We arrived late at night, picked up our rental car and drove to Aare's for a late dinner before bed.
The next morning we awoke to a fresh Newfoundland day and breakfasted on fare we had brought from the St. Lawrence farmer's market.
We noted that Aare had stocked up on firewood, soda water and coffee in anticipation of our arrival. Even so, we still required a quick trip into town to stock up on beer and wine ....
Later that afternoon it was off for an "easy" hike on the Bottle Cove trail, one of the OBIEC trails we had hiked before.
The hike started innocuously enough with an open sunny sky and wonderful ocean views over ground we had been on before.
We passed a sign indicating a four kilometre loop hike and kept going.
At some point we may have diverged from the easy trail as we soon found ourselves well past four kilometres and the trail still going forward.
Then the ascent began and it just kept going.
Higher and steeper on a trail that was still marked but became thinner and thinner!
So we followed it and soon found ourselves in ever steeper terrain but with wonderful views as compensation (not to mention a good sweat on our bodies!).
We finally reached the end of the trail where it looped around at the top of a hill, offering more amazing views, before descending back down the way we ascended.
On the way back down we suddenly started noticing patches of chanterelle mushrooms and began gathering them up as we had steak dinner (Belgian Blue!) planned for dinner.
All told we must have found at least a half dozen patches of chanterelles and perhaps 350g in total of the fresh fungi (which sell in Toronto for around $80 a kilo) found their way into our possession and ultimately our bellies before the end of the night!
After our wonderful steak and mushroom sauce dinner it was time to partake of our other favourite Newfoundland activity, sitting by the firepit!
As the fire raged we drank beer and wine until the wee hours, indulging in scintillating conversation (or so it seemed at the time) until we were incapable of doing so any more. Then sleep.
The next day the weather was a bit cloudier, as were our consciousnesses, so we opted for a more relaxed day of board games and downtime before dinner and another round of late night festivities around the firepit, although this one more tempered by the knowledge that we were off to Buchans the next day.
The next morning it was a quick goodbye to Aare before we piled into the rental car for the three and a half hour drive to Buchans. After a stop at the lovely "Eddy's Restaurant" for breakfast and socks, we arrived in Millertown before noon and checked in at the Lakeshore Inn before Christos met Bob at the coreshack at 1PM.
Christos and Bob went out to visit the trenches Canstar had recently completed and returned to Millertown in time for dinner for the three of us at the Lakeshore Inn.
After dinner, the three of us went over to visit Charlie and Dianne (two prospectors who work on occasion for Canstar), where we all socialized for a few hours, with much conversation on the Buchans Camp and its history, before we made it back to our lodgings sometime in the wee hours.
The next morning we grabbed coffee and a light bite at the Lakeshore Inn before heading off on the road back to Deer Lake and the flight home.
Around noon we grabbed a full breakfast at Eddy's, and with the weather looking good and our flight not until 7pm, we decided that we had enough time to stop at the Alexander Murray trail for the first hike we have ever had in Newfoundland without Aare!
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