We have been spending a lot of time with our friend Louise. She is fighting her cancer and believe me... she is a fighter. She brings light to everyone who visits her and she is a joy to be around. Her mom and I have a fun time communicating... I am an Anglophone with limited French and she is a Francophone with limited English. But we love each other A LOT and hugs communicate amazingly well.
Also another of our good friends baptized their son. We love this family and the baptism was a wonderful weekend of family and friends for them. This is them and our missionaries. Well most of them... the one on the far left has left already and we have a new elder.
We love where we are and in this time of year with the seasons changing, we have been blessed to see some beautiful things.....
This is The Riviere Magog that runs through town and has 3 dams in the down town area, creating beautiful waterfalls. Many of our favorite walks are along this river. The first pic is early spring when most of the trees were not yet leaved... but you can see in the last how beautifully they have popped!! What used to be covered in white and stunning beautiful, is now green, green, green, and we love it!!
Another interesting thing in downtown are the murals. They are all hand painted by a group that lives here, but goes all over the world painting them. They are so lifelike that often you can't tell if it is a painting or if it's real - until you get right up to it. Especially things like doors, windows, and bldg features.
Yes.... balconies, doors, windows, molding, everything is painted
can you find Elder Petersen in the mural... he is the only 3 dimensional thing there... the rest is all paint.
Notice the guy in the second story window... the green window sill looks real on the left, but he has his hand on the one on the right.. they are both painted.
and my favorite!!! I love the people on the bookshelves. Yes that is all paint too... no shelves!
As most of you know, we took a little trip to the Halifax Temple. Well, not really little, it is a 12 hour drive over the tip of Maine and back down through New Brunswick to Nova Scotia. Since we were so close we decided to take a little detour and go see Prince Edward's Island too.
We drove the Confederation bridge to get there - a 12.9 kilometre (8mile) bridge that links PEI to New Brunswick.
We fell in love with the island... I could live there - maybe 4-6 months of the year. They had over 15 feet of snow this year - so much that it still hadn't all melted. So I don't think I would want to winter there. But it is beautiful now.
We took the ferry to Nova Scotia. It was a beautiful sunny day and the waters were perfect.
The men of our trip.
The Halifax temple looks a lot like what the Montreal temple will look like when they finish this November. We are so looking forward to it opening!!
We stayed with the James family. They are good friends with John and Hans who were with us on the trip. They are a wonderful family and great Hosts and our new friends.
On the way home we stopped by Fundy Bay. This is a bay where the tide makes a 52 foot rise and fall 2 times a day. It is amazing. We didn't get to see it rise or fall, but we saw it at it's peek. You can watch it on You Tube and see how dramatic the rise and fall is.
We also visited the longest covered bridge in the world... 1282 feet long crossing the St Johns river at Hartland, New Brunswick. You can't drive past something like that and not stop and see, and of course drive through it!!
That was our trip to Halifax.
Now a few random items:
The border between Canada and the US is a funny thing. We often go to Derby Line, Vermont, which is just across the border. We go to check our mail box, get gas (1/2 price from Canada) and sometimes get groceries.(some things you can only get in the US) Each time we go we cross at the border crossing and do the whole - check your passport, check your car, where do you live, and whose car are you driving - thing. but --- the border it's self is pretty strange... in fact the Opera House and Library sits right on the border with 1/2 in each country. The boarder is marked by the flower pots. Notice the tip of the Border Patrol Vehicle on the left.
Here is Elder Pete straddling the border inside the building
The weird part is.... there are neighborhoods all along the border in these towns. All of the roads and city blocks have little fences that don't let you drive across except at the border crossing.... but the lawns of the houses connect from one yard/country to the other... you can easily WALK across almost anywhere. There is a border crossing guard that sits in his car outside the Opera/library ... why I ask? to make sure those who park on the Canada side walk - into the library and back out on the US side - make sure they get back to their car on the Canada side?? How about the kids playing on the grass... if their ball rolls onto their friends lawn is it OK if they go get it in the other country? or do they need to show their passport to get their ball?
Alright.... fine.... I will get off my soap box. It just seems weird to me.
One day we were driving through the farmlands and saw this
It is an observation deck built by an artist for the local communities. On a clear day you have a 360 degree view of the Eastern Townships. Local attraction/rest stop.Well.... there you go.... May in a nut shell.... as we enjoy Our Mother's Day Pot Luck - one of many Pot Lucks sponsored by the Sherbrooke Ward - We wish you a fond adieu .
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