Highlighter Chisel Tip

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Highlighter Chisel Tip

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12 SANFORD 27009 Sharpie Accent Pocket Style Highlighter Chisel Tip Pink


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12 ORANGE HIGHLIGHTERS CHISEL TIP 64325


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BIC Brite Liner Grip Highlighter, Chisel Tip, Two (2) Packs, Assorted Colors


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3 Pcs Lot Hype 5.0mm Chisel Tip Yellow Highlighters


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Travels-Central Newfoundland Newfoundland

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

Another sunny day for travel. This time we went another hundred miles inland from Bishop Falls, anticipating a fun time at the Salmon Festival in nearby Grand Falls. Standing in the visitor center in Grand Falls and collected information on Salmon Festival, which is considered one of the top 100 festivals in North America. The festival lasts a whole week and about 30,000 people expected. The attraction principal this year is the big band Blue Sea, and other popular rock groups of Newfoundland. The festival offers a salmon dinner followed by a 500 people dancing days family, and "Terranova" night of the celebration of the peculiarities of Newfoundland. The cost of admission is quite high: $ 32.00 for the concert, $ 25.00 for dinner of salmon.

We continue to Bishop's Falls and camped at the municipal campsite at the base of the falls and the hydroelectric dam. Exploits River is known for its salmon fishing. A fisherman is allowed only four from the river. " For a non-resident $ 50.00 fishing license plus the services of a guide. That fishing is expensive. Rather catch my own fish on the market.

Wednesday, July 16, 2003

Today we had a choice of traveling North or South. Travel to South Coast of Bays was a journey of more than 150 miles. Most of the area was mountainous and forested until the Bay Area. On the coast south of Newfoundland many different fishing villages. The natives say the area is nice, but not worth the trip. We took the road that leads to another main rather ticklish. The name itself adjusted our imagination (I did not say there is tickling). A tingling, according the Oxford English Dictionary, is a narrow stretch of treacherous sea water usually between the rocks or cliffs into a port. The true origin of the word is unknown. But the ship was being tickled from either side by the narrow passage rocks or sailors were delighted to go through this last passage in the port of treacherous when they arrived after being tossed in the North Atlantic. So that the name came to be. In The First Tickle is a fishery caught us some fish cod. The fish had been emptied and opened. Only a few bones and skin remained. They were then going to be salted and preserved. We have our salt fish before nine pounds worth of $ 2.50 per pound.

Due to fresh fish we did not want to stay too long in the tickling. There was, however a short side trip we had to do: the port of Glover. In 1879 the city entered into the Guinness Book for the largest giant squid ever captured. This baby was over fifty-five feet long and weighed over two tons and a half. Its tentacles had thirty-five feet long. The squid had come to die. They are usually found in the depths of the Atlantic. His mortal enemy is only the sperm whale. In the village is a center interpretation, which attempts to depict the life of giant squid (a sort themselves.) Outside is a concrete replica of squid in the place where she has appeared land over a century ago.

Thursday, July 17, 2003

Today we went to Twillingate, Iceberg Alley. We found a camp in the VR Peyton Resort with 30 amp service. The converter changed and we were back in business. Twillingate is at the end of a series of islands connected by causeways. The area is known as iceberg alley, but very few icebergs have traveled from the north this year. In the northern most tip of the island of Long Point Lighthouse, manned by Jack May and his family. They operate a visitor center, restaurant and gift shop. Guides show the interior of the lighthouse, which is still operable. The light is fully mechanized, but the original hand crank rotation mechanism still works. The lighthouse keeper had to reboot for hours. Also at the point of viewing stations in the North Atlantic. The visibility was thirty miles today. We met a lady and her son were waiting for the return of her husband more crab 150 miles out to sea. He had called and said he was about ten miles from the coast and on the way in. Nothing has really changed since the old days when wives of captains Sea "waiting for the return of their husbands in the top of the widow of the rides in their homes.

The water is crystal clear. You can see the different currents in the ocean by different colored lines in the water. Puffins, gulls and other waterfowl abound.

In the Street of Walter B. Elliott links and islands of the New World is the first Berth Twillingate, a genuine functioning fishing stage. David Boyd, the owner, has been fishing for over fifty years. The He shows how the cod was captured, and prepared for salting in traditional forms of age before refrigeration. All you need to know about the industry Newfoundland fishing can be found here. Tried in the 60s to convince the Government to ban fishing by trawl trawler fleet multinationals. They did not listen and cod fisheries of the North Atlantic is like a highway. The ocean floor has been scraped clear of life and the breeding grounds have been destroyed, it may not be fertile again for many generations. In the tour that shows how the cod liver oil calms the waves and watching the fish and seagulls go after pieces of fish that throws the bay. On a trip to Newfoundland, this is a must.

Friday, July 18, 2003

Twillingate left and stopped at Boyd's Cove in downtown Archaeological Beotuck interpretation. The Beotuck were an aboriginal tribe of hunters and gathers became extinct in 1829, when the last woman died in captivity. Due to their limited knowledge we have of this tribe survives. Archaeologist Dr. Ralph Pastore of St. John's searched the Notre Dame Bay the remains of this society. One day he found a clearing. Without knowing what it was, he went to ground and the chances of finding an archaeological site. After excavation of the sample, found eleven houses, including a ceremonial. Thousands of artifacts, including stone arrowheads, several animal bones, and iron tools. While European fishermen were seasonal, he returned to his home every winter and left behind the things they did not need, for example, iron nails, hooks, broken metal objects, Beotuck etc recycling of these products, especially the heavy iron spikes and remodeled into tools that could be used as spear and arrowheads, scrapers, etc. For more than one hundred years lived in peace, while the French in the English north and south fought among themselves. When the English began to settle around Bay Notre Dame, the small tribe of Beotuck, no more than a thousand members, reduced and eventually died out due to illness.

The archaeological excavation is reached by a 1.6-mile track. We Morgana in it. He did pretty well and did everything possible to walk the whole distance. But the heat and length made it impossible, especially with the proliferation of nuisance mosquitoes and black flies piranhas, who wanted to feast on a buffet of our body, despite we had sprayed.

From there began to take the loop, Route 330, near Hamilton Sound. We passed many small villages, where many of Residents have the same surname. We decided to camp in Musgrave Harbour. To the east were the Wadham Islands and the North, Fogo Island.

Saturday, July 19, 2003

In Puerto Musgrave is the Banting Interpretation Centre. Sir Frederick Banting, one of the cofounders of insulin, died in a plane crash here. The remains and a replica your aircraft are on display.

I drove to the coast of Newton, the Venice of Newfoundland, because the city is built around nine tickle (remember?) connected by bridges. Here the family lived Balfour, a wealthy seafaring family. From the 1960s to allow tourists to visit their farms to see how it life in those days. The family still comes and lives part of the year there. The Centre consists of two houses, one built in the 1870s, which housed thirty people; the other, a design of Queen Anne built in 1904. Both houses have the original furniture and memorabilia of the families. Employment Balfour ship was caught in a hurricane one year and ended in Scotland. He turned lemons into lemonade, for bringing a motor home of Calvin and marble vanity tops. All hands were saved. The Centre has an interview CBC with Captain Balfour, who is fascinating in itself. The Center has teachers with costumes representing different characters in the school house, a stage of cod, and a replica of the seal hunting vessel. One building is also used for a theater where plays are performed regularly. Newton, in itself is quite picturesque.

He drove a few miles to Greenspond, another fishing village that once was the capital of this part of Newfoundland. The 1904 courthouse has been restored and disguised teachers give tours of the building. Parking is minimal, especially on a Saturday, when everyone seems to be buying fish in the local fishing ground. This strain was big baby, trailer, and our personal relationship.

Our next stop was at Gander, once one of the busiest airports in the world. All Trans-Atlantic flights once had to stop here for fuel. Just last week, the Concord made an emergency landing here, because he had enough fuel to reach New York from London. London was experiencing a heat wave with temperatures around 100 ° F. After refueling the plane took off. The condensed fuel in height, not having enough to reach New York. The only plane at the airport today was a U.S. Air Force transport.

Near the airport are the ruins of the city during World War II. There is nothing left but the streets and some signs.

Just outside the city is the Silent Witness Memorial to victims of plane crash on December 12, 1985, of the 101st airborne troops flying home from a peacekeeping mission in Sinai Peninsula, landed in Gander. There was a crew change and refueling, but at launch, the spacecraft failed and crashed without leaving survivors. The cause is still unknown.

Another fact about Gander is its people. After 9 / 11, when airports were closed in the U.S., many planes, which had been forced U.S., landed in Gander. The people of Gander and the surrounding area arrived at the airport and invited the passengers into their homes. This is really the spirit of hospitality of Newfoundland.

Our next stop is Botwood, where we spent the night in the old World War II amphibious Air Force Base. Even before World War II, Botwood was a major airport. The first Trans Atlantic flight of a commercial for a Clipper seaplane landed here in 1937. This was the advent luxury air service across the Atlantic. This continued until after the Second World War when the sea planes went the way of the horse and buggy. A PBY Catalina aircraft just sits in the port today as a reminder of the heritage of the city. In the port is an island with a causeway leading to it, which housed defense weapons during the war.

Sunday, August 17, 2003

Led to Glen Falls-Windsor and visited the Mary March Museum, dedicated to one of the last members Beothuck Nation. It was interesting and highlighted the search for Beothucks in the Exploits River Valley by Cartwright, Buchan, and later Peyton. By this time the nation was dying from diseases brought by Europeans and many disagreements between the two cultures.

Behind the museum is a reconstructed village showing the different types of buildings Beothuck used.

A short distance away is a museum of record, included in the price of admission to the Mary March Museum. This is one of the highlights of our trip to Newfoundland. The museum is a reconstruction of a logging camp in the 1920s, where forty hundred men cut trees for wood pulp factories. The camps generally used for two years before moving to a different area. Besides holding an office building foreman, the kitchen and the rooms cooks, and bunk house, was the construction of the forge and store presentation. Work presenter was to sharpen the ax and saw every day. He worked at night while sleeping cutters. There were some interesting names for different teams: quicks urine, pot bitch, ass juicer, etc. Each was a major theme in the camp of the timber.

The cut usually comes in the last weeks in August until the fall of snow. The logs were transported to the bank of the river or the river itself, if frozen. When spring came they were expelled by the river to the mill. Finally there was a small cleaning kit to find the logs to the river behind. Wages for the cutters is piece work, depending on the number cut cable. The other papers were paid wages.

Monday, August 18, 2003

Today we went to Baie Verte Peninsula (Green Bay) for mines and particularly the excavation Dorset Soapstone Indian in Fleur de Lys at the end of the peninsula. On the way we passed a open pit mine asbestos, which has been closed a number of years. Mother Nature is starting to take it over, forming a lake at its center.

A Fleur de Lys is the leading Indian Heritage Dorset about 6,000 years ago. They preformed bowls, lamps and other items in the soft rock and then removed from the site. The tools used were of other rocks of chisels hammers and scrapers. Soapstone, which feel like the soap had properties that held the heat and was used for cooking pots and oil lamps. Talc is part of the rock. Today there are very few places in soapstone. A few scultpurers used for decorative purposes.

We made a trip to the slope Cove. This time it was a thriving city of more than two thousand people. Today is the ghost town of only five families. The area is beautiful and isolated, the creek that comes to Notre Dame Bay is surrounded by steep hills.

Tuesday, August 19, 2003

Hiking today was a beautiful sunny day. The first path that was to Rattling Brook Falls track, where a water falls falls eight hundred feet of the mountains. This was a short trail, only a mile long, but all ladders above. Morgan came with, but tired of the road about three-quarters.

After that we went a short distance to the Alexander Murray Senderos, approximately eight kilometers long, most ascending to the summit of a peak of 1,000 meters. More than 1,200 steps will take you to the summit. There is also a trip to Niagara Corner Brook, 205 steps each way. Falls seem to come out of the mountain, before falling over the mountain. The view from the top of the Green Bay area are beautiful. In the road two largest water falls, one of them called Gull Brook Falls. A walk, which is said to take only three hours, took almost five hours instead. We returned home totally exhausted.

About the Author

John and Maggie Pelley are Geriatric Gypsies. Both of us are retired from the rat race of working. We are full-time RVers, who ran away from home. We began our travels on the East Coast and, like the migrating birds, seek the warmth of the seasons. No more shoveling snow in Chicago. We have discovered volunteering with the National Park System. During our travels we have found that each town has a story to tell: some are more interesting than others. Both of us enjoy good listening music as we go. John has a CD he has recorded of Native American flure music. We have learned that RVing has a learning curve. We want to pass on some advice the help others avoid this trecherous curve. Life is an adventure. We are living it to the utmost.

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