Saltscapes Food and Travel 2022

Page 41

Treading lightly Walking barefoot among Keji’s petroglyphs STORY AND PHOTOS BY DARCY RHYNO

N

ick Whynot stands barefoot and proud—his tattooed arms crossed— on rocks covered in messages from the past. All around him are dozens of images scratched into the exposed bedrock here on the shores of Kejimkujik National Park. This is the second largest collection of petroglyphs in Canada and a direct link between the man standing before me and his Mi’kmaw ancestors who left their marks here over the past hundreds, perhaps thousands of years. Whynot begins his tour of the Keji petroglyphs by pointing out tiny but detailed images of tall ships under sail. “I particularly love these two,” he says. “They actually took the time to put in the cannons. It’s like a Spanish galleon.” The Parks Canada tour guide is a resident of the nearby Wildcat Reserve—a member community of the Acadia First Nations band—so he feels in his bones the importance of these images. “That would have been something to behold when you’re paddling to PEI or Newfoundland in a birchbark craft, and you see a big ship like that.” As he speaks, I think of stories we tell ourselves today of UFOs and visiting aliens. Pondering the impact of strange, unidentified sailing objects by his ancestors, Whynot continues. “Those are stories you’re going to bring back and draw for people, seeing these massive ships with people on them.” He’s been living and learning the ways of his people for most of his life. He grew up hunting and trapping around the national park with his father and uncles. Another Wildcat resident, Todd Labrador, offers birchbark canoe building workshops every summer at Keji, and Whynot has participated. “I also took up knife making with my uncle,” he tells me. “Now, I do knapping. That’s taking stone and turning it into projectile points and tools.”

Top: French missionary petroglyph at Kejimkujik; Nick Whynot; Spanish galleon petroglyphs. NOVA SCOTIA

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ADVERTISING What Will Your #MaritimeFerry Adventure Look Like?

2min
pages 90-92

ADVERTISING: Join us on a Bay of Fundy adventure

2min
page 89

ADVERTISING: The CAT is coming back— and we’re faster than ever

1min
page 88

ADVERTISING Maritime Adventures from Ship to Shore

2min
pages 86-87

Of giant lobsters and drunken lampposts

4min
pages 83-85

Gaol bird tour

3min
page 80

Ecclefechan Tart from Birkinshaw’s Tea Room & Coffee House

2min
page 79

Border town twins

4min
pages 77-78

Canvas crush

7min
pages 74-76

Hot Lobster Sandwich Clara Harris style

2min
page 73

Don’t stop for winter

2min
page 72

Quark Cheesecake from Ran-Cher Acres

2min
page 71

Say cheese Atlantic Canada!

3min
pages 69-70

Beyond the ordinary

6min
pages 66-68

Island Hill Farm Breakfast Sandwich

1min
page 61

From royal fries to championship seafood

4min
pages 62-63

Dinosaur Island

5min
pages 64-65

Milk ‘n’ Make

4min
pages 58-60

Foodie days

5min
pages 54-55

Back to Birchtown Chutney

2min
page 40

Victorian gardens

4min
pages 51-53

Smoked Haddock Fishcakes from Seawind Landing

1min
page 50

“Here to stay”

4min
pages 48-49

Treading lightly

6min
pages 41-43

Cadillacs, cannons and sea caves

5min
pages 44-47

The missing chapter

4min
pages 38-39

Bridget’s Breakfast Risotto

2min
page 37

Two shores—two UNESCO gems

4min
pages 33-36

Three of the most popular French fry sauce recipes from Potato World

4min
pages 9-10

Potato road

2min
page 8

Well worth a side trip

4min
pages 26-27

Of gannets and Basques

4min
pages 28-29

The “great equalizer”

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pages 14-16

The island frozen in time

4min
pages 24-25

The country of the washerwoman

1min
page 6

Acadian Molasses Cake

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page 7
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