Prince Edward Island

Blog posts about Prince Edward Island, Canada.


Sunset at the Lighthouse

As promised, here are a couple of videos from our 2015 visit to P.E.I.  The first is a 4+ minute-long version of the 1+ hour long video of the sun setting over the Northumberland Strait, with a view of the West Point Lighthouse.

The full, Slow TV, version of the sunset.  I apologize for occasionally checking the camera; I was worried the battery was going to go dead.  I had to change it about 10 minutes from the end.  I hope you can think of it like watching the fireplace channel for the guy who stokes the fire.


A Week in West Point

A few pictures and videos from our week in West Point.  I am also editing a couple of videos, which I will post separately. Click on the thumbnails to open a gallery view.


You don’t need filters here

For those who love to take pictures, Prince Edward Island will not disappoint. West Point, due to its location and geography, will give you some of the most beautiful shots that you will have the opportunity to capture. For today, I would like to give you a sample of one of my favourite subjects. Morning and evening, no matter what season, the ever-changing sky will provide.

Besides the clean air and unobstructed views, the fact that you are on the west side of the Island sets up amazing sunsets in the direction of the Lighthouse. But because West Point juts out into the water, you can also get great sunrises if you are on the other side of the harbour.

Until I travelled outside of Canada, I did not realize how much the latitude contributes to amazing dawns and dusks. I used to teach the physics of it, but at the time I did not fully comprehend the impact. A couple of years ago, my husband and I were at Airport Lookout in Sedona, Arizona to watch the sunset. There is no disputing that it is a beautiful location. But I was very surprized at just how quickly the sun sets when you are closer to the equator. It seemed to drop from the sky, and you could almost watch the shadows moving across the town below. Also, it was setting much too early in the day for July, compared to my previous life experience. In Canada, you may get short daylight hours in the winter, but in the summer you get the rewards of extended daylight. You can sit on the beach for hours in the summer and enjoy watching the sun slowly approach and then dip into the water. And no matter what time of the year, the sky at these transitional times of day are imbued with colour.

I also like catching rainbows, wherever I may find them. Here in the city, you can get beautiful rainbows; but, wires, buildings, and the contents of the neighbor’s recycle bin that have been blown about in the street clutter the view. Not a problem in West Point.

As the title states, no filters were needed in taking these shots. Nature just gives it to you, and you just have to take it. A lot of these were taken from my back deck, which was on Highway 14, near the river. My dad took the rainbow at the harbour. I hope you enjoy.


Sesquicentennial, Canada Day, and Granddad 8

Prince Edward Island is called, among other things, “The Cradle of Confederation”.  In 1864, representatives from the British colonies of Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick and the Province of Canada, comprised of Ontario and Quebec, met to discuss Confederation.  This meeting, the Charlottetown Conference, eventually led to the creation of the country of Canada in 1867.  And although Prince Edward Island did not join Confederation until 1873, the province is proud of its contribution to the building of the nation.

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CharlottetownConference1864.jpg

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, copyright expired.

2014 marks the 150th anniversary of the Charlottetown Conference.  All over P.E.I. there will be festivals and events, especially in the Charlottetown area, celebrating this historic event.  Sitting in my new home in Ontario, I know that P.E.I. will go all out to mark the occasion.  It got me to thinking about celebrations of Canada in which I have taken part, growing up and living in P.E.I.  One of the big celebrations was always Canada Day.

When I was young, West Point was not as developed as it is now (Those of you from away would probably not consider it developed now, but those who live there, I think you know what I mean).  The big deal for me at the end of June was that we were getting out of school and hoping we could go to the beach.  Also, my birthday falls around that time, so I wasn’t really thinking about much else other than my birthday party.

But with the creation of the West Point Development Corporation, mentioned previously, community events became more common.  And I guess, I probably just became more aware of things.  Canada Day celebrations became a regular event.  I have scoured through my pictures, both hard-copy and digital, looking for pictures of my kids in a wagon covered in red-and-white flags in our community parade/walk from the lighthouse to the Harbourside Centre, but for the life of me, I cannot find them.  If anyone has any images of Canada Day in West Point they want to share, let me know and I’ll add them to a gallery.  Trust me, people there are proud of our Country of Canada.

All the talk of Confederation has led me think of a very special Canadian.  My grandfather, Ernest MacDonald, was a very important person in my life.  I think anyone who knew him would confirm that he was a special man.  I say special and not great, as Granddad was not grandiose.  He was a wise man with a quiet manner.  He was giving, gentle, and had a sense of humour which would sometimes take you by surprize.  But he was great in that he was an example of how a peaceful person can exude strength in being calm.  Granddad lived to be 103 years old; his funeral was full of people mourning the loss.  But I feel he probably would have been overwhelmed with all the fuss.

West Point Class Picture 1912

West Point Class Picture 1912 – Granddad is under the teacher’s arm in the back left.

Granddad was born in 1903.  Think about it: PEI only joined Canada 30 years before he was born.  (Ok, if you live in Newfoundland, there are still people alive when your province joined Confederation in 1949, but give me this.)  His grandfather, William MacDonald, was the original lighthouse keeper in West Point.  Granddad himself was a fisherman and a cook on a schooner.  I remember when I was a kid going to Nana and Granddad’s house and he would give us paper on which to draw that had printing on one side only.  Nana would make us draw a pig and then close our eyes to attempt to put the eye and the tail on.  We thought it was great.  I still try it on occasion.  Turns out those books of paper were reports from the Coast Guard.  Granddad was also the fog-horn keeper at the Point and as a result used to get reports from them on a regular basis.  He hated to see good paper go to waste, so he made sure we put it to use before he disposed of it. He took care of the fog-horn in West Point until it was removed, the exact date I do not remember.

Granddad and Nana

My paternal grandparents, Ernest and Beatrice MacDonald.

Granddad never got his license.  He walked everywhere.  As a kid, I didn’t think much about it; but, as an adult, I cannot imagine living in West Point without having a vehicle.  He told us stories of walking home from Summerside in a snowstorm and about how a horse put its head through the back window of someone’s car.  He walked a great deal through the woods behind his house, wearing down paths that we kids would use to walk between Nana and Granddad’s house and Aunt Phosie’s cottage.  (One of my vivid memories is going  through that woods on the back of a banana-bike with my cousin Glen furiously pedaling.  Considering the dips and tree roots, I don’t know how we did not break our necks.)  But I think a major contributor of Granddad’s longevity was his physical activity in the form of walking.  And good genes, of course.

Although he lived at home until a surprizing age, making homemade banana bread and brown-sugar fudge with peanuts, by the time he was 99, Granddad was living in O’Leary at the Lady Slipper Villa.  That year, his son Gordon decided that he would help Granddad walk back to West Point.  As described by my cousin Wayne in this commentary on centenarians and by Eva Rodgerson in the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island, the men broke the 18-km journey into 19 treks.  Gordon would take him back to where they had left off during the previous walk the next time they went out.  If my calculations are correct, at the time, Gordon was 76 years old himself.

To me, while the walk speaks to Granddad’s exceptionally good health at an advanced age, he was so much more than that.  He was a gentleman in every sense of the word.  He told the best stories, and just when he had you captivated he would throw in some twist and you would realize that he was telling you a tall tale.  He saw the advancement of P.E.I. from when there were no cars and no electricity, through to when the internet was starting to invade our spaces.  The changes in our small community, let alone the world, over his lifetime would have been immense.  He took it all in stride, no pun intended.

Ernest MacDonald and Harry Stewart

My grandfather, Ernest MacDonald is on the left and Harry Stewart is on the right. Harry used to own the property on which the cottage now stands, but basically gave it to my mother to create the bed and breakfast in order to remember the Stewart’s in West Point.

In 2003, Granddad was interviewed by Reg Thompson for the IslandVoices Project.  If you would like to listen, it can be found at on the U.P.E.I. Robertson Library website.  (It is a very emotional thing to hear the voice of a loved one who has passed.)  As we all celebrate the 150th anniversary of the discussions which started our country, we should take the time to talk to our seniors so that we remain connected to them and their stories which helped define our families, our communities, and our nation.  We spend a lot of time taking selfies and documenting every minute of our lives, fearful that who we are will be forgotten.  Don’t forget to take the time to listen to the story of someone from an older generation and help keep those memories alive.  You might learn something about yourself in the process and those who come along later will thank you.