Short Day Party
Another of the fog
Blonde junco
Still partying
Lucy the blonde snowbird
Under Butter Cove Mountain
Happy New Year
Quails
Out of the pot
Min's chin on a shin
Laughing at our folly
Promise unkept
Rick
Parking
Glen
Road drain in 2001
More from 2001
Christmas tree comes down
Looking up from Ganny Cove
Ice but ten degrees
Hanging out in the rain
Another bird in the freezing rain
Harry talking about his carvings
Fogsun this afternoon
Waiting, not surveilling, at the hospital
Outside where I work
Din and Sab
Almost thirty years ago
Sunny
Birds gone nuts
That moon last night
The new moon in the arms of the old
Another view of where I live
Down the street from our house
Somewhere in there is my neighbourhood
Down the hill from our house
J and M out walking
Submitting the thesis
Finally - a win!
Uncle-in-law's funeral
Uncle-in-law's funeral
Two parts of The Beast
Alan's great beard
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Priest's Road


This road is often called the Priest's Road. It is closed to car
traffic but is used by walkers and bicyclists for recreation, and by
the Highways dept for access to water that would otherwise wash away
the highway underneath it. We walk its length, three km or so, a
dozen or so times a year. A nice six-km walk. And the day I took this
picture we added two km to each end by walking from our house -- a
total of ten km. Good walk. Nice fog, too.
It's called the Priest's Road because one end of it, just around that
corner in the picture, is the priest's house. Some people say that,
forty years ago when the big highway below was built with no local
access to it, the priest struck a deal with the Highways Dept that
they'd retain his old route between two parts of his parish by keeping
this road open. I don't know how true that is.
traffic but is used by walkers and bicyclists for recreation, and by
the Highways dept for access to water that would otherwise wash away
the highway underneath it. We walk its length, three km or so, a
dozen or so times a year. A nice six-km walk. And the day I took this
picture we added two km to each end by walking from our house -- a
total of ten km. Good walk. Nice fog, too.
It's called the Priest's Road because one end of it, just around that
corner in the picture, is the priest's house. Some people say that,
forty years ago when the big highway below was built with no local
access to it, the priest struck a deal with the Highways Dept that
they'd retain his old route between two parts of his parish by keeping
this road open. I don't know how true that is.
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