Hello again folks! Here we go again with today’s blog update, so as usual let’s begin with the map of the territory covered today. As you can see, we covered about 226 Km and it took about 2hrs 41 minutes of driving time. As usual too, we made good use of Tim Hortons along the route, stopping once for a short break after about 90 minutes.
We wanted to keep pushing ahead with the driving, as we’d arranged to meet Emily, daughter of friends of ours, in Dartmouth.
Emily now works in Halifax and shares an apartment with a friend she’s made from the Cabot Trail area. The two young women are getting along famously in the basement apartment they share in Dartmouth. Emily works in the Dartmouth library system and her buddy is an accountant when she’s not cutting bait for her Grandad’s fish boat back in the eastern section of this province.
We took Emily for lunch at Cora’s restaurant. It’s one of Em’s favourites. What a neat place to go and eat. What good food, and what an interesting story about Cora and the growth of her little empire.
Following a very pleasant hour or so with Emily, we took her back to her place. We said our goodbyes and after not too many tears we headed for the motel in which we’d previously dropped our bags. It too was in Dartmouth.
Just like everywhere else we’ve been in these three of the Maritime provinces, the staff at the motel (Country Inn and Suites, Dartmouth),was just brilliant. They helped us sort out the three rooms we’d booked for ourselves and our incoming Welsh friends. They printed out ready-made instructions for us on how to get to the airport and then how to get back to the motel, once we’d made it to the airport.
Time ticked by towards the time when the Taffies would arrive. I don’t know about Cynthia, but I was getting excited about seeing them again. We wanted to go to the airport early to check out motels, hotels in the vicinity to house us when we return to B.C. on the 12th of October. We visited two in the airport area and noted their rates. We tried to get to the third, and oh dear, we ended up on the wrong road, going the wrong way, away from the airport and on towards Elgin. Fog and gathering gloom didn’t help us either. The time to the Welsh contingents’ plane arrival was ticking away like a bomb in my head. How could we get off this highway and back on track? Gleefully, we noted an exit sign coming up in the next four kilometres so we breathed a sigh of relief, and knew we’d arrive on time if we didn’t overshoot the turn-off and head back to Halifax. Yikes!
We made it to the car rental drop-off place. Cynthia had received yet another of her brilliantly illuminated thoughts from on high. As the Taffs were also renting a car, maybe we could leave our rental car near their rental company, and so leave that area together, to avoid missing each other in the darkness. An obliging young man at Enterprise allowed us to leave our car in one of their parking slots and Cynthia and I were able to get to the arrivals area to meet our friends. Eventually they arrived and after hugs all round, we made our way to the rental area to get their car…and ours.
They received a free upgrade to an upgrade which made them very happy, so once we’d popped all their bags into the vehicle, we had a quick run-down of controls and a reminder to them they would be on the right side of the road while driving. We left the airport in very tricky driving conditions, for the fog had rolled in to add to the darkness. We were very glad when we arrived at our motel. Cynthia, Barrie, Pat and I went out for a meal, but Sandra and Dilwyn Byles crashed. Tomorrow should be a great day around Halifax. ’Til then, goodnight and God bless.





Janet and Alex were great. they treated us like royalty. One day we went for lunch in Coventry and then on into the city to attend a matinée of a play by a French playwrite. It was called Babylone,at the 


