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It was pitch black. Dead of night. I had just crossed a bridge I never knew existed. Terrified in terra incognita. Getting ready to jump into a great, wide open.
You never know what will happen, what you’ll learn.
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Try refreshing your browser. MARTINELLO: A rail bridge too far: Lines and Shadows (Part 8) Back to video
I don’t remember when I crossed that bridge. But it was either the summer of 1974 or 1975, just after I had bought my lime-green CCM Turismo 10-speed bicycle.
Every now and then throughout that summer – and always in the early morning so I could avoid the sweltering southwest headwind – I would jump on my Turismo and pedal, southward, fast as I could, the 30 miles between my house in Sarnia and my grandmother’s house on the south side of Gillard Street in Wallaceburg. I would stay at my grandmother’s for one night and then, the following afternoon – so I could catch the push of what h
Posted: Feb 24, 2021 1:58 PM CT | Last Updated: February 24
A troupe of caribou on December 4, 2018, along the Hudson Bay coast, near Whapmagoostui/Kuujjuarapik, Que. The Cree in northern Quebec are concerned over a recent hunt by an Innu hunting party in the far eastern reaches of Cree territory.(Matthew Mukash)
A community caribou hunt organized in northern Quebec by some Innu hunters from Matimekush-Lac John, near Schefferville, Que., has some Chisasibi tallymen and Cree government officials worried.
The hunt happened on lands west of Schefferville and east of Chisasibi, northwest of Brisay, in northern Quebec between the end of January and mid-February. The area is more than 1,800 kilometres northeast of Montreal.
Maine loses champion of natural resources
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On Feb. 12, Maine lost a champion of its natural resources. George Smith was a spokesman for the people of Maine, and he was never afraid to speak his mind on sensitive matters. The fact that he lived for four years with a debilitating disease never slowed George up and he continued to speak his mind through his books and newspaper columns.
George and I shared several forays to Quebec’s Leaf River to fish for trout. During one of our visits there, he told with me that the Leaf River was one of his most favorite places anywhere. When George and Harry Vanderweide were producing their television shows, I spent many hours in the studio and in the woods shooting countless hours of television with them.