Quebec City is a walled city, from times
past. The people seem to look different from others we have seen, but a lot
like each other. I've noticed this before in isolated places. Those French
speakers would not speak English to another Canadian, and were very standoffish
until we told them we were Americans, then they warmed up and spoke English
well.
Barbara started reading the Bible through
that day, and finished it on the trip. Gives you some idea how long that trip
was.
We discovered Expo Quebec was going on,
something like our Arkansas State Fair, but very different. I found a parking
spot in a man's yard nearby for a small fee. Then, the man said we had to leave
our car keys with him, in case he had to move cars around. Now, that was not something
I was accustomed to doing at our state fair, so finally, I just took everything
of value out of the car, put it in a big backpack, and carried it around all
day. When we got back at the end of the day, he was still standing right beside
our car, guarding it. I felt bad, and I could tell his feelings were hurt, but
he was nice about it.
We saw a lot of new stuff at that Expo.
Cheese sculptures, sand sculpture, all very intricate, chickens with feathers
down to the end of their toes, milk cows with giant udders, and a woman diving
from a 40 foot tower into a play pool of water six feet deep.
When we got back to the RV park, and were
loading up, Barbara drove the car up the ramps onto the car dolly. Those french
women screamed with amazement, then they all came over and hugged her! You
would have thought she had just dived off a 40 foot tower or something! Trying
to drive out of the park backwards, because I couldn't read the sign, I got
hung up between two trees. All those people turned out and started directing
me, in French.
Moving on out the St. Lawrence Seaway, we
blew a tire on our car dolly at Bic. The man at the only station had only one
tire that would fit, and there were no other possibilities anywhere around. But
he still gave me a cut-rate deal. I'm not really sure if he just liked me, or
he was helping me to get on out of there, but we always got very fair treatment
at the hands of French-Canadians. Little did we know, they were about to save
our necks in a major way, a little bit farther down the road.
Farther along, we left the Seaway and
headed inland, across the mountains to the Acadian Coast of New Brunswick. The
Acadians were kinfolks of the Louisiana Cajuns.
Big Trouble
Traveling across the mountains, I started
hearing a strange noise in my RV motor. It got worse. As we moved out of the
mountains, it would barely run. Finally, it shut down, but we were still
rolling down an incline out of the mountains. We were out on a peninsula, and
it appeared to me we were about as far from help as we could get in North
America, without going polar. We entered Caroquet, a very isolated little town
out on the far end of that peninsula. We rolled to a stop, literally, right in
front of the only truck repair place we had seen in many days. I went in to
talk, and they could barely speak a little English. Finally, they figured out I
was having motor troubles. They came out. The motor access was right beside the
driver's seat. They took their shoes off, spread out a cloth around the whole
area so as not to make a mess, and opened it up. The diagnosis was a thrown
rod, and I knew that would cost a couple of thousand at home. He suggested they
could tie that rod up, and we could limp on home one cylinder short. “Can you
fix it?” I asked. Yes, they could. It would take all day tomorrow, and they
would have to bring in extra help. I didn't want to face all those hills ahead
short one cylinder, so we went for it. They brought out an extension cord, said
we could live there for the duration.
Barbara
and I went to an Acadian Village the next day, set up like their
pioneers lived, and the people dressed the part. Their pioneer life on this
cold coast made our pioneers look like a cakewalk. The English had pushed the
Acadians up to this lonely, cold coast many years ago.
Back at the RV, they had finished up. The
total bill, when changed into dollars, was about $700. They had been extremely
nice and helpful throughout, and after paying the bill, I wrote a very nice
letter of recommendation, so that other travelers would know they were really
good people. We said goodbye, and headed on.
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