Keep your childheart forever...
Point Pelee National Park is the southernmost part of mainland Canada extending for 15 kilometers into Lake Erie. The park is a sandspit formation or simply a spit which is a landmass that was formed due to transportation of sediment by long-shore drifts and currents along a beach. About 70% of Point Pelee is composed of marsh that is dotted with cattails and ponds. Point Pelee has the longest continuous natural beach in Essex County. The southernmost beach of mainland Canada!
Sun almost going down to the end of the lake, watching kids playing at the beach, seems going back to the childhood… How nice keeping the child-heart forever…
This summer is a very special summer, I could hardly feel it, either staying at work office or home wearing sweater due to air-conditioning during the weekdays… Only going out on the weekend, so hot summer (over 30C most of daytime, 67 years record high, no longer arctic anymore ;))... not comfortable staying in the hotel due to virus when going out, had to drive back very late on the end of the day (12am last night) because one-way driving is 3 hours on the highway, no way to take sunrise photos, just sunset… I called it COVID summer… ;))
Keep your childheart forever...
Point Pelee National Park is the southernmost part of mainland Canada extending for 15 kilometers into Lake Erie. The park is a sandspit formation or simply a spit which is a landmass that was formed due to transportation of sediment by long-shore drifts and currents along a beach. About 70% of Point Pelee is composed of marsh that is dotted with cattails and ponds. Point Pelee has the longest continuous natural beach in Essex County. The southernmost beach of mainland Canada!
Sun almost going down to the end of the lake, watching kids playing at the beach, seems going back to the childhood… How nice keeping the child-heart forever…
This summer is a very special summer, I could hardly feel it, either staying at work office or home wearing sweater due to air-conditioning during the weekdays… Only going out on the weekend, so hot summer (over 30C most of daytime, 67 years record high, no longer arctic anymore ;))... not comfortable staying in the hotel due to virus when going out, had to drive back very late on the end of the day (12am last night) because one-way driving is 3 hours on the highway, no way to take sunrise photos, just sunset… I called it COVID summer… ;))