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Haunted Hangouts and Fairy Fields in LBMCOC

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The Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove Museum season is almost over, but that doesn't mean guests and locals can't explore this beautiful community while the weather is still mild. Many tourists and practically all residents of LBMCOC will know about spots like Middle Cove Beach or the Outer Cove Lookout, but they may not know some of these other locations, or at least that they're reputedly the stomping grounds of ghosts and fairies. Roche's Meadow   We don't know for sure where Roche's Meadow is, but it's speculated to be (or to have been) on Barnes Road. No, not the urban, Victorian Barnes Road in St. John's ⁠— the idyllic, countryside Barnes Road in Outer Cove. A local woman recalled a memory of this area from her childhood: she was on her way home with her brother around dusk when the two of them saw "three little fellows dancin' up the wall... they'd dance and they'd hop... they were just like little elves. That's the truth

Blueberry Pomegranate Jam

Today's #JulyIsForBlueberries recipe comes from my brother. He was never one for baking himself growing up, but definitely had a huge sweet tooth. Once he moved to Alberta, he started experimenting with cooking and baking and has become quite the accomplished cook! He says he makes this jam a lot up there, but it will never taste as good as when he gets to come home and use some of our local wild blueberries! Blueberry Pomegranate Jam 5 cups blueberries 7 cups sugar 1 (1 3/4 oz) package no sugar added dry pectin 1 cup pomegranate juice, divided 1. Place blueberries in a large pot. 2. Slowly add 1/2 cup pomegranate juice to blueberries, while lightly crushing blueberries with a potato masher. 3. Carefully measure out sugar into a large bowl or measuring cup. 4. Add pectin to berries a little at a time, stirring constantly. 5. Add remaining pomegranate juice to berries. 6. Heat berries on high, stirring constantly until mixture begins to boil. 7. Add sugar all at

Blueberry Buckle

Here's another blueberry recipe for #JulyIsForBlueberries. This one was given to my family by a family friend years back and we have loved making it every season! I like to serve these slightly warm with a little vanilla ice cream on the side. Blueberry Buckle Ingredients: Cake: 1/4 cup butter, softened 1/2 cup sugar 1 egg 1 cup flour 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/3 cup milk 2 cup blueberries Topping: 1/3 cup sugar 1/3 cup flour 1/4 cup butter 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon Directions: 1. Preheat oven to 350F. 2. Grease 8 inch square pan. 3. Cream together the butter, sugar and egg. 4. Sift together flour, baking powder and salt. 5. Mix flour with creamed butter mixture. 6. Add milk and mix. 7. Spread mixture in greased pan and spread blueberries on top. 8. Combine topping ingredients and scatter over blueberries. 9. Bake for 40 - 45 minutes. Once again, if you make this and want to share, please send a piece to the museum! Katie

Blueberry Squares

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This month is #JulyIsForBlueberries, celebrating the phenomenal blueberry found here in Newfoundland. Though they aren't quite ready for picking yet, I thought I'd share a new blueberry recipe every Friday since it is #FoodwaysFriday! These blueberry squares with meringue topping go great with a cup of tea and a good book. Blueberry Squares Cake: 3 tablespoons butter 1/3 cup sugar 2 egg yolks (save whites for meringue) 2/3 cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/4 cup milk 1/4 teaspoon vanilla Directions: 1. Preheat oven to 350F. 2. Cream butter and sugar. 3. Beat in the egg yolks. 4. Sift dry ingredients and add to creamed butter, alternating with the milk and vanilla. 5. Pour into a greased 8-inch square pan and bake in preheated oven for 18 to 20 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean. 6. Let cool before adding meringue topping. Meringue: 2 egg whites 6 tablespoons sugar 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 cup fresh b

The Outraged Fisherman

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Historically, Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove was largely isolated from the culture and influences of St. John’s. In the 1800’s Logy Bay residents would walk every Sunday to the Basilica in St. John’s and residents of Outer Cove and Middle Cove made an equally gruelling trek to Torbay just to attend mass. It wouldn’t be until 1918 with the arrival of Father O’Callaghan that the parish church would be constructed. Most would have had to travel to St. John’s to trade, as well. Every spring, for example, fishermen from Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove would sell their freshly caught salmon in the city, which in the early 1900s fetched around twenty cents a pound. For most residents, St. John’s was simply a place you went to for religious reasons or to do business. It was a place that was difficult to travel to and at the end of the day the events in St. John’s had little impact on the lives of the people living in Logy Bay, Outer Cove, and Middle Cove. The price of salmon. The Evenin

The Outer Cove Air

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Today is  #CleanAirDay in Canada, a day to highlight how important good air quality is for our health and our environment. We may be biased but we believe that, here in Newfoundland, we have some of the freshest air in all of Canada. Outer Cove Beach, 2017. Photo credit: Lisa Daly And, if we may be so bold, perhaps Outer Cove has some of the nicest air in all of Newfoundland! Some people from St. John's certainly thought so, according to stories from Mary Boland of Outer Cove about her mother and the laundry from St. John's. Mary was born and lived in the Rocky Hills area of Outer Cove in 1920, and during an oral history interview in 2000 conducted by her son, Martin Boland, she shared the following story. When Mary was in grade 7, which was likely around 1932, her mother Catherine Hickey (nee Dyer) broke her arm, so Mary left school to help her mother out at home. Her mother took in the laundry for several affluent families from the St. John's area. At the ti

The Forerunner

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It's a wet and miserable day outside, but the museum is cozy and we've got the kettle on. It's the perfect type of day to have a mug up and share some stories. My favourite kind of stories to tell on a wet and windy day are ghost stories, and I think I've found a good one. Fishing Stages - Outer Cove (from DAI) I've been doing some digging in the collections of the Digital Archives Initiative at Memorial University , looking for interesting stories from the Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove area. This one comes by way of correspondence between "Big Willie" Croke and Martin Boland. "Big Willie" tells the story of Jimmy Carroll, a planter from Outer Cove, who had signed on as a deckhand for the S.S. Beverley when he was young. The S.S. Beverley was to transport codfish between Harbour Grace and Gibraltar in the winter of 1918. According to "Big Willie" Croke, Jimmy said, "I was living on top of the world that day and so e