Bug Exploring the Historical Blacksmith's Shop on the Fundy Shore

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The discussion highlights the time zone confusion experienced by forum users, with posts appearing an hour early, possibly due to daylight saving time changes. Participants share their travel experiences in Nova Scotia, particularly enjoying Halifax, Digby, and the Fundy coast. A notable mention is made of a historical blacksmith shop behind the Evangeline Chapel, featuring 17th-century tools and knowledgeable guides. The blacksmith shop is described as having modern service bays and unique equipment for oxen, reflecting the area's agricultural history. Overall, the conversation blends travel anecdotes with insights into local history and attractions.
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All the posts are timed an hour early, as if I were in the Canadian Maritimes instead of the Eastern time zone.
 
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Your post and your profile show the correct time zone, at least as far as I can tell.
 
Astronuc said:
Your post and your profile show the correct time zone, at least as far as I can tell.

Of course, Astronuc is writing to you from his RV in Halifax...
 
DaveC426913 said:
Of course, Astronuc is writing to you from his RV in Halifax...
:smile:
 
All the chat posts are time-stamped in the 10am hour, and all the forum posts are time-stamped in the 12 o'clock hour. I'm in some Twilight Zone.
 
I enjoyed Nova Scotia and Halifax, although Halifax is a bit too busy for me.

Digby was nice. I hope to get back there and visit Yarmouth, or go out to the eastern end and Cape Breton.

I'd also like to visit Newfoundland and Labrador.
 
Astronuc said:
I enjoyed Nova Scotia and Halifax, although Halifax is a bit too busy for me.

Digby was nice. I hope to get back there and visit Yarmouth, or go out to the eastern end and Cape Breton.

I'd also like to visit Newfoundland and Labrador.
Travel up the Fundy coast and spend hours at the royal gardens at Annapolis Royale, and visit Victoria Park in Truro. It's a beautiful natural-looking park with lots of trails - a great place to walk off a big supper! Hint: behind the Evangeline Chapel is a wonderful old blacksmith shop with 17th C tools and a knowledgeable tour guide.
 
turbo said:
All the posts are timed an hour early, as if I were in the Canadian Maritimes instead of the Eastern time zone.

It's a Sunday around the time that daylight saving switches.
Europe and US have already switched (on different Sundays) ...
 
turbo said:
Hint: behind the Evangeline Chapel is a wonderful old blacksmith shop with 17th C tools and a knowledgeable tour guide.
There's a whole period village up there somewhere. Can't remember what it's called but we spent the whole afternoon there.
 
  • #10
Something weird happened in chat yesterday where the time presented changed some time during the course of the chat. I think someone indicated that I was caught in a revolving door, but I'm not sure what happened since I stepped away from the computer, and it may have gone to sleep. Anyway, I noticed that the time was off about 5 hrs, whereas it was showing correct local time in the beginning.
 
  • #11
DaveC426913 said:
There's a whole period village up there somewhere. Can't remember what it's called but we spent the whole afternoon there.
I never tumbled to that, Dave. I took my wife, her mother and her aunt on a tour of NS to thank her mother for caring for her after a very serious car accident, and I settled on the Fundy shore because of the nice touristy-history stuff that is out there.

I couldn't tolerate being around fragranc-y people even then, so I let them tour the chapel and took a walk around. It was then that I bumped into a pretty young tour-guide who asked me if I'd like to see the blacksmith's shop. I took her up on her offer and was very pleasantly surprised. The shop had service bays like a modern auto shop. If your ox needed to be shod, there were flaxen slings and windlasses to hoist the critter up, and wooden vises at each station to clamp their hooves, plus a yoke-like clamp at the front to hold the ox's head, with a trough for feed.

On the walls were wooden "mud-shoes" for oxen so that they could plow and till reclaimed bottom-land without getting mired. The people who populated the Fundy shore were quite talented farmers from the regions of France, Belgium, etc, that knew how to reclaim salt-marshes. I know this is quite unrelated to "forum time", but this is my thread and I'll cry if I want to.
 

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