Saturday, September 1, 2012

Cabot Trail 2

After hiking the Skyline trail in Cape Breton Highlands National Park, it was time to find a place to hole up for the night, preferably in a scenic location.  On down the road, just outside the park boundaries is the small village of Pleasant Bay, known for it’s whale interpretive centre and whale watching tours.

P8266070P8266071P8266072P8266074

After a few switchbacks later and some gearing down, we arrived at the harbour.

P8276089

It was crowded Winking smile, but we managed to find a spot!  Another night listening to waves crashing on the shore.

P8266081P8276084

A local we met back in Petit Etang had recommended the hike down to Fishing Cove, so we backtracked a bit, and took the relatively short, steep hike down to a now-secluded bay that used to be the site of a Scottish (?) village and farms and of course, a cannery.  It is now a deserted, beautiful spot with only an empty back country campsite.

I’m guessing that this is the east coast version of a bear bar?  Perhaps it is a racoon bar?

CIMG8139CIMG8140CIMG8141CIMG8142CIMG8143

Of course, this called for a quick swim, before taking the hike back up.

CIMG8144CIMG8145CIMG8146CIMG8147

Back on the highway in the park, I noted a couple of interesting things I have not seen elsewhere in the parks.

While most of the plaques and information kiosks in the parks attempt to rightfully interpret the natural surroundings, these ones provided information on highway maintenance and the largely unsung heroes of parks,the  snowplow drivers and others who do their best to keep the roads safe in the face of cutbacks and ever shrinking budgets. (it doesn’t hurt that some of it is high-tech as well!)

P8266058P8266059

Another good idea for public safety is these small shelters scattered in the isolated stretches of park roads, complete with emergency phones.

P8266060P8266062P8266063

And, another information panel on how the parks highways department attempts to reduce the negative environmental effects of road-salt, etc.P8266039

As the road leads in and out of the park, we found another great campsite outside the park on a spit of beach near the Dingwall harbour, but not before another refreshing dip in the Atlantic.P8276090

1 comment:

  1. Things should quiet down out there after the Labor Day week-end. When I did my trip around the Cabot Trail it was the second week in September & I had most places to myself. But of course that was back in the mid 80's & may be far different nowadays............

    ReplyDelete