:cheers:
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You have such a beautiful and very colourful city. :cheers:
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Great set of pictures there! I really need to get there some day. I'm not quite sure why I moved further away from the rock after seeing all the pictures you've posted.
:cheers: |
Such a kick-ass city.
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Lovely shots, as usual from you and St. John´s. Thanks for sharing.
I love the variety of weather you´ve got there. It´s fantastic. Congrats and greetings from Madrid, Spain!:tup: |
Nice pictures. I really like the one where you said the sun came out and warmed again. Are there three separate lighthouses in that one picture? How many lighthouses are there near that harbor entrance?
I was going to ask where all of the snow was. Shouldn't there be a lot more up there? Where are the piles of snow? My question was answered somewhat when the passing storm dumped snow in your pictures, but I would've thought that there would be plenty of piles of snow still around. Does the Gulf Stream warm things up? What are temperatures like right now? |
Nice looking little city! Great location too. :)
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Thanks, everyone! :D
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In the distance is Cape Spear, the most easterly point in North America. It has two lighthouses. The tall, slender one on in the middle is the new, functioning one. The stout building to the right is the old one, now a museum. The shorter buildings to the far left house the fog horn. In the foreground is Fort Amherst, which guards the very narrow entrance to St. John's Harbour. It's now a private residence but is open to the public. Here's the best I've ever captured it - I have pictures from this morning as well, but in the video you can hear the fog horn: We do get a lot of snow, but our winter temperatures are mild by Canadian standards and we rarely stay below freezing long enough for snow to accumulate: http://i48.tinypic.com/2po5x8l.png So you can end up with us getting 300 inches of snow and having nothing to show for it, while other cities can get 100 inches and be white for half the year. You just have to remember this doesn't mean we have nice, sunny winter weather. Winter and spring here are very grey, with lots of precipitation. Think of it as Seattle but colder, enough that the temperature hugs the freezing mark and makes messy, wet snow just as likely as rain. |
And here's a little taste of what a winter storm looks like here. All of this snow was completely gone just a few days later.
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...2&postcount=41 http://ryancrocker.zenfolio.com/img/...75544858-6.jpg http://ryancrocker.zenfolio.com/img/...75548180-6.jpg http://ryancrocker.zenfolio.com/img/...75539314-6.jpg And here's a film I made of a wintery drive a few months ago: |
The natural beauty of that town is just insane.
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It can't be mistaken for
anywhere else any time of year. Great photos as always! :tup: |
Really enjoyed this thread, how is the economy there? Do young people usually flee?
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The long answer is this... Newfoundland and Labrador was an independent country prior to becoming a Canadian province in March of 1949. We had a small, exceptionally wealthy ruling class (merchants) and a large population of poor, indebted servants (fisherman), who had to borrow each year enough money to buy the supplies they'd need to fish the next. After joining Canada, income equality started to lessen. The government invested heavily in rural areas with grand ideas (hockey stick factories, poultry farms, etc.) meant to free the people from this form of economic slavery. Nothing really worked, though the quality of life in rural areas improved dramatically. In the 1960s, the government forcibly demolished hundreds of villages and towns and forced their residents to move to larger communities that were less expensive to service with things like electricity, water, etc. This event, known as Resettlement, is part of our collective consciousness as Newfoundlanders, it is one of our great victimhood stories that forms a part of our identity today. Here's a song about it: In 1992, the s**t finally hit the fan. A moratorium was imposed on cod - it was no longer legal to harvest. Rural Newfoundland collapsed. Village after village, town after town, saw its entire reason for existing yanked out from under it. Tens of thousands (in a province with a population of only half a million) were forced to move. This was the situation in which St. John's found itself. Although it never lost population (because thousands of rural residents fled here, just as tens of thousands fled to other provinces), it did stagnate economically - and visually. For example, the office towers you see under construction in the above photos are the first new ones here for 25 years. So, we were the capital of a critically wounded province. There was enough going on to keep the city afloat, but we were clearly hurting. Now... we have greater control over our own resources and the ability to develop them. Oil, gas, minerals, fish, forestry, etc. We are LOADED. Since 2008, we haven't even received equalization payments (which are payments taken from a fund all provinces contribute to and shared amongst so-called "have-not" provinces to ensure they can provide a comparable standard of living to Canada's "have provinces". Becoming a "have province" was a huge and cheerful occasion for us. As our Premier (equivalent of a governor), Kathy Dunderdale, recently said announcing a MAJOR hydroelectric development: Quote:
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Thanks for the great explanation Ryan:
Sounds like a very interesting history and good to see that things have turned around and new office towers are being built. :cheers: |
:previous:
At first I was like, "How the **** does he know my name?" But then I remembered... :haha: And cheers to you too, thank you! :) |
Fantastic set and storytelling. I swear, every time I visit one of your threads, my tolerance for miserable weather increases (or maybe that's just from living in Portland). You've convinced me that I have to visit this corner of the continent sometime.
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I do love some weather that others might find miserable. Proper, dense fog (pea soup fog, we call it) brings a smile to my face. I walk outside into it like people might stroll off a flight from Iceland outside the airport in LA. But snow, I hate. Real rain, I hate. Most of the rain we get here is much closer to mist, which I mind less. But there's still something about a blue sky... we don't get it often. Even when it's bright and obviously sunny here, the sky is still sometimes white. As for St. John's... I try to be objective. That's why I don't take offense when people describe it as a small town, or dislike it based on accurate impressions. That's all fine with me. But it really is a spectacular place to visit. That VISIT word is key if you're someone who needs nice weather, big cities, etc. You couldn't live here... you'd go crazy. It's very much a small, close-knit city in atmosphere. But you would get a tremendous amount from visiting. I've met so many tourists that have been changed by coming here. And I make a point of stopping, and giving a wide-smiled welcome to anyone who is obviously not from here. Anyhow, the one I remember most was an older (it turned out) German woman. Her husband, who died several years previous, was a Newfoundlander but she'd never been. And she was sitting on a wall at Queen's Battery, overlooking St. John's, crying. That's why I approached her, to ask if she she alright. And, as part of a lengthy conversation, she said she felt, being here, as though she'd discovered a love letter to her that her husband wrote before he died, that this was the only way she could describe it. And that melted my heart. It's wonderful to feel like you're not the protagonist in your own life. It was genuinely cool. Anyhow... this sets us up perfectly: (The one thing in this that may not immediately make sense: the reference to being a half-hour ahead is literal. We have our own time zone, Newfoundland Time, which is 1.5 hours ahead of New York City). |
Wow man, thanks for the wonderful photography and history. Such vibrant colors and spectacular scenery...it really does look and feel like a special place.
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Thanks, AJW. :D
When we were independent, we used to promote ourselves as being like one of your neighbours (by North American standards of geographic distance): http://i.imgur.com/qPKJ77I.jpg |
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