations booked on this trip. This one is our first Airbnb reservation on this trip. We will sleep the next 3 nights here in the home of a lady named Margaret. She is a PHD student who has rented her lovely home to us while she herself is travelling. Place is cute and has everything we might need. She even gave us a few beers, water, some chips and a chocolate bar! Yum!Meer informatie

  • King of Donair

    1 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    Here is a bit of background on our dinner choice tonight:

    In the early 1970s, a man tried to introduce Canada to the Gyro, a popular food from his home country, Greece.
    He soon realized that the taste of the traditional Gyro was not as popular in Canada as it was in Greece so he decided to make some adjustments. He replaced the lamb with beef and the tzatziki with a sweet sauce he created and called it a Donair. In 1973 he opened King of Donair on Quinpool Road in Halifax which still operates today serving the traditional tastes and spices of the original King of Donair recipe.Meer informatie

  • Fairview Lawn Cemetery

    1 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    Is it weird to visit a cemetery at night on vacation? Well, too late now. We just did.

    It was getting pretty dark but we couldn't help but stop to pay our respects to some of the victims of the Titanic. There are 121 graves in this cemetery of victims of the Titanic. Some have names on them but there are also many that do not. Some have names added many years later when they were eventually identified.

    A famous grave here belonged to that of an unknown child. The sailors who found him paid for the grave since no one ever claimed him. It wasn't until 2008 that DNA was able to ID the boy as 19 month old Sidney Leslie Goodwin. His family also died that night but their bodies were never recovered.
    Meer informatie

  • Day 2

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    Good morning friends! Its day 2, but our first full day on the coast. If you've followed past trips, you may have noticed that we have a tendency to go pretty hard on the first day out. Today is no different. We will cover a lot of ground in Nova Scotia today. Are you really to follow along with us? Make sure you go pee first, and get some road trip snacks ready... it's time to hit the road! Peggy's Cove, here we come!Meer informatie

  • Peggy's Point Lighthouse

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    I don't know about you, but I need to see Lighthouses. I'm sure we will see many on this trip... shall we count them? There are about 160 historic lighthouses in Nova Scotia alone. We wont be seeing THAT many, but lets see how many we do come across! We are starting today with a pretty famous one! This lighthouse is on the the most photographed structures in Atlantic Canada and one of the most recognizable lighthouses in the world. Beautiful. A few snapshots from a crappy old cell phone doesn't do it justice, people. You just need to come here someday and see it yourself.Meer informatie

  • William deGarthe - Fisherman's monument

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    I don't know much about this guy so I google him. He's a Finnish born artist who spent most of his life in Peggy's Cove.
    This is one of his famous sculptures, located on the property he used to call home. It is a sculpture of thirty-two fishermen and their wives and children protected by the wings of St. Elmo. It also features Peggy, a shipwreck survivor the village is named after.
    There is an art gallery next door with more of his work bit it wasn't open.
    Meer informatie

  • Swiss Air Flight SR111 Memorial

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    The memorial site was made in honour of the families involved in the terrible plane crash of September 2nd, 1998 that killed all 229 passengers and crew members onboard. The plane was in the midst of a New York to Geneva, Switzerland flight. The view of the village and lighthouse of Peggy's Cove from the Swiss Air memorial site is also quite spectacular... although it doesn't look lime much in the photo.Meer informatie

  • Peggy of the Cove Museum

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    The website said it best:

    "There are two versions of the Peggy’s Cove name story in existence.

    The first is perhaps rather obvious, the cove known as Margaret’s Cove is because of its location at the entrance to St. Margaret’s Bay. When abbreviated, it becomes Peggy’s Cove, an area known the world-over for its scenic beauty, enticing tourists and visitors from near and far.

    The second account of how Peggy’s Cove was named comes from a book ‘This is Peggy’s Cove,’ by local artist and sculptor William deGarthe who writes about a Schooner that was shipwrecked on Halibut Rock, off the Lighthouse Point in a terrible storm of sleet and fog on a very dark October night in the 1800’s. He tells that the ship ran hard aground and with high waves washing her decks everyone on board was lost except for a young woman, who managed to survive the turbulent seas, swam ashore and was finally rescued by the people on shore. Her name was Margaret. After the tragedy she stayed in the area and went on to marry one of the men of the local area. People from near-by places used to say, “Let’s go see Peggy of the Cove,” and before long they began to call the place Peggy’s Cove."

    No one was really sure if it was fact or fiction, until 1996 the story was confirmed by Peggy's great grand daughter.

    Museum isn't open but we swung in to look at the mural and the lighthouse replica in the driveway.
    Meer informatie

  • Savvy Sailor Cafe

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    Lunch time! I had a "cup" of haddock chowder and Matt had a "cup" of lobster bisque. It was a pretty big bowl for a "cup" of soup. And then we both had a scallop club po'boy sandwich. Soups were both great and the scallops were huge and delicious.

    It was absolutely worth the line up to get a table.
    Meer informatie

  • Bluenose I and II

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    If you think this model ship looks familiar, check your pocket change. The famous image of the original Bluenose has been on the Canadian dime since 1937 and it's also on the Nova Scotia license plate. Sadly the Bluenose crashed into a reef in 1946 and was ruined. In 1963 a group of people, many of which built the original, decided to build the Bluenose II. Another absolute Canadian Icon.

    As I mentioned earlier, the ship is not currently docked, but here are a few photos related to the 2 Bluenose ships.
    Meer informatie

  • Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    A UNESCO World Heritage Site, The Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic commemorates the fishing heritage of the Atlantic coast of Canada and has recently been named as one of the top 1000 best places to see in the US and Canada before you die. The Museum has retired fishermen working in the brightly painted red buildings and floating vessels to enhance the experience.Meer informatie

  • Berlin Wall Segment

    2 september 2018, Canada ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    A few days shy of 29 years ago...November 9, 1989 the Berlin wall came down and thousands of people danced and celebrated on top of the Berlin Wall - a symbol of Germany’s divided past and the freedom and democracy that followed. While people in Berlin began to demolish the Wall very rapidly, there was also much interest from abroad to obtain pieces of the 140-kilometre-long wall. Pieces were scattered around the globe with many being given to various cultural and historical institutions, organizations, businesses, cities and governments. For the recipients, the large Wall segments and smaller fragments were considered memorials to be preserved and displayed in public places so that the story behind 'their' piece could be told. It is known that there are more than 240 sections of the Wall that can be found in over 140 countries around the world, including six sites within Canada. This is one of the 6.Meer informatie