Welcome to my blog! If you've come looking for something that makes any sense, well I'd hit the back button right now! But, if you are looking for an insight into the world of Chris Knighton, well then you just may have come to the right place! Everything from my usual photography, to my often really energetic rants will be posted here so scroll down and you just might like what you find.
Showing posts with label Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Island. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 September 2011

Saying Goodbye to PEI

As fun as going to Pei, and meeting my dad's side of my family, it was time to return home to Ontario, sad but true. But here are the last few photo's from my time there, and after looking at them one can easily imagine why I want to go back....
Province House, The house that the Charlottetown Conference, the meeting that United the British colonies into the beginnings of Canada, took place in.


 A nice View from My great Aunt's house.
 There was a lot of very Unique Architecture in Charlottetown, as many of the houses were very old.



 My great Aunt's Dog wading in the water that their house looks over.

 From the top of the veranda.
 I tried very very hard to get a close up Photograph of these Great Blue Herons, but every time I got anywhere near them they took off. 
 Very Skittish Blue Herons
And Very brave Seagulls......
The plane that flew me back to Halifax airport from Charlottetown.
Oshawa From 30,000 Feet in the air, Unfortunately, it is very difficult to take Photographs of the ground, at night, speeding at four hundred kilometres an hour. and as such my Photograph is not the best.

Prince Edward Island. Would I go back? Yeah, of course, now that I have broken the proverbial ice with my family, I can;t wait to go back and spend more time with them.

Thursday, 15 September 2011

P.E.I. Cont.!

Given that PEI is an island filled with different waterways, there are many, many bridges. This one is a foot bridge near the french side of the island.
Given that PEI is an island filled with different waterways, there are many, many bridges. This one is a foot bridge near the french side of the island.
 The only thing that I knew about Prince Edward Island, before I went, was that there was the "Confederation Bridge" linked it to New Brunswick. 

 The bridge is Nearly thirteen Kilometres long and is Canada's Longest Bridge.

Me, Infront of the Confederation Bridge, "The Fixed Link"
 Red Shores...
 The Doucet House, one of the oldest houses, if not the oldest, on the Island. Parts were built during the seventeen hundreds, but some of it had been restored.
 Now part of the "Farmers Bank of Rustico" The Doucet house serves to educate people on traditional Acadian Living.
 Apparently Large cruise ships like this are not uncommon in Charlottetown, a city with a population of only thirty thousand.

Near Cavendish.

Having never seen Sand Dunes, and Tidal pools, going to Cavendish on my second last day with my Nana and Uncle was a real highlight of my trip. This was taken at Cavendish Beach, with the tidal pools in the foreground and the Dunes in the back.
The water Within the Tidal Pools was so clear, I could hardly believe there was water there at all....

 The Boardwalk leading into the dunes and the beach from the parking lot can just be seen at the top. Although there was no trail through where we walked, we had to make our way over the rocks and tidal pools to get to here.
 Behind the dunes, they are covered in a grass that helps to keep them safe from the elements. This grass is actually very fragile and walking on the dunes, and the grass, is prohibited in order to protect them.
 A baby Osprey In his nest.
It seems that Inukshuk building was very popular on the Island, likely due to the large amount of tourists.
"When In Rome", This is the Inukshuk that I built, My very First one!
Red sand means Red cliffs!


Green Gables! This house was the house that the story Anne Of Green Gables took place in. As not many of us had read the books, we decided to not take the tour, surrendering that it would likely have little meaning to us and would therefore be dull...


The water Within the Tidal Pools was so clear, I could hardly believe there was water there at all....

Prince Edward Island

Over the past few weeks I have been Quite a few places. New York, Ottawa, Niagara Falls, The C.N.E., and most recently, Prince Edward Island, to meet my Fathers side of my family. So, I think that I will start by showing some of the stuff that I did whilst in PEI and work my way back.



I didn't have a direct flight from Toronto to Charlottetown, I had a short stopover, both ways, in Halifax. the flight from Halifax to Charlottetown was about thirty five minutes and was taken on a "Turboprop".
 My first view of the red sand in the Maritimes, this is a river near Halifax that appears to be red from all the sand and sediment in it.

The "Tuboprop" This plane only had eighteen seats inside.
 The inside of the "Tuboprop". Thats the co-pilots shoulder in the white up front.
Before we took off from Halifax he came around the airplane to do a "check" and said that since there was no airline attendant, we should just come and tap him on the arm if we needed anything, leaving the plane at that moment was a serious consideration of mine hahaha.
 The lighthouse in Souris, The Town that my father ,two of my Aunts, and one of my uncles grew up in.
 The cliffside at "Basin Head Beach". One can clearly see the difference in the soil colour of the Island and the sand colour washed in from the water in this picture.
 "Basin Head" offers something that i had never seen before, a "Double Beach", at least that's what i was referring to it as, more accurately it has one beach and a sandbar in front of it. I'm not entirely sure if it was something that had to do with tides and we happened to arrive at just the right time to see this "Double Beach" effect, but nonetheless it was still pretty cool.
 The joining of three different bodies of water, at East Point (the most easterly area on the whole Island), The Northumberland Straight, The Gulf of St. Lawrence, and the Atlantic Ocean.
 One of  very many Lighthouses on the Island, this Lighthouse at East Point, has an extra claim to fame. This Lighthouse was the last to be manned by an actual person on the Island With somebody operating it right into the eighties.
 Taken at North Cape.
 Baby Seagulls and some sort of Sandpiper

 Seals! all the little black "splotches", are actually seals!
Another Shot of the seals.
 An "Inukshuk" my Brother built while we were at North Cape

 The Altar at the "Bottlehouse" "Church". Made Entirely from mortar and used bottles, this house really represents and excellent front for Recycling.

 Just to prove that they were real bottles!
 The small lighthouse the man who single handedly built the bottlehouses, Lived in while he was constructing them
 Flying the "Acadian" flag. A large portion of the Island spoke French as their first language and most of them Identify as some of the original Acadian settlers.