| The ocean used to be where the brown is - about an hour ago! |
So what is the big deal you ask? The Five Island Provincial Park sits within the Bay of Fundy. The park features 90 metre (300 ft.) sea cliffs overlooking the world's highest tides, and when we got there the tide was on it's way out, so the ocean floor was slowly giving up all its secrets. We started up on one of the cliffs, wandered down to the beach and ended up spending the entire time there just walking and basking in the awesomeness of it all for about three hours. We were walking along what had been the ocean's floor just an hour or two before; it was like walking on the surface of the moon. Yes, I know, I said all this for the Burncoat trip as well, but it is probably going to be as amazing to me every, single time. Walking barefoot with the silty, clay sand oozing between your toes, seeing clam holes in the sand and walking on ocean kelp...who does this every day?
The sales pitch reads:
The cliffs at Five Islands Provincial Park tell a story of Triassic sand dunes, Jurassic lava flows and lake deposits from the age of dinosaurs. The spectacular faults and rocks exposed along the shore, near the "Old Wife" are dramatic evidence for the break-up of the super-continent Pangaea, and formation of a rift valley in the area that we now know as the Bay of Fundy.
Yup, it's all that and then some. So now my feet feel as smooth as a baby's bottom and I feel as if I had a serious leg workout - what an awesome Canada Day!
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