Super Good Camping Podcast
Hi there! We are a blended family of four who are passionate about camping, nature, the great outdoors, physical activity, health, & being all-around good Canadians! We would love to inspire others to get outside & explore all that our beautiful country has to offer. Camping fosters an appreciation of nature, physical fitness, & emotional well-being. Despite being high-tech kids, our kids love camping! We asked them to help inspire your kids. Their creations are in our Kids section. For the adults, we would love to share our enthusiasm for camping, review some of our favourite camping gear, share recipes & menus, tips & how-to's, & anything else you may want to know about camping. Got a question about camping? Email us so we can help you & anyone else who may be wondering the same thing. We are real people, with a brutally honest bent. We don't get paid by anyone to provide a review of their product. We'll be totally frank about what we like or don't like.
Super Good Camping Podcast
Tents And Timber-The East Coast Trip!
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Tune in for an amazing chat about a 32 day trip through rugged and rainy Newfoundland!!
Check out their YouTube channel for their videos from this trip.
Look here for a video of this episode with bonus chatting : https://youtu.be/heQ0QsUMFG0
https://www.threads.net/@tents.and.timber
https://www.instagram.com/tents.and.timber/
https://www.youtube.com/c/TentsandTimber
Originally recorded on November 12, 2023
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00:00 - 00:04
Hello and good day. Welcome to the Super Good Camping podcast. My name is Pamela.
00:04 - 00:04
I'm Tim.
00:04 - 00:05
And we are from supergoodcamping.com.
00:06 - 00:10
We are here because we're on a mission to inspire other families to enjoy camping adventures
00:10 - 00:11
such as we have with our kids.
00:12 - 00:15
We'd like to welcome back a wonderful couple from right here in Southern Ontario.
00:16 - 00:20
They originally joined us last year to chat about their epic trip to hike the West Coast Trail.
00:20 - 00:24
Today, they're going to share some of their highlights from their recent trip to the other side of the country.
00:24 - 00:30
Please welcome back, Alex and Jess, otherwise known as Tents and Timber or Tents and Timber or I actually
00:31 - 00:32
Thanks for having us.
00:32 - 00:33
Hey, guys.
00:33 - 00:36
Thanks for coming back in Yacking again. Glad.
00:36 - 00:40
I couldn't, I I briefly looked at how long ago.
00:40 - 00:46
It was like we published it last last sorry. A year ago, June.
00:46 - 00:49
Like, I I wouldn't have thought it was that long ago.
00:49 - 00:50
And 2022 is what you're saying.
00:50 - 00:56
2022. Yes. And and who knows how long before that we actually recorded it.
00:56 - 00:58
So it's nice to see you guys again. Guys.
00:58 - 01:00
Absolutely. Yeah. YouTube been busy.
01:00 - 01:02
We've seen, lots of podcasts out from you.
01:02 - 01:04
I think you just had your 100th episode or something.
01:05 - 01:06
We just did. Yep. Yeah.
01:06 - 01:07
Wonderful. Big birthday.
01:08 - 01:13
That's that's weird. It's stunning to take that to be to having done it that long.
01:13 - 01:14
It would be like it.
01:14 - 01:15
A 100 episodes.
01:15 - 01:18
Yep. So you guys went east this year.
01:18 - 01:19
We did.
01:19 - 01:21
Where did you go? How long was it?
01:21 - 01:22
Tell us all the things.
01:22 - 01:26
We actually went for 32 days in total.
01:26 - 01:28
Oh, my goodness.
01:28 - 01:33
Yeah. So we feel pretty fortunate that we were able to have that luxury to take that much time
01:33 - 01:35
off of our full time jobs.
01:36 - 01:39
But yeah, we just, we really wanted to go east.
01:39 - 01:42
We haven't we went when we were kids.
01:42 - 01:43
Yeah.
01:43 - 01:45
But we never went as far as Newfoundland.
01:45 - 01:51
So the original goal was kind of maybe spend a week in PEI, a week in Nova Scotia, a week in
01:51 - 01:54
New Brunswick, and maybe a week in, Newfoundland.
01:55 - 01:59
But once we started looking at the maps and everything, we're just like and then all the things
01:59 - 02:02
that we wanted to do, we were just like, no.
02:02 - 02:03
We're just going to Newfoundland.
02:03 - 02:05
There's way too many things to see and do in Newfoundland.
02:05 - 02:12
So we spent, you know, the bulk of our time over 3 weeks just in Newfoundland alone. So
02:13 - 02:17
Yeah. That's my big bucket list item is to go to Newfoundland.
02:17 - 02:21
That's high list of things I'd like to do. So inspire me. Tell me more.
02:21 - 02:25
Well, it was lovely. We could have easily done 3 more weeks.
02:25 - 02:26
Oh, 100%.
02:27 - 02:33
No problem at all. We mainly focused on hiking and doing crazy excursions.
02:34 - 02:37
We didn't spend a lot of time in the small towns.
02:37 - 02:43
So definitely the next time that we go, we'll probably shift our priorities and hit some of the smaller towns.
02:43 - 02:50
Yeah. We figured, while we're young and our legs and everything are still able, let's do as
02:50 - 02:53
much hiking and adventurous things as we absolutely can.
02:53 - 02:57
And then, you know, maybe a little bit later, we had some friends and actually my parents this
02:57 - 03:04
year, did, like flew into Newfoundland and did some bus trips and stuff, with, like, big tourist groups.
03:04 - 03:09
So we figured, you know, way down the road, that's gonna be our thing, and then we can see those
03:09 - 03:10
small towns and all that stuff.
03:10 - 03:15
But this time, we did as much like backcountry esque things as as we could.
03:15 - 03:16
So that was really cool. So, yeah, we
03:16 - 03:17
go hiking.
03:17 - 03:18
Where did we go hiking?
03:21 - 03:24
Pretty much everywhere. So the we drove out there.
03:24 - 03:27
So we took 2 days.
03:27 - 03:27
Yep.
03:28 - 03:30
Almost 3 days just to get to Newfoundland.
03:30 - 03:36
The ferry is, a 7 hour ferry just in itself to get there. Yeah.
03:36 - 03:43
So we started in Southwestern Ontario, drove all the way to the Far East of Nova Scotia, and
03:43 - 03:47
then hopped on our 7 hour ferry to get to our final destination.
03:48 - 03:49
And then from
03:49 - 03:51
Did you have a nap on the ferry?
03:51 - 03:53
Oh, yeah. We, We did.
03:53 - 03:57
We took a few grab all to help us sleep, just because we weren't really sure.
03:57 - 04:01
We'd heard some, like, horror stories on, like, how rocky that boat could be. You're crossing the ocean.
04:01 - 04:01
Yep.
04:02 - 04:06
Luckily, we had, like, super smooth, it was it was rainy.
04:06 - 04:08
We couldn't it was foggy, so we couldn't really see much.
04:08 - 04:12
You know, there were stories of people seeing whales and, you know, animals and stuff as you're
04:12 - 04:14
sailing across, but we couldn't really see much.
04:14 - 04:17
So we just slept, the entire way across.
04:17 - 04:19
We did a day ferry on the way there.
04:20 - 04:25
And then on the way back to try something different, we took the night ferry, and actually got a cabin.
04:25 - 04:27
So we actually had a bed where we were able to sleep.
04:28 - 04:31
But, it wasn't anything like like an airplane, I guess.
04:31 - 04:36
Our seats are much bigger, much wider, so it was very luxurious kind of thing.
04:36 - 04:38
Yeah. Both options were fantastic.
04:39 - 04:41
I think we we enjoyed both. So
04:41 - 04:48
Absolutely. Yep. So, yeah, we ended in the south southwest kind of corner of Newfoundland.
04:49 - 04:54
And then there's not much really in the sit in the center of Newfoundland, I guess.
04:54 - 04:59
So the main highway kind of takes you arcs you across all the way to Saint John's.
05:00 - 05:06
So the goal was to drive all the way across, and then you can actually take a ferry from there
05:06 - 05:09
all the way back to Nova Scotia, but that's a 17 hour ferry.
05:10 - 05:12
So we figured we'd get more enjoyment.
05:13 - 05:14
Driving back.
05:14 - 05:19
So we drove all the way to the far side of Newfoundlanders and then ended up driving all the
05:19 - 05:22
way back in that 3 week span.
05:22 - 05:27
Yep. How how many hours roughly of of driving was it?
05:27 - 05:34
So it takes about from, like, Saint John's back to Porte De Basque where the ferry is to go back to Nova Scotia.
05:34 - 05:36
It's about 9 hours of driving.
05:36 - 05:39
Yeah. So not horrible in the grand scheme of things.
05:39 - 05:44
And I think living on Ontario too, we're so used to having to drive fairly far to get to some
05:44 - 05:48
of the more wilderness locations. Right? So we found Right. We found the drive.
05:48 - 05:54
And the drive is so beautiful. Just the landscape's incredible. The mountain ranges.
05:54 - 05:59
It's just our concern with this trip is that we were we're going to get burnt out of driving
05:59 - 06:04
just with what we were taking on, but I never once was just like, oh my gosh.
06:04 - 06:06
We have to have another long drive day.
06:06 - 06:08
Every day was just like, bring it on.
06:08 - 06:09
What are we gonna see today?
06:09 - 06:11
So we really enjoyed the whole thing.
06:12 - 06:19
Yeah. In total, in the 32 days, we put 8 over 8,000 kilometers on the car.
06:21 - 06:24
So, yeah, it was a it was it was just a little bit of driving.
06:25 - 06:26
A little bit of driving.
06:26 - 06:31
But, yeah, as Jess said, like, you know, we don't have mountains really in Ontario.
06:31 - 06:36
So driving through Newfoundland, like, you just there's just mountains that you're, you know,
06:36 - 06:38
drive around the next bend and there's some big mountains.
06:38 - 06:43
So it was just it was so enjoyable just driving, let alone actually exploring and getting out there. So
06:44 - 06:47
And you're right in the ocean the whole time when you're driving?
06:47 - 06:50
Pretty much except for kind of the middle portion.
06:50 - 06:53
You're you're a little bit back from the ocean. But, yeah.
06:53 - 06:57
On on either side, you're pretty much following the ocean.
06:57 - 06:59
You're never too far from the ocean, really.
06:59 - 07:04
When you mentioned not being able to see whales on the ferry, but did you see whales in in the
07:04 - 07:06
in the portions where you're driving or hiking?
07:06 - 07:12
Unfortunately not. No. We did not walk out weather wise on this whole month long adventure.
07:13 - 07:19
I I want to say it rained more than half the time. I haven't added it.
07:19 - 07:21
I haven't fully added it up yet.
07:21 - 07:30
But as an example, and I know for sure the first 4 days it rained on us, which were our travel
07:30 - 07:31
days, so it wasn't so bad.
07:31 - 07:37
So and then, you know, when we actually made it to the Far East Coast, and we were doing some
07:37 - 07:41
backpacking and stuff, it rained all 5 days of that hike. So.
07:41 - 07:43
We were a little soggy, but it was worth it.
07:45 - 07:49
But I think we lucked out like, you know, as far as much as it did rain, we definitely lucked
07:49 - 07:52
out for the days that it did rain.
07:52 - 07:58
So we did some, some bigger hikes, you know, like a 17 kilometre hike in 1 day.
07:58 - 08:00
And, you know, that day we lucked out that it didn't rain.
08:00 - 08:04
It rained the day before and the day after, but not that particular day.
08:04 - 08:07
So I think we were even, no, we did get a lot of rain.
08:07 - 08:10
You know, it's not camping unless it's raining. Right? So
08:12 - 08:15
Well, I know. What month did you go? Just for reference.
08:15 - 08:16
We went in August.
08:17 - 08:18
Pretty much the entire
08:18 - 08:21
So pretty much from both long weekends. Yeah.
08:21 - 08:25
So, yeah, we kinda did the west side of the island first.
08:25 - 08:32
So we went to our destination was Gros Morne, and we spent a week in Gros Morne. And that was lovely.
08:32 - 08:38
That was kind of what drew us to that province first was just looking at some of the photos of Gros Morne.
08:38 - 08:40
It's like we have to get there.
08:40 - 08:45
Yeah. If you type in Newfoundland into Google, the first photo you're you're gonna see is photos
08:45 - 08:49
of Gros Morne and the fjords and stuff that they have there.
08:49 - 08:51
And it's just absolutely stunning.
08:51 - 08:54
So that's their big national park there.
08:55 - 08:58
And yeah, we ended up spending 7 days there.
08:58 - 09:01
We'd only planned to spend 6, but it was just so nice.
09:01 - 09:06
We actually extended our stay by an extra day. So and we ended
09:06 - 09:08
up camp while you were there?
09:09 - 09:15
So we stayed in 8 different campgrounds over the course of the whole month that we were away.
09:16 - 09:21
And then that doesn't include camping on the actual East Coast Trail because that was in different
09:21 - 09:23
campsites as we kind of hiked along.
09:24 - 09:29
And technically, that's not really a campground. But, yeah.
09:29 - 09:33
So we stayed in we slept in our car the 1st night.
09:35 - 09:39
Just because we weren't planning on it, but it was pouring rain, and I didn't wanna set the
09:39 - 09:40
tent up in the pouring rain.
09:40 - 09:42
So we just kinda kept driving. And then Yeah.
09:42 - 09:43
And we were both feeling so great driving.
09:43 - 09:45
We're just like, you know what?
09:45 - 09:47
We're just gonna go as far as we're comfortable going.
09:47 - 09:51
And we ended up finding a really cute spot on Ioverlander.
09:51 - 09:56
There's an app for over landing and, more van lifers.
09:56 - 10:00
So we used that app to try to find somewhere that was relatively good to stay.
10:00 - 10:02
And yeah, that night worked out wonderful.
10:02 - 10:05
But, yeah, we started in Grossmore. Yep.
10:05 - 10:12
Yeah. Slept in the car, slept in Wai Kokomo Provincial Park in Nova Scotia, and then we stayed
10:12 - 10:18
in a small little provincial park in Newfoundland called JT Cheesman Provincial Park.
10:18 - 10:22
And then we got to Gros Morne where we stayed for for the 7 nights.
10:22 - 10:27
And in Gros Morne, it's kind of like Algonquin, where there's like the different campgrounds
10:27 - 10:30
in Algonquin, kind of along the main highway.
10:30 - 10:31
That's the same thing in Gros Morne.
10:31 - 10:35
So there's, I don't know, 5 or 6 different campgrounds there.
10:35 - 10:40
We stayed in 2 different ones and explored kind of the south end of Gros Morne and then drove
10:40 - 10:46
farther north and explored the north end because the landscape is just so crazy.
10:48 - 10:51
In the southern portion, they have what's called the Tablelands.
10:52 - 10:58
And it's just giant mountains, but they're like almost like an orangey red color.
10:59 - 11:00
Just bare.
11:00 - 11:02
And yeah, no trees, no grass, no nothing.
11:02 - 11:08
And then on the north side, you know, that it's big lush forests of and mountains and stuff like that.
11:08 - 11:15
So it was big kind of difference, you know, driving from 1 side to the other, which was which was really neat.
11:15 - 11:22
So we stayed in Gros Morne and then we started our drive across to the other side of Newfoundland
11:22 - 11:26
and we stayed in some smaller little provincial parks.
11:27 - 11:33
And then we got to the East Coast Trail where we hiked that for 5 days.
11:33 - 11:35
And then Jess has an old friend over there.
11:35 - 11:39
So we stayed in at their place for a couple nights kind of near St.
11:39 - 11:43
John's and, got to hang up with them and explore the area.
11:43 - 11:48
And then from there, we basically in St.
11:48 - 11:53
John, we made that 8, 9 hour drive all the way back to the ferry and took the ferry back across.
11:54 - 11:58
So, yeah, we stayed in quite a few different locations.
11:59 - 12:03
But there's so many that we just kind of unfortunately had to if we only stayed like 1 night
12:03 - 12:05
there, like, it was just like a tease.
12:05 - 12:09
We were just like, oh, we just want to stay, want to explore some more like the area.
12:09 - 12:12
Little towns. Yeah. Like Twilling Gate and Buena Vista.
12:12 - 12:15
I can't wait to go back to those areas to explore more.
12:15 - 12:18
And there's just even just great day hikes there as well.
12:19 - 12:20
There there's so much to see.
12:21 - 12:27
And how are the were the people, like, everybody says, you know, they're just they're so so
12:27 - 12:30
friendly and all that's is that the real deal?
12:30 - 12:32
Oh, a 100%. Yeah. Absolutely.
12:32 - 12:37
That's what we were really hoping to accomplish with having this longer time frame was, you
12:37 - 12:41
know, not just to do all, like, the touristy things while we were there.
12:41 - 12:43
We wanted to kinda get in,
12:44 - 12:47
and meet people and talk to different communities in that.
12:47 - 12:51
And everyone asks, like, oh, what was your favorite part?
12:51 - 12:56
And obviously, all the adventuring was great, but the people were way up there and probably
12:56 - 12:58
the top things that we experienced on this trip.
12:58 - 13:03
They were lovely and just, yeah, would give you the shirt off your back their back.
13:03 - 13:11
It was just, different pace than Ontario as well. And, yeah. No. They were fantastic.
13:11 - 13:17
Sweet. Well, and, in terms of comparing your West Coast trail trip to your East Coast trail
13:17 - 13:22
trip, any comparisons, anything different, anything better?
13:23 - 13:24
It was completely different.
13:24 - 13:27
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's it's hard to compare the 2.
13:27 - 13:28
Yeah.
13:28 - 13:33
So the West Coast Trail is an actual national park, so it's all well maintained.
13:33 - 13:39
There's, you know, lots of info about it and that type of stuff versus the East Coast Trail
13:39 - 13:42
is actually a complete volunteer organization.
13:42 - 13:47
It's a non profit, organization or not for profit.
13:48 - 13:51
And, the trails aren't as well marked.
13:51 - 13:57
There's not there's a few designated campsites, but a lot of it is just kind of not really.
13:57 - 14:06
So it's not as well done and nice and as used as the West Coast Trail would be, I guess. And it's substantially longer.
14:06 - 14:06
Yes.
14:06 - 14:14
The West Coast Trail's roughly like 88, 90 kilometers versus the East Coast Trail is 336 kilometers.
14:15 - 14:16
That's a little bit longer. Yeah.
14:16 - 14:18
Yeah. So it's a bit longer.
14:18 - 14:24
We did not do the whole, trail because we would have been there at minimum.
14:24 - 14:26
I think it was, like, 12 days as the recommended or
14:27 - 14:28
No. It's like 18.
14:28 - 14:28
Oh, 18.
14:28 - 14:29
But yeah.
14:29 - 14:34
So we did 50 kilometers of the over 300. But yeah.
14:34 - 14:38
So it just the biggest difference was is that it is all a 100% volunteer base.
14:38 - 14:43
So they do all the maintenance, all the clearing, maintain the boardwalks and everything.
14:43 - 14:46
So, like, kudos to them.
14:46 - 14:48
Their map was actually really great.
14:49 - 14:53
They have an organization that we ordered their maps from so we could decide where we wanted
14:53 - 14:57
to put start the hike and in the hike, and it was great details.
14:57 - 15:00
So we were grateful for all the volunteers that put that together.
15:02 - 15:05
Ladders to go up and down like there was on the West Coast or no?
15:05 - 15:11
We in some spots, I'm sure that we wish there was some ladders. Yep. But but no.
15:11 - 15:18
For the most part, it's I don't think it was as, like, sheer cliffy that we were going up and
15:18 - 15:19
down as we were hiking.
15:20 - 15:25
Well, there was just some spots that we we had a substantial amount of rain and fog on this
15:25 - 15:30
trip, and so we could have been against cliffs, but we just couldn't see them.
15:30 - 15:32
But we don't like hiking them necessarily?
15:32 - 15:33
No. Not hiking them. Yeah.
15:34 - 15:34
So, yeah. No.
15:34 - 15:36
Hiking along them.
15:36 - 15:42
I'd say it was a lot more flat kind of walking, on the East Coast Trail than the West Coast Trail.
15:42 - 15:47
The West Coast Trail, you know, you're just constantly up and down and up and down and up and down.
15:47 - 15:51
And then walking out onto the beach and you had like some good beach stretches where you're
15:51 - 15:57
walking along the beach in the West Coast Trail, versus we didn't really have that on the East Coast Trail.
15:58 - 16:03
I'd say the the landscape is a little more weather beaten from the ocean and the wind and everything.
16:03 - 16:08
So the trees and like right along the coast, there isn't a ton of big, big trees.
16:09 - 16:17
So you're able to just kind of like walk some almost like grassy fields to a certain extent, as you're walking.
16:17 - 16:24
And then, but generally, we were always walking with like a 100 foot cliff to our right side, down into the ocean.
16:25 - 16:26
It was, it was pretty stunning.
16:26 - 16:27
Yeah.
16:27 - 16:32
When, when we could actually see and it wasn't foggy, it was, it was a pretty stunning view
16:32 - 16:33
for the majority of the hike.
16:34 - 16:40
And is it like the West Coast Trail where you need permits and to organize it going like you
16:40 - 16:41
did with that or no? It's just No,
16:41 - 16:44
that that's a good that's a great question actually.
16:44 - 16:47
No, you as of right now, it's all completely free.
16:47 - 16:53
So they they really promote obviously, you know, the leave no trace, attitude while you're out there.
16:53 - 16:58
There is so they've broken the trail down into different sections based on their map.
16:58 - 17:04
So each section of trail is is labeled and there's like trailheads and it has pretty good descriptions
17:04 - 17:05
of what's along the way.
17:07 - 17:12
So before we went, we went, we found a Facebook group about the trail and someone had actually
17:12 - 17:17
kind of written down where the campsites were, and we could printed that off.
17:17 - 17:23
And as we went along, we could kind of, however far we wanted to go each day, we could, you
17:23 - 17:26
know, pick where we were gonna kind of find a place to stay.
17:27 - 17:33
So for night 1, we found, there was, like, a designated campsite.
17:33 - 17:37
And night 2, there was a designated, like, actual East Coast Trail campsite.
17:37 - 17:41
But after that, we were just kinda sleeping alongside the trail wherever we could find a a
17:41 - 17:42
flat spot.
17:42 - 17:48
Enough spot. And it did some night it the 1 night it did take some time to find anywhere that was Yeah.
17:48 - 17:52
Appropriate to put our tent up, but it worked out.
17:52 - 17:57
So, yeah, it was it was free, which was really, really neat.
17:58 - 18:00
And there's parking spots kind of along the trail.
18:01 - 18:04
So it's broken down to do it for, like, day hikers.
18:04 - 18:09
So what a lot of people do is they'll they'll section hike the trail and they'll go and do 1
18:09 - 18:13
section a day and then kinda make your way along and then you could sleep in like a hotel or
18:13 - 18:16
an Airbnb, which, you know, would have been nice.
18:16 - 18:19
And you can actually do that if you're doing, like, the entire thing.
18:19 - 18:24
You actually unlike the West Coast Trail, the East Coast Trail, you walk through a lot of small
18:24 - 18:26
little coastal villages along the trail.
18:27 - 18:32
So it gives you some more opportunity to, you know, sleep in a hotel or an Airbnb and, you know,
18:32 - 18:36
get some supplies and food and stuff along the way, which was really nice.
18:36 - 18:41
Unlike the West Coast Trail where you're just kind of in a rainforest and you're on your own.
18:42 - 18:48
The East Coast Trail, you there's civilization almost on every pathway to a certain extent.
18:48 - 18:50
So you're not so remote or isolated.
18:50 - 18:54
Yeah. Yeah. Sounds like it could kinda kinda neat way to do it.
18:54 - 18:57
Like, it's very different from anything else, You know?
18:57 - 19:01
It doesn't even culinary or whatever, if you're doing a a 3 day or a 5 day, you're in
19:02 - 19:02
Yeah.
19:02 - 19:06
Until you come out or until you double back, however, that plays out. But, yeah, neat.
19:07 - 19:11
Slop off, have a nice plush Airbnb, go do some grocery shopping.
19:12 - 19:13
Take in some culture.
19:13 - 19:14
Catch a movie.
19:15 - 19:16
Absolutely. That'd
19:16 - 19:18
be neat. So how long did it take?
19:18 - 19:23
There must have been epic planning. Like like, how long?
19:23 - 19:27
What how did you go about how did you go what resources did you use?
19:27 - 19:29
For, like, the whole Facebook.
19:29 - 19:30
For, like, the whole month? For the
19:30 - 19:31
whole for your whole trip.
19:32 - 19:38
Yeah. This was, like, almost years of planning to a certain extent and, you know, getting our
19:38 - 19:44
the biggest thing was actually getting our workplaces to allow us to have this much time off in a row. Right.
19:44 - 19:47
So that was kinda like the big hinge in the in
19:47 - 19:52
the Yeah. Once we got that approval and we made all of our plans, then it was just like, okay. It's go time.
19:53 - 19:56
Let's start let's get everything booked. And it's like, okay.
19:56 - 19:57
Well, when can we book here and there?
19:57 - 19:58
Because it's so far out.
19:58 - 20:03
Well, we couldn't book, like, just like Algonquin, we can only book 5 months out or whatever. Right?
20:03 - 20:09
So it was planning all that to make sure we didn't miss out in Gros Morin being so iconic.
20:10 - 20:15
The morning that we could book and it opened, I was literally just watching all of the campsites
20:15 - 20:17
go book, book, book, book, book.
20:17 - 20:21
I'm in had Alex and I'm like, I can't click on anything fast enough to get this thing booked.
20:22 - 20:25
So it it worked out, but it was like the panic.
20:25 - 20:25
I'm like, oh my gosh.
20:25 - 20:28
We're not going to be able to camp there because it was so quick.
20:28 - 20:35
But, I think everyone was just very eager on that 7 AM, opening of the booking.
20:35 - 20:38
And it it did calm down after that, and there was availability.
20:38 - 20:41
But just watching everything flicker, I was like, oh, shoot.
20:42 - 20:44
Sounds like booking Ontario parks, boy.
20:45 - 20:49
Yeah. Pretty much. Actually, the act overall, the ferry was probably the hardest 1.
20:49 - 20:50
0, true.
20:50 - 20:52
The ferry books up very, very quickly.
20:52 - 20:56
You almost have to book that, you know, 6, 8 months in advance just to even get there.
20:57 - 21:00
So, yeah, some of the campgrounds were a little bit easier, and then we didn't have to book
21:00 - 21:02
anything for the East Coast Trail, so that was
21:02 - 21:04
And that gave us some flexibility too.
21:05 - 21:12
So we had, like, an overarching plan of where we were going to be, but we didn't really plan out each day. It's like, okay.
21:12 - 21:14
We're doing this today, this today, this today.
21:14 - 21:16
It was kinda like these groups of days.
21:16 - 21:20
We're gonna try to do all these things, because based on weather, it was gonna be really weather
21:20 - 21:24
dependent on what we could do in terms of our hikes and things like that.
21:24 - 21:29
We're comfortable hiking in the rain to a certain extent, but we also want to enjoy the trails
21:29 - 21:30
that we are going to be doing.
21:30 - 21:34
So we did, the mountain trail in Gros Morne.
21:34 - 21:36
That's a 17 kilometer loop. And it's like, okay.
21:36 - 21:40
Well, we're gonna really pick which day we're going to do that because we're climbing up a mountain.
21:40 - 21:46
We want to enjoy it as much as we can, and not have inclement weather to deal with.
21:47 - 21:51
So thankfully, Jess is like the Excel ninja.
21:51 - 21:54
And we just we just like had each day kind of roughed out.
21:54 - 21:57
And then like, you know, if it's gonna be nice, we can do these things.
21:57 - 22:00
If it's not gonna be nice, we can go to these museums or something. So it was tough.
22:00 - 22:04
Like, you know, we're we're so used to planning, you know, you go on a canoe trip and you're
22:04 - 22:04
like, okay, I have to get to this lake today.
22:04 - 22:06
I have to get to this lake tomorrow.
22:06 - 22:08
We had to leave it a little bit more flexible, but there was
22:13 - 22:18
some things that were like written in stone, like our ferry times and our time at Gros Morne.
22:19 - 22:23
They were kind of like written in stone and we knew we had to, you know, make longer drives
22:23 - 22:28
or push to get to those places in order to be able to see them for the time frames that we've had booked.
22:28 - 22:33
But luckily with the East Coast Trail and a couple other items, we were a little bit more flexible
22:33 - 22:36
and we could alter some things kind of as we went along.
22:36 - 22:43
But, yeah, there was years of planning that went into this and then, you know, even day of planning.
22:43 - 22:46
You know, some things kind of changed at the last minute.
22:46 - 22:51
So it was, yeah, lots lots of maps, lots of notes, lots of
22:51 - 22:53
lots of lots of planning.
22:53 - 22:58
Researching and googling and trying to find best spots and things like that or other people's
22:58 - 23:01
trip reports of, you know, where's the best place to go. Right?
23:01 - 23:06
So it's just a lot of the the normal research that we would do for any trip. But, Yeah.
23:06 - 23:08
It was a a long time.
23:09 - 23:12
Where did you dig up other people's trip reports?
23:12 - 23:18
For the East Coast Trail, the big 1 is actually the East Coast Trail Facebook group.
23:19 - 23:20
There's a couple of them.
23:20 - 23:25
There's some for just like day hikers and then there's, for the through hikers.
23:25 - 23:30
So I think it's on the through hiking Facebook group that it talks about all the different places to camp.
23:30 - 23:35
And there's I forget who had created it, but someone's made a a phenomenal Excel spreadsheet,
23:36 - 23:42
with all the water sources, all the campsites, and different lookouts and stuff along the way.
23:43 - 23:44
So we printed that out.
23:44 - 23:45
We had it with us.
23:46 - 23:53
And, yeah, that 1 was more flexible as far as where we were going to be staying because certain
23:53 - 23:56
sections of the trail are a lot more strenuous and a lot more difficult.
23:56 - 24:00
So we didn't know how far we'd actually be able to travel every single day.
24:01 - 24:06
As an example, similar to the West Coast Trail, there were times where we would only travel
24:06 - 24:08
1 kilometer in an hour of hiking.
24:10 - 24:14
Normally, like walking down a road, you can easily go 5 or 6 kilometers in an hour.
24:15 - 24:21
But yeah, we're making 0 headway, so I think the 1 day we only made it, like, 7 kilometers in the Yeah.
24:21 - 24:22
It was it was a slow day.
24:23 - 24:28
Just because of the amount of rain and how, like, slippery and kind of dangerous the paths were.
24:28 - 24:29
We just really took our time.
24:29 - 24:31
And as Jess said, this was our vacation.
24:32 - 24:36
So we weren't out there to, like, kill ourselves and set any new records or anything.
24:36 - 24:40
We wanted to see and take in as much as we absolutely could. So
24:41 - 24:42
Yeah. But we made up for it.
24:42 - 24:47
We had 1 7 kilometer day, and then the next day or the day after that was 20 kilometers.
24:47 - 24:48
So we made up for it on that day.
24:48 - 24:49
We had some great weather.
24:49 - 24:52
So we're just like, let's just keep on hiking. This is great.
24:53 - 24:58
We got to the most easterly point of Canada, which is pretty special to see and stand on.
24:58 - 25:04
And, so that was a pretty wicked day to have that many kilometers underneath our boots.
25:05 - 25:05
Cool.
25:06 - 25:08
On Cape Spear, did you get to Cape Spear?
25:08 - 25:11
Yeah. So that's the most easternly point of Canada.
25:11 - 25:20
So we started, at Bay Bulls, I believe is the name of, like, the the start of the section that we started on.
25:20 - 25:23
And then we hiked for 3 days to Cape Spear.
25:24 - 25:27
Got to see, like, the most easterly part of Canada.
25:27 - 25:32
And then we continued another 2 days up from there, and then popped off the trail.
25:33 - 25:35
But I had read that the trail is open year round.
25:35 - 25:39
So even in the winter, you can hike the East Coast Trail.
25:39 - 25:43
Yeah. There's there's certain sections I probably wouldn't be hiking in the winter to keep.
25:43 - 25:44
I can imagine.
25:44 - 25:48
The first section that we did, definitely, I wouldn't do that in the winter.
25:49 - 25:55
Just between all the rain and the cliffs and but the last portion that we did closer to Cape
25:55 - 25:59
Spear, I would think that would probably be manageable in the wintertime.
25:59 - 26:00
Oh, yeah. For sure.
26:00 - 26:06
Yeah. There were sections that were just, they marked them from moderate to strenuous.
26:06 - 26:13
So it was a good, the maps were really great in determining that and the strenuous, they were accurate with that name.
26:13 - 26:21
The moderate were pretty for your hiker, like, they're pretty good, but the strenuous, they did not lie. Yeah. Yeah.
26:23 - 26:27
Well, you mentioned, water sources.
26:27 - 26:28
What kind of water sources?
26:28 - 26:32
I'm I'm my tiny brain because you're beside the ocean, saltwater.
26:32 - 26:37
So what about what were what was non saltwater sources?
26:37 - 26:41
Like, you know, I'm picturing, you know, canoeing, filtering water, and stuff like that.
26:41 - 26:43
Is it was that what we were into?
26:43 - 26:48
Yeah. So the that was actually 1 of the better parts for the sections that we did.
26:49 - 26:51
The water was for the most part, very, very clear.
26:52 - 26:56
And as I said, we were hiking along the cliff edges.
26:56 - 26:59
And then so to my right, because we hiked north.
26:59 - 27:01
So to my right was the ocean.
27:01 - 27:06
And, like, generally it was like a 100 foot, 200 foot drop off to the ocean.
27:06 - 27:13
So anytime we stepped over a stream or a creek that just shot over the edge of the cliff down
27:13 - 27:14
hundreds of feet into the ocean.
27:14 - 27:20
So it just made for some, like, insane epic waterfalls, like just falling 100 of feet down a
27:20 - 27:21
sheer cliff into the ocean.
27:22 - 27:23
So those were our water sources.
27:23 - 27:28
There was a lot of, smaller, little creeks that we just stepped over as we were walking each
27:28 - 27:32
day there, you know, anywhere from 3 to 10, little creeks.
27:32 - 27:34
We hop over as we were going along.
27:34 - 27:35
There was a couple bridges.
27:36 - 27:42
So those were our water sources and they were all relatively pretty clean for the sections that we were doing.
27:43 - 27:49
We'd read that there are a couple sections where the water is very, you know, tea colored with
27:49 - 27:52
all the tannins similar to what we're familiar with with Algonquin.
27:53 - 27:59
But most part, our water was was was always nice and clean, and we still filtered it, obviously.
28:00 - 28:04
But, yeah, that's where we got our water from. Cool.
28:05 - 28:08
And you dehydrated food, took took dehydrated food with you or?
28:09 - 28:18
Yeah. So for this whole month long trip, we knew we were gonna be like camping and kinda being more secluded.
28:18 - 28:21
So we did a lot of dehydrated meals.
28:22 - 28:26
We did like 25 dehydrated meals ourselves before we went.
28:26 - 28:30
And that's what we were planning to use to even when we were in provincial and national parks,
28:31 - 28:34
because we were didn't know what the food situation was going to be.
28:34 - 28:39
We heard that groceries were gonna be quite expensive on East Coast as well.
28:39 - 28:46
So we just kinda had a meal plan, and we had set up a Rubbermaid bin, with different levels of a pantry.
28:46 - 28:51
So we had, you know, our oatmeals, our dehydrated meals that we could do for lunch or dinner.
28:51 - 28:58
So we kinda had a pretty big kitchen, set just so wherever the heck we ended up, we would always
28:58 - 29:01
know we'd have a meal that we enjoyed with us.
29:01 - 29:07
Yeah. On the East Coast Trail, we kinda went between our own dehydrated meals and then some,
29:07 - 29:11
you know, store bought dehydrated meals, which are just always so delicious.
29:14 - 29:19
Yeah. I I don't think I've ever had a store bought dehydrated meal.
29:19 - 29:22
Just because I look at the price tag on them and go, I don't think so.
29:23 - 29:29
Well, we had, there's a manufacturer who makes them here in London, I believe, OTG.
29:29 - 29:32
I think Yep. Both maybe. Or yes. In that area.
29:32 - 29:38
Somewhere in Ontario. And, so we we'd always wanted to try 1 of his.
29:38 - 29:40
And so we brought 1 of those along.
29:40 - 29:44
And we've we've always had some pretty good luck with the alpine air meals.
29:45 - 29:47
Yeah, they've always been delicious.
29:47 - 29:51
And for the most part, their serving sizes are like a serving size 2.
29:51 - 29:52
So we can we can share 1.
29:52 - 29:56
So even if it has like a $13 price tag, you know, we're splitting that.
29:56 - 29:58
So it's, you know, $6 a person. Yep.
29:59 - 30:00
So we won't do that all the time.
30:00 - 30:07
But the convenience factor of just being able to boil water, pour it right into the bag, you know, seal it up.
30:07 - 30:13
Jess will use that as like a hot water bottle and, you know, put it under her shirt and, like, keep keeps her warm.
30:13 - 30:16
And, you know, and then just eat right out of the bag.
30:16 - 30:19
So no dishes, no mess.
30:19 - 30:20
It's, you know, super easy that way.
30:20 - 30:23
So, we'll do that on the on the harder days.
30:23 - 30:27
So the days we hike longer or more exhausted and, like, you just get to camp.
30:27 - 30:32
You you just have enough energy to set the tent up and kinda lie down and then boil some water
30:32 - 30:38
that those are the days what we'll do those versus sometimes our meals, our dehydrated meals
30:38 - 30:41
will be, you know, you'll create some mess and you'll have some dishes to do.
30:41 - 30:41
So
30:41 - 30:45
Or they take more fuel too sometimes too if you need to let them simmer.
30:46 - 30:52
So it on the long haul hike trips, we'll mix it up just for ease a little bit.
30:52 - 30:57
And we're always a bit mindful to our comfort level with weights and what we wanna carry on our back.
30:58 - 31:03
So we went a lot lighter weight this hike and we were grateful for it.
31:03 - 31:05
It it completely was game changer on the trail.
31:05 - 31:06
Absolutely.
31:07 - 31:08
And I know you guys are into fishing.
31:08 - 31:10
So did you do any fishing while you're on the East Coast?
31:11 - 31:18
Oh, I definitely wanted to, But the fishing rules are a little trickier there.
31:19 - 31:22
You need multiple licenses to go fishing.
31:22 - 31:27
And for an out of province thing, it's it's more expensive.
31:29 - 31:32
And then we thought about even just doing like a cod fishing trip.
31:32 - 31:36
So like getting on someone's boat and having them take us out to go cod fishing.
31:38 - 31:43
But it just didn't end up working into our schedules with the weather and the things we wanted to do.
31:43 - 31:49
Again, that's we kinda put it in our brains that that's something, you know, even if I'm, you
31:49 - 31:55
know, 80 years old and, you know, I can't go hiking anymore, I could go stand on a fishing boat and go then.
31:55 - 31:58
So I'll just we'll put that on the list for for later.
31:59 - 32:02
We were pretty lucky on our return trip home.
32:03 - 32:09
We have some friends kinda back closer to home and in New Brunswick.
32:10 - 32:16
And, so we stopped with them for a couple of days and did some coastal fishing with them, where
32:16 - 32:19
you don't need a license to fish in coastal waters.
32:19 - 32:24
So, like, you're fishing kinda right in the ocean, essentially.
32:24 - 32:25
So that was kinda cool.
32:25 - 32:30
So we were able to do a little bit of fishing, but definitely not as much as, you know, we would have liked.
32:31 - 32:32
Mhmm. Next time. Did
32:32 - 32:33
you catch anything?
32:34 - 32:39
Yeah. So we, we caught some flounder, which are kind of cool.
32:39 - 32:42
I don't know if you've ever seen a flounder, but they're like the the flat fish that rest right
32:42 - 32:46
on the bottom, and then both their eyes are facing on 1 side of their body.
32:47 - 32:53
So we found some of them and some mackerel, I believe, which are just like, like a little tiny
32:53 - 32:56
torpedo, but bright blue and stuff like colors.
32:56 - 33:00
We don't have in fish here in Ontario.
33:00 - 33:02
Yeah. Very unique. A lot more vibrant.
33:03 - 33:05
And just pure muscle. You're swimming around in the ocean.
33:05 - 33:06
You have all the tides.
33:06 - 33:13
And so where we were fishing was very close to, the Bay of Fundy, which if you're not familiar
33:13 - 33:16
with the Bay of Fundy, that's where the the largest tides are in the world.
33:17 - 33:21
So twice a day, the tides are going in and out, like, 100 and 100 of feet.
33:22 - 33:25
So that was kind of pretty interesting to wrap our brains around.
33:25 - 33:31
We'd be standing on shore and you'd cast out and like an hour later, you're 10 feet from the water.
33:31 - 33:33
And, you know, it's just, you know, going out.
33:33 - 33:36
So and when we went, it was during a full moon.
33:36 - 33:38
So the tides were even more extreme.
33:40 - 33:44
So, yeah, that made for just absolutely what either constantly having to, like, chase the water
33:44 - 33:48
because it just keeps going out farther and farther and farther and farther.
33:48 - 33:50
So that was pretty cool.
33:51 - 33:55
But because we're on the ocean, the wildlife is more abundant.
33:55 - 33:58
So, a, we never knew what we were gonna catch.
33:58 - 33:59
You're casting into the ocean.
33:59 - 34:03
Are you gonna catch a whale or a shark or, like, what what's gonna be on your line?
34:04 - 34:09
So the 1 thing that happened to us almost every day that we went fishing is we're fishing and
34:09 - 34:10
we we catch 1 or 2 fish.
34:10 - 34:15
And then all of a sudden a seal or a sea lion or something would swim into our little bay.
34:15 - 34:18
And then there's no more fish.
34:18 - 34:20
They all left because the seal chased them away.
34:20 - 34:24
So, you know, that that was kind of a bummer, but at the same time, it was super cool to, like,
34:24 - 34:28
see, like, sea lions and, you know, big marine wildlife swimming around.
34:28 - 34:32
And, they were chasing the fish away, so we didn't catch anybody.
34:32 - 34:35
Anybody, but we got to see some wildlife.
34:35 - 34:36
So That's an okay trade off.
34:36 - 34:38
Yeah. Cool.
34:38 - 34:42
I don't know. What so fine.
34:42 - 34:44
There's your there's your East Coast.
34:44 - 34:50
But along the drive, were there any Bay of Fundy, were there any really cool things that that
34:50 - 34:55
will be a memory you're never going to you're gonna hang on till till you're our age?
34:57 - 35:01
Yeah. Well, definitely, Gros Morne, I'd say it was the most mountainous.
35:01 - 35:05
And again, because we don't really have mountains where we are right now.
35:06 - 35:09
There was 1 section where you're just driving.
35:09 - 35:14
I think it was like an hour, maybe hour drive along, and you were going up and down so much.
35:14 - 35:17
Like your ears were popping, like, constantly constantly.
35:17 - 35:22
So, like, that's how much elevation you were, like, changing in that hour. Yeah.
35:22 - 35:26
So that was that was a really cool section, that we got to drive.
35:27 - 35:29
I think gross morn in general
35:29 - 35:30
Mhmm.
35:30 - 35:36
Is just gonna stick out, And we were able to get 1 of the so their backcountry campsites are
35:36 - 35:44
they call them primitive campsites, and you can only book them I think it was the day of that you wanted to camp.
35:45 - 35:46
So much different than what we're used to.
35:46 - 35:51
So when we were booking Gros Morne, I'm like, I wanna book Backcountry, and it was only you
35:51 - 35:52
have to show up and book it in person.
35:53 - 35:56
So much different than we're what we're used to. But that Yeah.
35:57 - 36:02
That that backcountry campsite in Gros Morne, was 1 of my favorite nights there.
36:02 - 36:03
I think it was just fantastic.
36:03 - 36:05
It was right on the coast.
36:05 - 36:10
We had a herd of sheep visit us on the coast right there.
36:11 - 36:15
We ended up having dinner with them because they were quite happy to graze there.
36:16 - 36:22
So being able to have that experience was really high on my list of just awesome adventures.
36:23 - 36:30
But as far as far as driving, I'd say the second best was the Twilengate area, which is famous for like icebergs.
36:30 - 36:33
Obviously, a little bit earlier than August in the season.
36:34 - 36:38
But that just the landscapes there, like it definitely reminds you of something like you've
36:38 - 36:41
experienced in Europe with like the cliffs down into the ocean and the foggy little fishing villages.
36:41 - 36:47
That place we wish we could have spent more time in and explored some more of, because there were some great like
36:52 - 36:54
hiking trails there. Just, you know, even short ones.
36:55 - 37:01
So, yeah, that place I could we could have just driven around through those little towns and villages all day long.
37:01 - 37:01
Yep.
37:03 - 37:04
Cool.
37:04 - 37:06
Awesome. Any epic trips planned?
37:06 - 37:08
Or do you wanna disclose that information?
37:09 - 37:11
For next year, you're talking about?
37:12 - 37:14
Oh, this Next whenever. Yeah.
37:14 - 37:17
Yeah. Hopefully, we get a winter.
37:17 - 37:21
I don't really know what Southern Ontario is gonna bring for us this year.
37:21 - 37:25
Ideally, we would just do some ice fishing trips, around here.
37:25 - 37:29
But if it's anything like last year, we might not get that much ice.
37:29 - 37:33
So, yeah, for next year, we haven't really sat down.
37:33 - 37:38
We've still been we're still literally going through all the footage and the amount of pictures
37:38 - 37:41
and videos and stuff that we took from our East Coast trip.
37:41 - 37:45
We're still kinda trying to collaborate that altogether.
37:45 - 37:49
So we haven't put too too much thought into next year yet.
37:50 - 37:56
But in order to go to the national parks in Newfoundland that we went to, like Gros Morne, we
37:56 - 37:58
did have to buy a national parks pass.
37:59 - 38:01
So that's good for for 1 year.
38:01 - 38:06
So there's the possibility of visiting maybe a national park in Ontario.
38:06 - 38:09
We talked about that, for 2024 before our pass expires.
38:11 - 38:14
But, yeah, don't really know. Open to suggestions.
38:14 - 38:16
Gonna say open suggestions. Yeah.
38:16 - 38:17
What what do you guys have planned?
38:20 - 38:22
Surprisingly. That's so much.
38:22 - 38:27
So when when we when we camp, it's car camping.
38:27 - 38:27
Right.
38:28 - 38:33
So I don't know. That's generally a where do you wanna go, hon? Okay. I'll book it. I'll figure something out.
38:35 - 38:41
As far as backcountry because it's it's with our our our eldest, is what I usually do.
38:41 - 38:48
Where I've actually it has recently sort of come to my mind that I only backcountry camp with him.
38:48 - 38:51
Like, I don't I don't do anything with anybody else.
38:51 - 39:00
So we we actually we had a friend come on our fall trip, and that was a just for me, it was a mind blowing. I was like, woah.
39:01 - 39:03
Somebody else on the trip. How cool is that?
39:03 - 39:09
So it was because it was really enjoyable, just the the weird dynamic of having that third person,
39:10 - 39:19
I started planning to do maybe a a 6 or an 8 person trip to somewhere like, Killarney or, you
39:19 - 39:23
know, somewhere in that realm of the world next summer.
39:23 - 39:29
Try to try to see if we can snag, you know, 2 sites sort of closest together and, and do something like that.
39:29 - 39:30
Oh, very cool.
39:30 - 39:31
Very, very cool.
39:31 - 39:32
Yeah. Yeah. Well, we'll see.
39:32 - 39:36
It's very early planning, so I'm sure I'll trip over something at some point. But yeah.
39:36 - 39:39
Yeah. I think I I think I, like, just missed you.
39:39 - 39:44
I I believe you went to the wild lands this year, and I think I went Yes.
39:44 - 39:47
You were the week after or something. You and, and Cohen. Right?
39:47 - 39:47
That's right. Yeah.
39:48 - 39:50
Yeah. That was a That was a different experience.
39:51 - 39:55
I I've never done, what do they call that? Non operating.
39:55 - 39:59
So we Thomas and I were I don't know.
39:59 - 40:06
We were a ways north, and figured we'd we'd paddle down and and pick up a site closer down to
40:06 - 40:13
Head Lake, hang out there for another day, and then bail out early on the Sunday morning. We came down. There was nothing.
40:13 - 40:17
We never saw a site that was open, and we paddled around for hours.
40:17 - 40:22
So it was we just just kept going and ended up having to bail out a day early because yeah.
40:22 - 40:28
I didn't it hadn't occurred to me that it was Saturday, and it was beautiful, you know, towards
40:28 - 40:31
the end of the towards the end of the season, and it's like, ah, shoot.
40:31 - 40:34
So I'll be planning that differently next time.
40:34 - 40:38
Yeah. I've we were pretty lucky, like, we did on Monday to a Friday.
40:39 - 40:42
So Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, there was nobody.
40:42 - 40:48
As we were leaving, it was just like 1 canoe after another was passing us going in the other direction.
40:48 - 40:49
I'm like, well, I think we timed this quite well.
40:49 - 40:50
I, you know, I didn't really know what to expect.
40:50 - 40:53
That was my first time going there too to an to a non operating park.
40:53 - 40:56
And, yeah, the weekends are, are very busy.
41:00 - 41:07
Yep. And then it's weird to see boat traffic too. Like, I don't know.
41:07 - 41:13
There's there's a couple of times I've run into it in the Kawartha Highlands and in Algonquin,
41:13 - 41:14
but just tiny little boats.
41:14 - 41:19
These are, like, big ass boats. Wow. I don't know. Yeah.
41:19 - 41:21
It it messes with my brain.
41:21 - 41:25
I wanna see people, you know, people people power moving moving boats.
41:25 - 41:29
Right. Yeah. And that's why we're such big fans of Algonquin where there's only, like, a handful
41:29 - 41:31
of lakes that actually allow motorized boats.
41:32 - 41:35
And then even then, those motors have to be, you know, a certain size.
41:35 - 41:39
So Yeah. Like, 5 horse or I think they go up to 9 at some point. But Right.
41:39 - 41:41
That I'm kinda okay with that.
41:41 - 41:43
But these were, like, big.
41:45 - 41:47
Yeah. Yeah. Weird.
41:47 - 41:48
That's it for us for today.
41:48 - 41:52
Thank you so much to our special guest, Tenson Timber or Alex and Jess.
41:52 - 41:54
Please do check them out.
41:54 - 41:57
They're on YouTube, Instagram, all the all the things.
41:57 - 42:03
I think they have, like, 80 80 something videos up on YouTube now because I remember we we figured
42:03 - 42:07
out the number the last time you're on, and it was a much smaller number.
42:07 - 42:10
So way to put that content out.
42:10 - 42:13
Yeah. There'll be there'll be lots more coming too with our East Coast adventure.
42:13 - 42:17
We haven't even fully started posting that on YouTube. Just more so Instagram.
42:17 - 42:20
It sounds like it would be epic and beautiful. So Yeah. Yeah.
42:20 - 42:21
You definitely wanna check that out.
42:21 - 42:23
Really looking forward to that.
42:23 - 42:25
And and check us out too. We're on YouTube also.
42:25 - 42:28
We are on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter.
42:28 - 42:32
And, if you'd like to reach out to us, we love to hear from you.
42:32 - 42:36
Our email address is hi@supergoodcampaign.com. That's hi@supergoodcampaign.com.
42:38 - 42:43
Or you can just check us out on our website, site, and, we will talk to you again soon. Bye.
42:43 - 42:44
Bye.
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