Well the weather in eastern Ontario was
awesome! We covered almost 250 km of backroads across the entire width of the United Counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry.
Along the St. Lawrence River are lots of War of 1812 historical sites stretching from the Quebec border west. We stared our tour in Glen Walter, ON, burial place of the first Surgeon General of the Canadian military. Eastward through Lancaster, hometown of
Sgt Claude Joseph Nunney, VC, past the Glengarry cairn (an 1840 conical stone monument, with stairway, to the Glengarry and Argyle Regiment, at the mouth of the Raisin River) and to the Quebec border. North we went through St. Raphaels,
and visited the ruins of first parish of Bishop Alexander MacDonnell, the warrior-bishop of Upper Canada (and founder of what is now the SD&G Highlanders). Westward on to St. Andrew's, home of the oldest stone church in Ontario (and a great Scottish pub), thence towards Lunenburg, Osnabruck Centre, Boucks Hill and Williamsburg.
We turned south to Cardinal along the St. Lawrence Seaway, site of many of the
"Lost Villages", and passed the massive seaway locks at Iroquois. We travelled east to Morrisburg and visited the
Crysler Farm Battlefield Park, passed the site of the Battle of Hoople Creek (a delaying action), through Cornwall, hub of the St Lawrence Seaway and home station of the SD&G Highlanders (and the CF School of Aerospace Control Operations). Went for dinner at a Chinese buffet and took in the excellent waterfront fireworks in Cornwall (and some from the Akwesasne reserve) until almost 2330 hours.
A super Canada Day indeed!!!