Home in Trinity was a little cabin about 15 minutes from town. The cabin's interior was pure retro, with 70's table and chairs, faded floral curtains, lino floor and faltering black and white TV (which revealed trembling volleyballers and shaking sprinters in Beijing). Over the road was a bay filled with blue and white mussel traps. (Did you know that mussels are only harvested in months containing the letter 'r' and by the full moon? I read this in an old almanac in the Trinity musuem).
As is the generally the case in NFLD, the weather was temperamental, and I spent some time tucked up in bed reading, with wind and rain spattering outside. I even cranked a bit of heating (despite brushing off owner Corinne's heating instructions with a hasty 'oh, I'll be fine!'). I had some sparkling days too though, and decided to hike the nearby Skerwink Trail. Corinne picked me up for the hike in a fierce brute of a machine, emitting growls out of two oversized mufflers. I couldn't help but grin at her wrestling with the monster, and she told me it had belonged to her eighteen-year-old son, Geoffrey, who had died in March on an oil rig up in Alberta. He had been the first death on the rig, she said, a freak accident due to a part malfunction that had been immediately remedied 'but why couldn't they have thought of that in the first place?' Her voice was steady but undercut with pain, and I cried a little after she let me off, for her family and the beautiful laughing boy in the photo on the dashboard.
On my last night in Trinity I went to see a theatre production by the Rising Tide Theatre. The play, named 'Saltwater Moon', was staged behind the old Museum just before sunset. Set in Newfoundland in the 1920's, it was really delightful as well as a great insight into life in the province at that time.

1 comment:
Hi Emma
Love your blog and your writing style, especially when you describe places and events I"m familiar with. Back from NFLD since Tuesday and totally back in the grind at work... but dreaming of my next adventure, which will most likely be in November. Already looking forward to it.
I've posted my pics form the trip up, the first one of interest to you is at http://flickr.com/photos/johnnylang/2789811906/in/set-72157606863140169 you can check out the others by cliking on "Go to the next item" at the right. Let me know when your done at downhill@sympatico.ca so I can make some of them private, since they might look a little strange to the masses LOL.
Cheers hand have fun the rest of your stay on The Rock.
Jean :)
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