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Prince Edward Island
I was pleasantly not surprised to find I'd added one more faulty prediction to my lengthening list. Nice is an appropriate adjective for PEI. It's an island of rolling farmland. There are fields of corn, but it isn't Iowa. These are family farms. There are lovely beaches, a lighthouse or two, and very little else to attract crowds. The people are friendly.
The hottest tourist attraction on the island is the town of Cavendish, the home of Anne of Green Gables. Well of course Anne Shirley is a fictional character, but her creator, Lucy Maud Montgomery, lived there, and the house that inspired her story is preserved.
This being the biggest tourist attraction in the province, there are collateral lures. I was a little disturbed to see the bright plastic of Shining Waters Fun Park and even more so to find they Cavendish has its own Ripley's Believe It or Not Museum, where you can see a two-headed sheep, a hand painted vampire bat, and a twenty foot section of the Berlin Wall. My alarm dissolved when I realized that's about all the blight there is. The area is like Cape Cod as envisioned by PattiPage. There are no condos or McMansions or even cottage clutter to block your ocean view. There are tourist cabins, but few motels. There's not a fast food restaurant in sight. If your children are bored with all the scenery, they can play miniature golf.
Our waitress was so friendly, she was thankful that it was September, and the crowds had vanished so she had time to find out where we were from and what we thought of her island home. Chez Yvonne's was about to close for the season , and the mistress of the tiny nearby post office said that in a few weeks you could fire a cannon down Route 6 without the danger of hitting anyone.
I like to imagine Plymouth and Cape Cod as they must have been in those days, and the closest I can come to it is Prince Edward Island. I want to go back and spend more time getting to know the people, wandering the countryside, and eating the beautiful food. The twenty-first century looms offshore. It has already enveloped much of Nova Scotia, but the countryside of Anne Shirley still exists, and it is worth the trip.
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