There were over 15 kids who came yesterday to the Joggins Fossil Centre for a free day camp and we all had fun making tie-dyed t-shirts, human trackways, digging for "fossils" (in our new sandbox!), crafts, water games, and practicing how to respond in a fire and much more! Thank-you to our sponsors and supporters who helped to make this day happen:
Carter's Sports Cresting Ltd: donation of t-shirts
River Hebert Co-op: donation of food for our healthy kid's camp lunches
101.7 CKDH: promotion
The Bayview Restaurant: donation of supplies
The Joggins Volunteer Fire Department: Sparky and the Fire Chief (Laurie Melanson)
The next FREE day camp is on August 14 from 8:30am - 5pm - be sure to register early as space is very limited! Registration is closed after August 10.
Friday, July 20, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Interpreters: from cannons to calamites
The interpreters at the Joggins Fossil Cliffs have diverse backgrounds that have taken them all over the country, (and in some cases, the world), and allow them to meet many different people. Sometimes, those people make a second appearance!
Sophie Prayal-Brown, bilingual student interpreter at the Joggins Fossil Centre and funded through the Federal Young Canada Works program, was previously an interpreter at the Halifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada. During this time, Sophie gave tours from the perspective of an officer's wife in the 1800s.
During one tour, Sophie met Anne and Germain Grill of Strasbourg, France, who were visiting Canada for the first time. When visiting Canada for the second time, Anne and Germain explored the Joggins Fossil Cliffs. It was during this second visit that they ran into Sophie again!
It is a small world after all! If Anne and Germain visit Canada for a third time, they will may be on the lookout for Sophie. You never know when or where you will run into someone again!
To learn more about the team at the Joggins Fossil Cliffs, check out our staff biographies.
Sophie Prayal-Brown, bilingual student interpreter at the Joggins Fossil Centre and funded through the Federal Young Canada Works program, was previously an interpreter at the Halifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada. During this time, Sophie gave tours from the perspective of an officer's wife in the 1800s.
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Sophie interpreting the Noon Gun at the Halifax Citadel in 2009 |
During one tour, Sophie met Anne and Germain Grill of Strasbourg, France, who were visiting Canada for the first time. When visiting Canada for the second time, Anne and Germain explored the Joggins Fossil Cliffs. It was during this second visit that they ran into Sophie again!
Anne, Sophie, and Germain at the Joggins Fossil Centre, 2012 |
To learn more about the team at the Joggins Fossil Cliffs, check out our staff biographies.
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