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Wednesday 31 August 2016

Rusty sneakers

The soil is thick and rich, red with few rocks. The iron in the soil oxidizes or rusts, causing the red colour which stains white socks and other clothes if you are not careful. In one way, sneakers rust with use on Prince Edward Island.

There are beautiful beaches, which when crowded by island standards, are not crowded like beaches elsewhere. We have visited those beaches numerous times this summer and observed the sandstone shoreline from a distance 

 

and up close. 

 

The sandstone is easily eroded by the sea, 

 

creating more red sand, the accumulation of which can become more sandstone over time.

 

The natural cycle of nature is at work with each wave.

 

The wonder of this place is a backdrop for life with family and friends. Rusty sneakers are a small price to pay for the pleasure afforded by life on the gentle island.

 

28 comments:

DJan said...

It is a beautiful place. I'm glad I've begun to learn so much about it from you. I look forward to learning more. :-)

Debra She Who Seeks said...

At first I misread your blog post title as "Busty sneakers." Oh oh!

Joanne Noragon said...

An excellent title for your piece, and a beautiful place to spend time.

Anonymous said...

Beautiful. I recall as a child traveling up to the northernmost part of Wisconsin along Lake Superior. The ground was red, red, red from iron ore, Dad said. Now I am wondering if the great Niagra escarpment which reaches from New York to Wisconsin is sandstone. And how about our Red River, or the Colorado?

Mage said...

Simply lovely.

Anvilcloud said...

Anne's land.
I did swim n the ocean (my one and only time) at Stanhope.

Elephant's Child said...

Definitely a small price. And well worth paying. What a glorious place.

Celia said...

Rusty sneakers, a small price to pay.

Barbara said...

Such a gorgeous little island.

Marie Smith said...

I love this island for family here but for the island itself as well. I guess that's why I write about it so much.

Marie Smith said...

Lol. Good one, Debra!

Marie Smith said...

I have to buy sneakers regularly to replace the rusty ones.

Marie Smith said...

The escarpment is limestone over shale. The shale is sedimentary rock, as is sandstone but they are different in their components. I don't know about the Red or Colorado Rivers.

Marie Smith said...

It is beautiful, Mage.

Marie Smith said...

I've never been to Stanhope but it is on our list of places to visit.

Marie Smith said...

It is glorious! I love it!

Marie Smith said...

Very inexpensive and good value for the beauty!

Marie Smith said...

It is such a little island, Barbara.

Ginnie said...

I would gladly trade rusty red sneakers for a chance to get to your beautiful island. It looks like paradise to me !

Robert Smith said...

Sounds like your little island is being eaten by the sea-monster. If I were you I would move further inland. Lovely pictures.

Marie Smith said...

It is beautiful, in spring, summer and autumn. Then we have eastern Canadian winter.

Marie Smith said...

It's on our minds for sure, Keith. The erosion is evident, that's for sure.

Ginnie Hart said...

Rusty sneakers! I never would have thought of that but I'm sure that's the perfect description of what happens there in your neck of the woods, Marie. Yes, a small price to pay because it really IS beautiful!

Marie Smith said...

It is a small price indeed!

The Furry Gnome said...

Those PEI beaches are amazing, beautiful but not crowded. We walked for miles on our past visits.

Marie Smith said...

I know! An amazing place!

Down by the sea said...

Beautiful, Devon has red rocks and soil that used to find fascinating as a child. It must have felt familiar to the Devon fishermen when they reached your shores. Is the erosion gradual or do you have rock falls? Sarah x

Marie Smith said...

We have both gradual erosion and rock falls here. I took some photos to show the same just yesterday. I will post them later this week.

Some of my ancestors were from Devon. They went to the northeast coast of Newfoundland, where there was no red sandstone, unlike PEI.