Map of Canada, drawn my nephew, probably when he was about 10 years old |
Eight days ago I got on a plane and flew to Boston,
Mass. There I joined my younger brother
and his daughter (my niece), my older brother and his wife (my sister-in-law)
and we got in a smallish car and headed northeast. To New Brunswick or bust!
Before I left home, I had this conversation with my son:
Son: So, you’re
going to Canada today!
Me: Yes, I am
going to Canada. You know what this
means….
Son: Free health care!
Me: No, it means whatever dishes you put in that
sink in the morning will still be there when you get back in the evening.
Son: As a parting gift to us, can you do the
dishes one more time?
I was nervous before the trip. This was my first trip outside the country in ten years, an embarrassment for the world traveler I once was. As my husband drove me to the airport, I
bemoaned the fact that I had not looked up the driving directions. It just bothers me to not know what roads we
are going to take.
I did not need to worry.
Once I got to Boston, my brother went to his Chart Room.
This box full of maps is what my brother refers to as his Chart Room. |
Paper maps - how quaint! |
If you were looking for Waldo, try looking in Maine. |
Bright and early the next morning, we set out for Maine. Our
first stop – a town near Portland, for a wonderful but all-too-brief breakfast visit
to my cousin and his family. Then on to
Saint John, New Brunswick, to visit my uncle, aunt, and another cousin.
Here are a few of the signs we saw during our trip.
That top sign denotes that you will likely see bicyclists riding on top of a tunnel harboring pregnant university graduates. That's the best I could make of it. |
We thought this might be a sign showing the way East for those without a compass app. But someone told us it was the town’s evacuation route. |
All road signs in New Brunswick are in French and English. |
Political sign in someone's front yard. |
Be sure to notice dogs doing their business. By the way, that's the US on the other side of the water. |
Vroom Lane, in St Stephen, NB |
Back in New Hampshire, the Interstate highway rest stop consists of a giant liquor store. No mixed messages there, eh? |
Restaurant wisdom. My brother said this just about summed up the history of thought in Western Civilization. |
10 comments:
How come I never noticed that you could DRIVE to New Brunswick? I thought you needed a ferry from Maine. I must have been thinking of Nova Scotia, I guess. That trip does look like fun!
I want to go to the Bay of Fundy.
Sounds like a really fun interesting trip! I was in that area, oh, maybe around 1987 or so. Beautiful country!
Jealous! I love a good road trip! Yours looks really fun.
Road trips are good things! On this trip I had to go back to using paper maps, because it's very expensive to use the tiny bit of data we bought for Rob's phone in the UK.
Cassi, you make a very good point. Once we were in Canada, roaming charges applied, and I did not want to use my phone for maps, which would have gobbled up the data allowance on our plan. So it was great to have paper maps.
I prefer a map to the screen. I like reading that you do, too.
Happy trails.
Plus the health care comment--too funny!
So many great things in one post!
1) I'm sure to you it's sass, but your kids' responses are always pure comedy for me.
2) A chart room. Oh my word. Did your brother, by chance, want to be a pirate when he was a kid? I never need to know what road we're taking if I'm not driving (don't caaaaare), but I do love examining paper maps to get my bearings.
3) I love signs, so all those photos brought me to a very happy place, perfect for a Monday morning.
Oh goodness I like that dead end- cul-de-sac sign. I seem to remember a visit to Canada when I was younger and seeing a sign that read Squeeze to the Left and or Squeeze to the Right. Do you have that now or ever had such a sign there?
Dead End is an apt name for a Cul-de-Sac. The UK sign would be 'No Through Road' symbol.
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