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Showing posts with label periwinkles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label periwinkles. Show all posts

Monday, 18 July 2022

A day at the beach

It was a sunny but windy day and the tide was low, a perfect morning for the park and beach at Canoe Cove. We love to visit that beach with our daughter and grandchildren, so we headed out early to get maximum time there at low tide. The kids were so exited when they jumped out of the car, all laughing and talking at the same time. The Cove is a great place for all of that energy. 


First they checked out the playground at the park. Meanwhile the tide was headed to its lowest point and before long, we headed down for a walk in the sand and tidal pools. We watched a pair of Great Blue Herons fishing for an early lunch. 





Also, this is an area of coastline which is home to seals. They are in the distance in this photo but as so often happens, I didn’t notice them until I looked at the photos later.





This cove drains off most of its water during low tide so all that remains is water in low lying areas. The exposed sand shows the action of the water on the sea bed. 





Seaweed is strewn around the beach and we spent some time observing the Toothed Wrack variety 





which anchors itself to rocks via a holdfast. 





Wouldn’t it be wonderful if each person in the world had a holdfast to anchor us when the storms of life are particularly rough?


We explored the animal life remaining on the beach including barnacles and periwinkles attached to the rocks. 





The periwinkles in the tidal pools were crawling over the sand and explored our feet when we walked among them.





It was an interesting sensation. Around the exposed seabed, we found several dead crabs which were intact. 





We didn’t find any starfish that day however.


Several jellyfish were in tidal pools and stranded along the beach. 





The children always avoid them but are curious about them too.


Overhead, the Bank Swallows darted through the air in pursuit of insects and from the exposed shoreline, we watched as they entered and left their nests through the holes in the bank above the sandstone.





Along the shoreline, driftwood of various sizes stands against the elements, 





while trees drape their roots over the elevated shoreline. Those trees will eventually be but a piece of driftwood too.





Our grandson played with toys to make a channel in the sand. It flooded later with the rising tide, a lesson in tidal action he will remember.


The girls had mud baths, coating themselves in some muddy sand along one of the tidal pools. They had a natural spa day with the mud bath and the periwinkles tickling their feet.


Lunch in the park at a covered picnic table was a cool affair in the shade on that windy day.





As we left the park, the rising tide sent people off the beach as the Cove filled with the rising sea.





Canoe Cove at low tide is a great place for children to explore and swim. The added bonus of the day park facilities makes it an ideal location for families to spend the day.




Monday, 2 October 2017

Comedy by the sea revisited

Every September we take in a comedy show at the village of Victoria by the Sea, Prince Edward Island. The little village does not change much from year to year. A new house on the corner, 





a new paint job for another house are among the changes this year. But, the village looked different because of our new vantage point.


This year, the tide was low, so we ventured along the beach 





and onto the exposed sand bars to see the village from what has been the sea on our previous visits. 





The red sea floor was covered with sea snails or periwinkles, seaweed and barnacles. 




Along the water, a yellowlegs foraged for lunch, while a flock of cormorants rested nearby.





Exposed sandstone looked like sand.




Looking to shore, the wharf, with its restaurant and gift shops appeared small in the distance. 




Later, on the way to the theatre, this colourful door caught our attention 





as did this plant stand.




It was the end of the theatre season for 2017.




Now the village will return to the quiet lifestyle the residents enjoy for the remainder of the year.