Cape D’Or

Cape D’Or is a place of magic and mystic, a land where you are not in control and accept it. An area forgotten. I make memories every time I have ever been there. No two trips are the same except the risks.

I wanted to show the longest way in that I hike in first that has year round access, it is a hike merely just to get to here truly, to me this is the real Driftwood beach. The one that is inaccessible except for a long hike on rugged terrain that wants to be left alone. You won’t see many photo’s from here.

Looking towards Chignecto provincial park, going back this year for better pictures of here now that I have better equipment and experience.

You are met with a relentless surf with warnings you do not belong here

Massive boulders gives your ankles strength or collapse, I once had to turn around based off someone with ankles that kept rolling and it was too hard on them to continue. No jokes here the tide two times a day goes over your head so you cannot be there for long.

The original reason I went here was minerals

Had to downgrade the quality of this to post sadly, I was about 200 feet up here, I would search this rock piles for minerals and memories. You look up and know the 5-600 overhanging cliffs is above you as you are always in it’s shadow. With all the rocks under me, I know they once were above. There was a time in the rain I was here and a plane fly overhead and I saw a rock the size of a jeep fall 200 meters away, I left immediately.

There is a thing I do with the background from Van Gogh’s Field of poppies where I make that the texture to my photo’s. I have a one of kind set of 3 of these in my living room. They are all 3 feet by 4 and I love them intrinsically. This is my Cape D’Or edition.

Next
Next

Parenting