Day 22

Another lazy day with a slow start.
We're realizing now how worn out we were from our first two weeks on
the road. Breakfast involves a little bit of a walk through “camp
town”, as we call it, to retrieve our groceries out of the
community fridge. Whoever volunteers to make this walk usually has
coffee awaiting them upon their return.
It's beautiful and sunny today, so we
spend a few hours by the pool. This campground miraculously has some
vintage Vanity Fairs from the mid-90's; anyone who knows me knows my
love of a Vanity Fair. Lying poolside with a pile of magazines is my
idea of heaven.

After a chlorinated hour or two, we
decide to venture out; not too far this time, not as far as
yesterday. There is a coast that's within our “neighborhood” that
we keep bypassing, so we decide to check it out. We ride west
through Rustico, Cavendish and Stanely Bridge. In Long River we pop
into the Kitchen Witch restaurant, a little place that's both
charming and haunting with it's stark black and white palette. It's
in an old school house from the late 1800's, and run by an American
ex-pat and her Canadian husband of 35 odd years. Though these people
are wonderfully nice, their food was a snooze fest and their décor
is comfortable, though eccentric and dispensable, like a flea market
booth. They do offer tea leaf readings though, but the leaf reader
wasn't there today.

From our disappointing lunch we
continue west to Malpeque, a name you may recognize as it generally
proceeds “mussels”. This little harbor village is lovely, and
somewhat abandoned at the hour we visited. This allowed us to poke
through the marina, greet the dock cat, and take pictures of things
these fishermen see everyday of their lives. From here we circle
around east again, this time taking deep red dirt roads through
farmer's fields. PEI is a motorcycle riders dream. The Girl is doing
much better now that we're treating her like the cruiser that she is
rather than a touring bike.

On our way home, we stop in a
Poissonerie (now just called simply a fish market) and buy mussels
and clams. If you turned your head a few degrees to the right, you
could see the very water where these creatures were just a few short
hours ago. The
very water, as they have an aqua culture outfit
in this particular bay. We also get a loaf of their crusty homemade
bread. From our favorite country store at the bottom of the road to
our campground we snag some more salad mix and a lemon.
Because of the recent rain, we can now
have a campfire. We buy the wood from the campground, it seems like
some kind softwood like fir. The Pirate gets the fire blazing, and
then tends it down to hot coals. We put our tall, borrowed stock pot
over the coals, and wait for the 2 inches of water to come to a boil.
Once it boils, we add the clams first, and let them steam about 2
minutes. On top of the clams we dump the mussels, and cover that up
for another 10 minutes exactly. Meanwhile, the last of the garlic
butter we bought in Gaspe is melting in a Sierra cup near the coals.

While this is coming together, a nice
little thunderstorm blows through. There we stand, in our rain gear,
passing Crown Royal back and forth, waiting for these bivalves to
blossom. The storm clears just as the food is ready. It has left
everything soaked, so we simply dump the pot of shellfish over the
picnic table like a giant wooden colander. We put it all back into
the pot, squeeze half the lemon over it all, and commence to feast.
We tear bread off and smear it thick with ADL butter, and pluck salad
greens out of the bag with our fingers. This is the way it should be.
It seems clear to me that PEI is a
place for ingredients, and not amazing preparation. Granted, I have
been here only 3 days, but in those days I have figured out to revel
in the groceries that are available here, and not the restaurants.
Love! Love! Love! I lay in bed every evening and read the adventures of The Pirate and Mermaid!... Such a treat before closing my eyes!
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