Made the trek from the Passage to Bathurst today. For the number of times I have driven those 478 km, today was the first time I noticed that it is a microcosm of this country in a number of ways. I’ve always been keenly aware of the change in climate of course. I can’t count the times I’ve left a snowless Halifax under clear skies only to watch the clouds gather as I approached Truro. By the time I’d reach the Cobequid Pass it was often snowing, and the roads and landscape would gradually turn to a winter wonderland by the time I’d hit the Bathurst city limits.
Today was different. Yes, I left a green Halifax and arrived in winter but the highway in between was shrouded in thick fog that obliterated familiar landmarks and played scary tricks as oncoming cars and lumbering trucks emerged like ghosts out of the mist.
But back to my discovery. I’m familiar of course with New Brunswick’s sharp divisions when it comes to French and English communities. It’s almost as if the warring forefathers drew literal lines in the topography to claim their territories. It wasn’t until today that I noted the sprinkling of Mi’kmaq names in the mix and how representative this is of Canada as a whole. Love that diversity. Love that Christmas here will be white.



