It looked EXACTLY like I thought it should. When I was little, I had a book about some little kids who explored the rocks and caves in Maine, and something happened with a gigantic crab or lobster… I forget exactly what… and since I can’t remember enough about it, I can’t find it… but for my age group, it was a “thriller”… ANYway – all of the pictures and these big, giant boulders, and that’s exactly what Nova Scotia looked like. Like we were miniature in the land of giant..boulders. AND, it was misty and overcast often, which is exactly what it should be…in my imagination… so, I wasn’t at all disappointed.
Since we were visiting friends, and not doing really tourist-y things, the only thing I remember straight off is that we ate lobster. Now, the way I heard the story is that they picked up yummy fresh lobster in fancy packaging (see previous blog – I pretend a lobster tail is “fancy packaging” for some sort of yummy food. … I can’t see the entire lobster and eat it…) ~ actually, Peter and the guy we were visiting went to the pier and picked some lobsters fresh from the barrels… ANYway – “lalalalalalal”, she says, with her hands over her ears…
At some point, the people we were staying with ended up in a great, big, huge angry argument about something (I can’t remember what about BUT it WASN’T anything to do with us!). It was loud and angry, and we were uncomfortable, so we tiptoed out the back door and went for a walk.
At first, we were just strolling along – I want to say it was lit up by the full moon, but that just might be my memories now… but it was well-lit, anyway… as we “browsed” the headstones, we became aware (gradually), that the headstones all had the same dates…April 15, 1912.
Everyone knows the story, or at least have heard enough about it, or at least saw the movie to get the heart wrenching, tear jerking gist of the tragedy of the Titanic. I can’t even talk about it. You can do your own research if you want/need further details.
Or, watch the movie. I didn’t want to watch it. I resisted it. I refused to go to the theater. Then, a friend brought it over, because the music was beautiful… I cried from the very beginning and had nightmares for… a long, long time. Can you believe that the movie came out 16 years ago!!?
Also found in the Museum is information about the Halifax Explosion, another tragedy, just 5 years after the Titanic, December 6, 1917.
Unfortunately, a crowd had gathered on the wharf because of the burning ships… plus, there was the normal hustle and bustle of the businesses along the harbor…The explosion that followed levelled the port of Halifax and killed 2000 people and injured 9000 more.
HalifaxExplosion.org explains: “the air was filled with the sound of bursting flames, billowing smoke, explosions, fire bells, and crowd reactions all around… and then a momentary silence…”
More Nova Scotia details next Sunday.
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