Take a drive...to France

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Scooter
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Take a drive...to France

Post by Scooter »

Drive from Canada to France? A new ferry from Newfoundland will allow you to do it

FORTUNE, N.L. — If all goes well, Canadians will soon be able to drive to a little-known corner of France.

The French islands of St-Pierre-Miquelon just off the south coast of Newfoundland — North America’s last vestige of colonial New France — have long attracted adventurous travellers seeking an unusual European experience.

But the ferry that links Fortune, N.L., with the windswept archipelago 40 kilometres away only carries walk-on passengers in the spring and summer months.

Later this year, however, the tiny French territory plans to start using two new ferries that can carry up to 15 cars, 200 passengers and three tractor-trailers year-round.

“It’s like a piece of France right next door,” Fortune Mayor Charles Penwell said Tuesday.

“The language is different from what we’re used to in Newfoundland, but it’s very similar … to the (language spoken in) the Basque region of France … It offers traditional French food, French atmosphere, and the music and song of France. It’s unique. This archipelago is indeed a part of Europe that’s right next to our border.”

Penwell said St-Pierre-Miquelon — about the size of Honolulu and home to about 6,000 French nationals — doesn’t get the attention it deserves.

“We get frustrated,” he said in an interview from Fortune, population 1,400. “I think there’s a fair number of people even in Newfoundland and Labrador who don’t realize it’s there.”

The islands were returned to France in 1815 after several stints of British occupation.

The French government now provides hefty subsidies to support its outpost, which is heavily dependent on government jobs, fishing and tourism.

The smallest of the islands, St-Pierre, is also the most populated, with colourful clapboard homes on tidy, winding streets.

Tourists can take advantage of fine French wines — at reasonable prices. In the town of St-Pierre, there’s a regular midday siesta and access to smaller boats that serve the larger, sparsely populated islands of Miquelon and Langlade.

Restaurants and bakeries specializing in fresh seafood and French patisserie bustle with foreigners in summer.

Though often draped in thick fog and scoured by powerful offshore winds, the largely barren islands offer precious isolation for campers and hikers.

The new ferry service was supposed to start May 15, but the port authority in Fortune hasn’t been able to scrape together enough money to upgrade its wharf.

“I think they’re still about a million dollars short,” Penwell said. “So they’re looking to the provincial government and the (Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency) to see if they can come up with a bit more money … So far there’s been no resolution.”

Negotiations with federal and provincial officials are ongoing, but Penwell said a temporary solution is in the works, though he isn’t sure when the wharf will be ready.

The head of the independent port authority in Fortune declined comment Tuesday.

Newfoundland and Labrador’s tourism minister, Christopher Mitchelmore, issued a statement saying he’s working with the Fortune Port Corporation to find the money.

“I met with officials from St-Pierre-Miquelon on Friday, and am hopeful they can reach an agreement with St-Pierre-Miquelon which will provide them with options to finance the expansion,” Mitchelmore said.
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Long Run
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Re: Take a drive...to France

Post by Long Run »

Learn something new every day. Thanks for sharing. This outpost looks ripe for a French version of Fortitude or The Kettering Incident. Coming soon to a netflix near you?

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BoSoxGal
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Re: Take a drive...to France

Post by BoSoxGal »

I’m sure it’s quite lovely - but I think it’s much easier to visit ‘France’ by taking a car to the old city of Quebec.
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Take a drive...to France

Post by Bicycle Bill »

Since they didn't have a way of getting cars there before, other than to maybe ship them as freight or cargo, do they even roads suitable for motor vehicles?  This sounds more like Mackinac Island where private vehicles are banned and everyone gets around with horse carts, wagons, bicycles, or just — gasp! — WALKS!!
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rubato
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Re: Take a drive...to France

Post by rubato »

We have been there! St Pierre et Michelon is where we discovered the fact that lunch is a cultural treasure en France and why we took three separate trips to that glorious country! A country and a culture tres magnifique! Canadians are are weak and pale ambassadors of a far greater culture.

I have pencilled in a trip which will include St Pierre et Michelon next year(2019)




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rubato

rubato
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Re: Take a drive...to France

Post by rubato »

The only downside, and we know it for a fact, is that postcards will travel back to France before they are sent on to the US which adds the inefficiency of the French postal system to the amazing efficiency of the US postal system.

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RayThom
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Take a drive...to France

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