Celebrating everything wonderful about this fabulous part of Newfoundland & Labrador! Photographer, sometimes with an iPhone, mostly with my trusty Fuji X-T1.
Thereโs blocky ones, wedged, pinnacle and dry dock. Then thereโs the icing on the cake - the ones with a hole straight through the middle! @NLtweets#Iceberg
#OnThisDay in 1922, the Royal Navy HMS Raleigh ran aground at Point Amour, Labrador. The flagship of the North America and West Indies Squadron and was on a goodwill tour. 12 sailors died and more than 700 got ashore. The ship was blasted apart in 1926, as it was an embarrassment
I work hard for these today. Weโve been getting unseasonably warm conditions in these parts. The berries spoil quickly and it makes getting them tougher too.
Needed to clear my head, so I headed up on the hill with a Tetley in new pottery from PEI (love love love this one) and a handful of Peak Freans. Think it worked.
Of all my years with a camera, this iceberg in particular has been responsible for the most early morning trips to Point Amour. Iโve witnessed it change shapes, tilt, turn and now vanish in the NE wind we are having today. It was a great bit of fun while it lasted!
The wind can whistle through the valley and across the bay here something fierce at times - but there are mornings like this to remind us just how still it can be.
Made the mistake of coming to our happy place for a few days and now I donโt want to leave! Spring is here, the bay ice is breaking up and itโll soon be time to get the boat on collar.