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Showing posts with label historical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2008

"A Flag Tree??"




 
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I was at our provincial Medical Radiation Technologist conference this weekend here in St. John's. At The Fairmont Hotel. It went very well. During one of our meals. in the hotel Atrium, I looked up and saw all these flags that looked to be draping from this huge Fig tree. The flag that stood out the most however amongst all the provincial flags, was the flag of Nunavut which is in the center of the tree. Now Nunavut is unique in our country because it breaks a precedent among Canadian provincial and territorial flags in that it does not make reference to British heraldry or any coat of arms.

The flag was proclaimed on April 1st, 1999 along with the territory of Nunavut. As you can see it features a red Inukshuk-an Inuit land marker- and a blue star which you cannot see in the flag in the tree and is to the right on the flag. The star represents both the Niqirtsuituq, the North Star and the leadership of elders in the community. The colors of yellow, red, white and blue represent the riches of the land, sea and the sky. It is a beautiful flag steeped in very old truly Canadian culture and history.

Inukshuks traditional in the territories are copied by many travellers all across our country. They stand to remind people of another people and the camaraderie that is exhibited by the adventurers that tread our soils and waters and the fragility of all our lands that so often travellers try to be "one" with in the course of their exploits. The Inukshuk in the bottom picture is one on Silver Fox Island, Indian Bay, NL.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

"PM, Paddler"



Say what you will about one of our greatest and charismatic Prime Ministers but Pierre Trudeau had more than a passion for paddling and the outdoors.

Born Oct. 18, 1919, Trudeau served as prime minister from 1968 until 1984, with a nine-month break in 1979-80 after Joe Clark's Progressive Conservatives won a short-lived minority government in Ottawa.

Ever a controversial and much-debated figure in Canadian history, Trudeau repatriated Canada's Constitution, introduced the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, enshrined both official languages in law and established multiculturalism as official federal policy.

This quote by him sums up his love of canoeing.

"What sets a canoeing expedition apart is that it purifies you more rapidly and inescapably than any other travel. Travel a thousand miles by train and you are a brute; pedal five hundred on a bicycle and you remain basically a bourgeois; paddle a hundred in a canoe and you are already a child of nature." -- Pierre Elliott Trudeau

Don't you just feel it though, when you are in a kayak, immersed in nature, well immersed in anything in a kayak, ......just "giddy", with the overwhelming sense of adventure? I know I do.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

"Queensport Light"


This is one of the oldest lights in NS. It is this light Stan Rogers sings about in one of his songs. This light is of course in the community of Queensport on the way to the town of Canso, where every year in August they host the Stan Rogers' Music Festival. It brings in 10,000 tourists to a community of about 800. It is a major "Kitchen Party", now combine that with a kayaking trip in and around the town and you are about as close to heaven as you can get.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

"On Gaurd For Thee", St.John's, NFLD

Remnants of years of duty still highlight the shore of the entrance to St.John's harbour.

"The Cape Spear Light", NFLD

Maintaining its' lonely yet constant vigil the light at cape spear gaurds the ruggedness that is the most easterly location in North America.