Hi Folks!
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| We're back! |
Well, after a break of just under 4 years, I've finally found the inclination to post this update on our blog.
As many of you know, neither Mark nor I are posting regularly on Facebook - in fact, apart from Christmas, New Years, and Canadian Thanksgiving, (and wishing people well on their birthdays) we haven't posted anything for over a year. We took ourselves off the platform because of the increasing negativity found there.
However, I will post this on Social Media - just in case anyone is interested in taking the occasional peek at our adventures.
We are currently doing a repeat sit in Westport, Southern Ontario. Yesterday, we went into town and saw a tour boat in the dock and got speaking to two of the passengers. They told us that they were on a 5 night tour through the Rideau Canal from Ottawa to Kingston. After an overnight stay in the town, they would be staying at Jones Falls Locks the following day.
It just so happened that we had planned to go to that place the next day (today), and we were delighted that our timing was (accidentally) spot on as the boat was just reaching the top of the lock system when we arrived.
It was fascinating watching the crew navigating through the lower triple locks, opening and closing the sluice gates and the main lock gates in turn as the water levels evened off to allow the boat to make its way to the dock where it was going to drop anchor for the night.
It brought back memories of teaching at Springhill R.C. School in Southampton, UK, when the topic we were covering in Social Studies was 'Water'. Prior to the Internet, there was a BBC computer program called, CANAL LOCKS, where students were challenged to see a boat safely through a set of locks by manipulation the sluice and lock gates in the proper sequence:
- It placed students in the role of a lock-keeper, tasking them with operating water gates and sluices to safely raise and lower boats along a canal.
- It famously taught children responsibility by failing the game with the message: "You did not leave things as you found them!" if they failed to reset the locks properly.
After watching the boat moored at the dock, and having had a conversation with a few of the travelers on the cruise, we made our way, by car, up to the one upper lock to see where the boat had come from. On the way, we passed a large stone dam which, when it "was completed in late 1831, it was the highest dam in North America - a major accomplishment of early 19th century engineering."
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| View from above the dam |
Before returning to the parking lot, we notice a family in a small boat on the upper lake, and saw a small radio-controlled boat zipping around the lake. We got permission to video the model being happily controlled by the young lad on board. I think he deliberately crashed it into the jetty upon which I was standing - maybe to gauge my reaction!
All in all, it was a pleasant afternoon, graced by warm temperatures, a beautiful blue sky punctuated with puffy white clouds, and the synchronicity of being in the right place at the right time.
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