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Local Libations Map

A short note, today.

The Grapevine (April 2025, No. 22.4) includes a map of local libations on page 15. It is a cartographer’s nightmare. I should take it to COGS to get their opinion.

Here are a few of the errors that I have noticed. I think #38 Lunn’s Mill is in the correct location. #38 Still Fired Distilleries in Annapolis is incorrect. #39 Beaver Creek Vineyard is not correct.

Here is a possible explanation. #39 is Still Fired Distilleries. #38 is Lunn’s Mill. #37 is Beaver Creek Vineyard.

The map does not show road numbers e.g. highway#1 or highway #201. Nor does the map identify any of the communities by name.

I cannot speak for the geography (cartography) in Kings County.

My suggestion to the Grapevine Editorial. Contact the faculty at COGS and see whether they, or a student, can produce an accurate, useful map for those folks who want to enjoy a drink of local products in the Annapolis Valley

Everyone will have noticed the increase in lawn signs for candidates in our forthcoming federal election. Today (Sunday) we will stop at the Bridgetown Legion to hear from Ronnie Leblanc, the Liberal candidate. I anticipate there will be a similar event for our incumbent Conservative representative, Chris D’entremont; or perhaps, an all-candidate meeting for our riding.

PS

We attended the meeting in Bridgetown. Speakers included Stephen McNeil and Carman Kerr. McNeil emphasized that this election was about the United States threat to Canada as a Nation, and which party will stand up to the threat posed by Donald Trump’s policies south of the border. The meeting had a strong attendance, with the opportunity to catch up with old friends.

Go find your Grapevine !

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Just like old times

Heather and I decided to revisit a walk we have made many times, when we lived on Highway #201. We parked at the Lawrencetown tree nursery. Walked down to the Annapolis River, checked out the Spring flowers. Too early for Ladyslipper orchids.

On the river bank, there is a platform where the Fire Department dry out their hoses.

We followed the residual flagging tape markers (towards Bridgetown). this takes us to Raymond Hunter’s property. At this point, we head South. Eventually reaching the orchard and Highway #201.

Turn left on the highway, past Peter Redden’s property, to the car. Lunn’s Mill is a bit further on the left hand side. The complete circuit is one hour.

The walk reminded us of the many times we took the dogs down to the river. The proximity of the tree nursery to Lunn’s Mill always seemed like a missed opportunity. An outdoor laboratory of different tree species, within walking distance of a retail outlet. We talked about field trips for school groups, snow-shoeing in winter. If the province gave up the nursery, it could become an outdoor education centre.

A week or two ago, I issued a challenge to COGS faculty and students (To date no response).

If we used AI to search my previous blogs, we would find descriptions of previous walks, through the same geography, with observations about various plants in flower.

The property (#6325) was owned by Raymond Hunter. He planted the orchard. Andrew, my son, purchased the property between 2005 -2019. We enjoyed harvesting the apples, turning them into apple juice and then later, with help from Brian Boates and Pierre at Ironworks Distillery in Lunenburg, into Hunter Brandy.

Ps we did find a couple of ticks. On the Inglisville Road we noticed carpets of the yellow flowers of Coltsfoot ( Tussilago farfara). A true sign of Spring.

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Community Mapping

Yesterday (Sunday) we made a second visit to the Lower Granville Hall at Port Royal. We enjoyed an excellent lunch prepared by the community. The guest speaker was Heather Leblanc. It was good to catch up. I recall the days when Planning students at COGS would work with the citizen group to use GIS technology to produce online maps of heritage buildings in the County. Map Annapolis also worked with Parks Canada and ground penetrating radar of the graveyards.

The current web site includes a number of excellent videos, produced by Andrew Tolson.

On Saturday night we visited the Evergreen Theatre in East Margaretsville. We enjoyed the music of Rachel and Darren. They were part of the award-winning group, Coig.

The venue was a chance to catch up with old friends at the Eastern end of the County. On a sad note, we learned from David O’Leary that Karen Reinhardt and her husband had passed away. Karen was at student at COGS in the early eighties.

My homework (reading) this week is Matt Rouse ‘Will AI take my job ? And Ronald Blythe Next to Nature. A Lifetime in the English Country side. The first is an introduction to current technology and the second prepares me for our life in the Nova Scotia countryside.

References

Matthew Rouse. 2023. Will AI take my job. ? Predictions about AI in Corporations, small business and the workplace.

Ronald Blythe. 2023. Next to Nature. A Lifetime in the English Countryside. John Murray.

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A Challenge to Students and Faculty at COGS

This week, I stopped at the COGS library. I found ‘Canadians who Innovate’. The last entry, #60 was Fraser Taylor, Ottawa, Ontario. Fraser Taylor’s contribution includes the Cyber-cartography Atlas of Arctic Bay.

This led me to ‘AI and the Geography of Annapolis County: a proposal for students and faculty at the Centre of Geographic Sciences.

I have been writing a blog ‘Ernest Blair Experiment’ since 2013. Some times, it was posted to GoGeomatics. Since 2017, it was posted under Ernest Blair Experiment. The title comes from Ernest Buckler, author of ‘The Mountain and the Valley’. Eric Blair aka George Orwell. Experiment because using changing technology is always an experiment. Volume 9 includes all the blogs for 2024.

After attending Wayne Rouse’s talk on AI. I had this idea.

Could we use AI to link GIS to local Geography ?

Is this a project that might appeal to current GIS/AI students at COGS ?

Could this provide a model for other groups in other parts of the country to link local geographic knowledge and share it with the world ?

Here is my thinking. Each blog has date and contains reference to the local geography. In my case, Annapolis County or the Annapolis Valley.

Using AI could we take the total collection of blogs, identify themes and topics and produce a series of online maps ? We could use AI to identify the locations. We could use ArcGIS to map these locations.

Topics could include walking trails, canoe routes, mountain bike adventures. They could include types of retail outlets – restaurants, book stores, tourist services.

From a literary perspective, it could include geographic references in the writing of Ernest Buckler, David Whitman (e.g. Roxbury).

A recent blog feedback from Celes Davar showed me the technology for mapping bird calls. I can imagine something similar for mapping plant observations e.g. Agalinis neoscotica.

The fundamental challenge is to use current technology to extract local knowledge (in an electronic database) and to ensure it is taken into account when making resource management decisions about our ‘collective geography’. The tools exist; there are individuals who possess detailed experiential knowledge of our environment.

Let’s bring them together. Create a prototype at COGS; then share world-wide.

Reference

Roseann O’Reilly Runt. 2024. Canadians who Innovate. The Trailblazers and Ideas that are changing the World. Simon and Schuster. Part 9. Social Innovation for a better world.#60 Fraser Taylor, Ottawa, Ontario. p.300.

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Feedback Time

This week, I received feedback on my blog from Celes Davar at Earth Rhythms. Our paths have crossed several times : Newfoundland, Prairies, Nova Scotia. Most recently, in the context of experiential tourism and his work with Food, Art and Nature (FAN) in Kings County.

He tells the story of the return of the American Woodcock. He uses a PUC (‘a small recording device that sits in our sunroom and records bird songs, continuously uploading them in real time via the Internet’)

( I imagine doing the same with a beautiful male pheasant, in our backyard)

Edward sent me an email on Memory Mapping. Marlene Creates, a Canadian Artist is giving a talk at a UK conference, April 30, 2025 on’Walking and Memory Mapping’ ( I will try to add the link, in Edward’s absence).

Last Night (Wednesday) Heather and I attended Matthew Rouse’s presentation ‘ Introduction to AI’ at the Lower Granville Hall. It proved to be an excellent talk, to an audience of about 16, at a great location. The only drawback was the drive home to Middleton on a dark April evening.

There will be a lunch time presentation by Heather Leblanc on MapAnnapolis this Sunday, 12 noon, same location.

It is truly remarkable to find these presentations, available in rural Nova Scotia. It gives me insight into a proposal to COGS on ‘AI and the Geography of Annapolis County’. (See next week blog).

Reference

Matthew Rouse. 2023. Will AI take my job ? Predictions about AI in Corporations, Small Business and the Workplace. Self-published.

Acknowledgements

Edward continues to share his finds on the web. The same is true of Celes Davar. Thank you, both.

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A Place of Change

Today, Heather and I walked around First Lake, part of the water supply for Annapolis Royal (AR). This is part of our growing resolution – to keep healthy, we must find a significant walk every day. There was no-one on the trail. It is well-marked with flagging tape. There was a slight dusting of overnight snow. Afterwards, we stopped for a coffee at the Sissiboo Cafe on the Main Street of AR.

Between the endless election coverage, I have noticed the CHIP advertisements with Peter Mansbridge on the CBC. Mansbridge notes the stereotype of the retired segment of the population.

This strikes a chord with me. Since my retirement from the NSCC Annapolis campus (AGRG) I have continued to write a regular blog ( ernestblairexperiment.wordpress.com ). These blogs give a window on retirement living in rural Nova Scotia. I have made significant effort to engage instructors and students at the Centre of Geographic Sciences. I have worked with other retired faculty in an attempt to engage this segment of the population e.g. Edward Wedler, John Wightman. Each week, I forward my blog to over thirty associates from my previous working life in the county.

If Annapolis County is going to flourish into the future it is critical that the local population work together to promote the natural resources and human resources of this part of the province.

With a network of NSCC campuses, it can spread across Nova Scotia.

In particular,we must use modern technology to share current information on our landscape, our resources, our industry, our people.

My proposal is simple. We need to work together to present ‘the geography of Annapolis County’. We need to understand the landscape: geology, ecology, climate. We need to understand our resources: agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining. We need to understand our demographics. We need to use the latest technology to share images, links, research results. We need to join the ‘creative rural economy’.

If you are reading this blog, please imagine ‘ how we can join the dots’ ,’how we can empower all members of society’.

Please forward your questions and ideas. I will gladly share these findings. It could be a ‘story-map’. Together, we will enhance Annapolis County, the Annapolis Valley, rural society, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Postscript

This week, I am encouraged to see locally a talk on Artificial Intelligence (AI), Heather Leblanc on the findings of MapAnnapolis, and the availability of live music at the Evergreen Theatre.

I have shared this draft with Edward Wedler. He has asked for a rewrite on my expectations from the NSCC. My expectations are that the educational institutions treat the needs of the community seriously.

They have showed initiative with the formation of CORAH ( Center of Rural Aging and Health). They need to recognize that the new Geographic Science and Technology can address our ‘sense of place’, leading to experiential tourism and other economic opportunities.

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A Time of Change

The Spring Equinox is a harbinger of change. On Saturday, I wanted to celebrate, and decided to reconnect with Delaps Cove. We took the Bohaker Trail and enjoyed the beautiful clear vistas of the Bay of Fundy. Driving the shore road, you enter a different world, and a different economy, from the Valley. We decided to save Charlie’s Trail for another day.

After the walk, we stopped at the Crow’s Nest in Hillsburn for a late lunch: they serve an excellent sea food chowder, in a ‘homey’ atmosphere

Thrilled with this successful adventure, we stopped at Bees Knees for fruit cake. Then on to Kingston Park for a recreational cool-down stroll.

In the evening, I checked out Scott Osmond’s ‘Hidden Nova Scotia’. No reference to Delaps Cove. I had the realization that Osmond tends to focus more on the human artifacts on the landscape, and less on the natural features of the landscape

With much enthusiasm, I thought about a Sunday hike out to Peter Point in Kejimkujik National Park. But the weather did not cooperate; instead snowflakes on a cold wind. Must wait for more Spring sunshine.

Acknowledgements

Lacking access to Edward’s online talents, this short blog is devoid of links and images. Apologies.

Postscript

The last mile or two to the Delaps Cove trailhead is not in great shape.

Watch out for significant pot-holes.

Reference

Scott Osmond. 2023. Hidden Nova Scotia. Boulder Books.

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Geographic Links

With the first day of Spring, we expanded our walk to Valley View Park ( see Middleton Walks (1)). Today we celebrated with the CORAH exercise classes.

Overnight, Edward forwarded two links. The Map Reader is a film set in rural New Zealand, about a young man obsessed with his map collection. https://youtu.be/-m4xPr274gw?si=w4oQmDYLPdyo14O

The second was a conference from the Livingmaps Network, including Marlene Creates ‘Walking and Memory Mapping’. https://marlenecreates.ca/virtualwalk/

From the Centre of Local Prosperity, the link to the webinar ‘Safeguarding Community Economics in Troubled Times’ with Michael Shuman.

Meanwhile a phone call from The Inside Story in Greenwood. Scott Osmond’s book ‘Hidden Newfoundland’ had arrived for pick up. This is the companion to ‘Hidden Nova Scotia’.

Books to read ; online food for thought. Meanwhile the meadow alongside the Annapolis River is under Spring flood water.

Acknowledgements.

Thanks to Edward for the online links. When necessary, we can return to the Inside Story, previously owned by Edward and Anne Wedler. Heather and I look forward to rediscovering hidden Newfoundland this Summer. Edward is back in Florida. I will try to add the necessary links.

References

Scott Osmond. 2022. Hidden Newfoundland. Boulder Books

Posted in Event Review, Travel

SOOF SOUP SUNDAY

Yesterday, we had the opportunity to attend the community gathering at Centrelea Hall. Cindy Staicer gave an excellent presentation on ‘Forest Bird Species at Risk and their Habitats’ (See also YouTube Video HERE).

Click on image for YouTube presentation

Today SOOF (Save Our Old Forests) are making a presentation to the town of Middleton. They are looking for municipal support for the Goldsmith Lake Wilderness Area (see also Saving Forests, Screening/Road Trip, and Two Meetings; Two Questions)

This grassroots action is in stark contrast to the paid advertisement, this weekend in the Chronicle Herald — “Nature Nova Scotia response to Premier Houston’s January 21 letter re: Intention to Expand Unsustainable Natural Resource Industries and Dismissal of Expert Opinion“.

My questions are as follows:
Why is the Government and, subsequently, Nature Nova Scotia using paid advertisements to communicate? Is this an attempt to impact public opinion? Likely, Yes.

What structures exist within the government to solicit informed public opinion?


Earlier on Saturday morning, it was a simple delight to walk through Annapolis Royal Historic Gardens to see the crocuses and snowdrops.

Trish Fry was out taking photographs.

Also, we had to stop at the local bookstores.

Mare Gold had a copy of Ronald Blythe’s “Next to Nature: A Lifetime in the English Countryside“. I could not resist the purchase.

Blythe died in January 2023, aged 100.

The finest contemporary writer on the English Countryside. Next to Nature dances with self-deprecating wit, rebellious asides, sharp portraits of fellow writers and notes of worldliness.’ – Patrick Barkham, The Guardian.

Acknowledgements

Heather and I enjoyed our busy weekend catching up with the SOOF activities. Thank you to Cindy, Nina et al. Edward added the graphics and links.

Reference

Ronald Blythe, 2022, Next to Nature. a Lifetime in the English Countryside, John Murray Publisher.

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Time away from Home.

This week, we had to spend a couple of days in Pictou County. This provided us with the opportunity to visit the deCoste cultural hub in Pictou and the Museum of Industry in Stellarton (see also Pictou Visit) .

As before, I am impressed by the combination of the theatre, the art gallery and the library in downtown Pictou. It makes me reflect on what is the equivalent in Annapolis County? At the Centre, I discovered information on ‘Our Climate Quest’, a special exhibition at the Museum of Industry. This includes a series of Climate Conversations: a guest speaker series and a new exhibition by Science North.

Before heading to New Glasgow, I stopped at the Middleton Library.

There, I found The Interior Silence by Sarah Sands. ‘My encounters with Calm, Joy and Compassion at 10 Monasteries around the World.’

Light reading; designed to take me away from Donald Trump and the tariff wars.

Making the trip from Middleton to New Glasgow, we were fortunate to be accompanied by Gordon Lightfoot.

‘Country Road’ and other songs that illustrate the relationship between Canadians and their landscape.

This landscape is not simply a set of resources for exploitation, nor something to be traded away to the highest bidder. Within Nova Scotia, there is a diversity and richness that is not ‘up for grabs’. The landscape (aka Geography) cannot be separated from the people who share that richness.

Acknowledgements.

Heather took the winding road through the Rawdon Hills with me to Pictou County. Edward added his touch.

Reference

Sarah Sands, 2021, The Interior Silence: My Encounters with Calm, Joy and Compassion at 10 Monasteries around the World, Chronicle Prism.