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It was such a thrill to see this posing heron and others in his flock in New Brunswick's Kouchibouguac National Park, a place we stumbled upon as we were recovering from some rough travel the previous day. I learned that great blue herons, a treasured seasonal bird in our Southern Oregon home, nests here in New Brunswick. In Oregon we rarely see more than one heron at a time. Here, they hang out in gangs. Thank you, GBH. The older I get, the more such moments thrill me. I enjoyed many such moments today.
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Yesterday sucked. Even though we traveled from beautiful, rolling, church-spire-bejeweled and grain-silo decorated Quebec to reach New Brunswick, we disagreed about where we were going and what we were doing. You think that a married couple traveling in a small van for miles and miles and weeks and weeks doesn't sometimes think about divorce? Gags? Murder? We're probably not the only ones. Right?
PK's a planner, and he's good at it. If he wasn't, we wouldn't be doing all this traveling.
But the problem with detailed planning and road trips, in my estimation? Plans put spontaneity on the back burner. If you have a destination, and you gotta get there on schedule, then unexpected side trips tend to well, slip aside. That's the crux. We managed to compromise with some mileage along a scenic route as opposed to a get-there-quick freeway, and arrived around 6 p.m. a few miles from our stopping point, Kouchibouguac National Park in New Brunswick. (Hard to pronounce, easy to love, is the way they describe it around here.)
We found a municipal campground, scored a site in the trees, and started to relax. Our plan for today was to roar on over to Nova Scotia and the Cabot Trail on Cape Breton, a place we've talked and dreamt about for years. But we were just a few minutes from a national park. What the heck. Let's have a look. In a sweet burst of spontaneity, we decided to spend the entire day in the park and camp overnight. Thus began a day filled with wonder and fun, brimming with the travel moments that keep us on the road.
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Canadian geese in, where else but Canada! They were feeding just a few pedal strokes from our campsite and the great blue herons were close by. |
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PK getting ready to cycle. We practically had the campground to ourselves, a Sunday in September, the
start of "shoulder season." Great time to travel! Even though it rained a bit today, and was windy, it was shorts weather. This campground also has blazing fast wifi, which, coupled with a long relaxing day, is why I could whip out a blog post in short order. Wifi is not something we expected in Canadian parks, but it is often available.
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One of the park's claims to fame is restoring the pied plover population, which had dwindled near extinction here. One
of the interpretive signs provided this silly photo op. We rode our bikes here and that rectangle on my glasses is a bike
mirror, in case you were wondering.
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Just a few minutes down the boardwalk through the marsh, perhaps through divine intervention? we spotted this bird, which we believe, with the help of Stokes, to be a juvenile pied plover. Again, just unbelievable and thrilling to us both. Photo below, PK on the board walk where we spotted the pied plover.
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One of many interpretive signs along miles and miles of hiking and biking trails throughout the bogs, lagoons, forests, and sea shore in this hard-to-pronounce national park. |
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Strong winds made the grasses dance but kept us safe from the local mosquito population, of which we were warned. |
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PK making his way through bog vegetation on a sinking boardwalk. |
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It was a warm but blustery day and we didn't expect to see people swimming or playing in the Atlantic Ocean on Kelly's Beach in the park. But there they were, enjoying the last Sunday before school starts here next week. |
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Yes, warm enough to swim, but PK and I stuck to wading and
splashing around a bit before getting back to cycling. |
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I liked the red chairs provided by the park service. By the time we got to the chairs to clean our feet and put on our
shoes, a middle-aged woman was occupying one and struck up a conversation. Within a few minutes, she spilled the news that her husband had recently left her for a much younger woman and was also deserting their sons, ages six and four. This was an unexpected torrent of anguish that didn't fit with our perfect day. But we both warmed to her and ended up in a discussion about love and marriage, hope and betrayal. I think we ended with hope. The last time she'd visited this place had been with the errant husband and their boys. She wanted to reclaim the powerful place as her own. I hope she did that. Our encounter reminded me that even when inevitable human suffering occurs, the sea and the sky, forests and mountains and rivers, birds and mammals, and even strangers on the beach, can be restorative.
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I think the balm of a day of spontaneity has paid off for your fan base in a superlative piece of writing, Mary. I laughed. I cried. I felt like I right there with you. Bravo.
ReplyDeleteYou are too kind, Grace. But thank you.
ReplyDeleteAgreed...the wonders of the world, even locally..can be restorative!
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