Thursday 20 September 2012

The Diefenbunker





About half an hour’s drive from Ottawa is the Diefenbunker. It was built during the Cold War, back when Canada’s proximity to the USA was a little more dangerous than it is now. 535 people could be housed in the bunker and it was designed to be lived in for 30 days while the air literally cleared of any radioactive stuff. Not sure if 30 days would actually be enough for radioactive stuff to clear, but hey, I’m not the expert. That was if the bomb was dropped around the Parliament area. And was a blah blah tonne bomb. Only to find out after the war that the USSR actually had a bomb that was about 100 times that. Uh-oh!

The bunker houses a lot of authentic 60s, 70s and 80s gear, including TVs and telephones, which Will and I recognised from our childhoods and had a giggle over. The computer system took up a whole room and was installed in the 80s. Apparently its capacity is less than what our digital camera can hold! Crazy! I think it cost a few million dollars too. The bunker is on four levels and includes an old school hospital area with operating room, cafeteria, several meeting rooms, lots of offices and tiny bunk rooms. The Prime Minister’s suite was pretty bare and the single bed said a lot! No priority to Mrs Prime Minister in the 535 head count!

The bunker hasn’t been in operation since the 1990s, so they’ve managed to restore it pretty well. The huge chamber where they were supposed to keep the gold (somehow gold loses its value if it comes in touch with radioactive material) until the war ended or at least it was safe to come out was never used. It had a door that was approximately 7 tonnes and looked pretty solid! Around the exterior of this chamber was a walkway with mirrors at each corner, so that the one guard on duty at the front didn’t have to move to see if anyone was trying to break in. And I guess it needed the walkway/tunnel so that people couldn’t dig through into the gold stash.

There was also a blast tunnel so that the full force of a bomb wouldn’t wipe out the front of the building, as well as decontamination shower section for anyone seeking refuge. Apparently you had to scrub pretty well, ‘cos if you didn’t get past the Geiger counter the second time, it was bye bye and you were kicked back outside.

The whole bunker reminded me of a spy movie like James Bond, or a Cold War movie. We’d just watched Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, so it totally made me think of that. Also I’ve always been fascinated by the Cold War and all the paranoia of that time, so it was so interesting to see the crazy precautions nations took to protect their leaders. Well it wasn’t so crazy to them at the time, but did they really need a desk for the Minister of Mortgages?

Anyway, well worth the visit!! 


Vault door - looks pretty solid!

Hanging out inside the vault. No gold, so sad. 
Cafeteria. 
Lol.  



Girls' room. Not so comfy looking... 
Massive, multi-million dollar computer. 
Computer storage. 

Uhh they need a booklet to say SMASH IT WITH A HAMMER??



In the PM's seat. 
What's the time, Mr Wolf? 







Model of the bunker. 
Building the bunker. 
Inside the blast tunnel.  



Friday 14 September 2012

Algonquin Park


The weather wasn’t brilliant when we stayed two nights in Algonquin Park, but we decided to lash out and actually stay in an RV park. We stayed at the Two Rivers campground on recommendation from a friend and it was a lovely spot near a lake. And besides, for us rainy weather = movies in Betsey!

We went for two hikes on the second day. The first hike was about 6km (not 10km like I’d thought and prepared for, oops) and there were some nice views from high up, but being overcast it wasn’t that great. We braved the wet weather, but fortunately didn’t get too wet, being under the trees for most of the time. We did see a woodpecker which was pretty cool. He was so loud, bashing his little beak against a hard tree!! Must have a strong neck!

The second hike at Beaver Pond nearly didn’t happen (a little bit of feet-soreness whining on Will’s behalf), but lucky I bullied him into it, cos we struck the wildlife jackpot! Coming around a corner, a lady stopped us and said to be really quiet because there was a moose! Across from the water there was a moose mumma and her calf! It was awesome! She was wandering around the edge of the water and we took a load of photos. Then Will spotted two funny looking rocks a little further up from the moose and we realised they were beavers! One took off into the water, but the other one stayed and moved around a little! A bit far away for a good picture (where’s that zoom lens when we need it), but it was still pretty exciting!! Made our sojourn into Algonquin Park well worth it!! That takes our moose count to 3 and beavers to 2. Yay! 


Storm's a comin'! 
A beaver house and me! 
Beaver dam.


Spot the moose! 






Those dark lumps on the far bank, in the centre of this picture, are beavers!!