Ad Finder
  
 Tuesday February 9, 2010 
Truro, NS
 0°C
Wind: 19 Km/h
Humidity: 93 %
Feels like -5°C
(view forecast)
ADVERTISE
ARCHIVE
COMPANY DIRECTORY
SPECIAL SECTIONS
NEWS TIPS
SUBSCRIBE
Click to view today's Smart Edition
Click here to view today's SmartEdition

HOW TO ACTIVATE YOUR SMART EDITION ACCOUNT

H1N1 Virus - The Canadian Press

tv listings


Colchester Sports

In Memoriam


READER POLL
What's your reaction regarding the latest increase in costs – $24.6-million – to build a new hospital in Colchester County?
 
Shocked
Very disappointed
Not surprised

| view past polls

ITS


Town of Truro map


Money
Business Journal

Sign up for our FREE online daily news service. Your up to the minute business information source.
Business Journal

Email:

LOCAL NEWS   Local News RSS Feed
Last updated at 11:21 PM on 22/02/08  

‘PHANTOM SHIP’ SPOTTED BY VISITOR print this article

SHERRY MARTELL
The Truro Daily News

Mathieu Giguere, a 17-year-old Katimavik participant visiting the Tatamagouche area, points to where he believes he saw the legendary Phantom Ship floating in the Tatamagouche Bay.
Mathieu Giguere, a 17-year-old Katimavik participant visiting the Tatamagouche area, points to where he believes he saw the legendary Phantom Ship floating in the Tatamagouche Bay.

TATAMAGOUCHE – When Mathieu Giguere looked across Tatamagouche Bay in mid-January and saw a brightly lit ship it didn’t seem like anything out of the ordinary.
The 17-year-old was used to viewing late night harbour cruises on the St. Lawrence River  near his home  in Sorel-Tracy, Quebec but soon he realized the bay was blocked by ice causing him to question what he was staring at.
“It was  bright white and gold and looked like a schooner with three masts, like the Bluenose,” he said.
“I was like, ‘that’s cool to see a ship here.’”
Giguere is participating in a Katimavik program in Tatamagouche and was taking advantage of an unscheduled night to work out at the Shapen-Up fitness centre in the Byer’s Building on Main Street when he stepped outside for fresh air around 10 p.m. noticing the glowing ship.
He called out to  another Katimavik participant to come see the ship in the harbour but  she continued with her workout, leaving Giguere to admire the sight on his own.
He watched the glowing ship for several minutes then returned inside to finish his workout and when he left the building around 11 p.m. it had disappeared, a feat he thought impossible because of its size and the ice in Tatamagouche Bay.
One of the province’s most famous ghost stories tells the tale of a Phantom Ship that has appeared periodically in the Northumberland Strait since the 1700s.
Some people who have witnessed the phenomenon say it resembles a  three-masted square rigger that is glowing with fire and a few believe they have seen people jumping from its decks to escape a tragic end.
Before arriving in the small rural village, the teenager said he had never heard of the legend and it wasn’t until he was billeting with local historian Dale Swan who shared a wealth of local history with the young man that he understood what he saw.
“I was like, ‘oh wait, that is actually what I saw’ and we talked more and more about it,” said Giguere.
“Sometimes people are afraid to tell things like that because people will react badly, people can think what they want, I know what I saw.”
Swan said the young man was genuinely surprised to hear the local folklore.
“All of a sudden it was the expression on his face as I talked,” said Swan.
“No mention was made by me of how many masts were on it.
“He was animated when he was telling me about seeing it.”
Swan is convinced Giguere knew nothing of the Phantom Ship legend before their conversation.
Tatamagouche artist Barb Gregory captured the Phantom Ship on canvass in 1991, an image she developed by researching documented sightings of the local legend.
Around the same time she opened the Phantom Ship Art Gallery in Bay Head, dozens of people who witnessed the burning ship shared their first-hand accounts
“Basically they are all interconnected and one doesn’t contradict the other,” she said.
Gregory said the Phantom Ship has been seen at varying times throughout the year and in all seasons by people of all ages.
 The visiting teenager isn’t the only person who has sighted the ghostly vessel in recent months.
Tatamagouche Mountain resident Melvin Langille is convinced he saw it one evening in October while star gazing out across the bay.
“I saw this ball of flame above the horizon.
“At first I thought it was a light on land then realized it was over the water,” said Langille.
“I believe in all that stuff and I don’t know what else it would be.”

smartell.news@ns.sympatico.ca




23/02/08  


 
Recent local news:




Past local news :

February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009
August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009
February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008
August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008
February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007
August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007
February 2007

 






Weblocal - Search. Find. Share.

Are you searching for a product, a service or a local company?

Search
Local Deals, local advertisers, everyday!

February 9, 2010


PHOTO GALLERIES
Snowmobile races on Sutherlands Lake
NSCC Truro campus Mawi'omi
NSCC Truro campus Mawi'omi
Year in photos 2009
Year in photos 2009
Biathlon
Community photos
Community photos
view all | submit photo

Flyer Zone

Highway cams

E-reporter

Canadian Living Recipe of the day
Recipe of the day
Slow Cooker Pulled Pork Tacos
Slow Cooker Pulled Pork Tacos
More >>


The Truro Daily News   Video-on-Demand
United Breaks Guitars 2
United Breaks Guitars 2
United Breaks Guitars
United Breaks Guitars
Poem for Tanya Jean Brooks
Poem for Tanya Jean Brooks
view all | submit video

RSS Feeds

TOP 10 ARTICLES

Advertise Online

Judy Morrell National Advertising
Debbie Brown Special features
Website Advertising Information


The Truro Daily News
A division of Transcontinental Media Inc.
6 Louise St. - P.O. Box 220 - Truro - Nova Scotia - B2N 5C3
Contents of this website are copyright © The Daily News news@trurodaily.com



Click here to view our privacy policy.

A Transcontinental Media, Local Solutions Group site

This site is part of the Transcontinental Media Network


Daily Newspapers:
Nova Scotia: Amherst Daily News; Cape Breton Post; The News (New Glasgow); Truro Daily News.
Prince Edward Island: Journal Pioneer (Summerside); The Guardian (Charlottetown).
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Telegram (St. John’s); The Western Star (Corner Brook).
Saskatchewan: Moose Jaw Times-Herald; Prince Albert Herald.
Weeklies and Specialty Publications:
Nova Scotia: The Advance; The Hants Journal; The Kings County Register; Kentville Advertiser; The Annapolis County Spectator; The Yarmouth County Vanguard; The Digby County Courier; The Shelburne County Coast Guard; The Citizen; Nova Scotia Business Journal; Burnside News; Farm Focus; Springhill Record; Bedford Sackville Weekly News; Dartmouth Cole Harbour Weekly News; Halifax West Clayton Park Weekly News; Halifax News Net; The Atlantic Construction & Transportation Journal
New Brunswick: Sackville Tribune Post; ENBusiness.
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Charter; The Southern Gazette; The Compass; The Labradorian; The Aurora; The Beacon; The Pilot; The Packet; The Gulf News; The Coaster; The Georgian; The Nor’wester; The Advertiser; The Northern Pen.
Saskatchewan:Southwest Booster; SaskNewsNow; Coronach Triangle News; Grenfell Sun/Broadview Express; Oxbow Herald; Radville/Deep South Star.
Consumer Magazines:
Canadian Living; Elle Canada; Homemakers; More; Good Times; Canadian Gardening; Canadian Home & Country; Style at Home; Western Living; Ottawa at Home; Vancouver Magazine; TV Guide; The Hockey NewsMochasofaOccasions MagazineGolf Ontario StyleGolf EastGroup Travel Planner.
Services:
Weblocal; Merkado

Advertise with TDN.com