"LeBlanc, a retired school teacher from Belliveau Village, near Memramcook, is one of only about a dozen people who still have a licence to fish the Petitcodiac,.....
His father and grandfather were among as many as 150 fishermen who had licences to fish on the Petitcodiac prior to the construction of the causeway. The main fisheries at the time were Atlantic salmon, gaspereau, smelt, sturgeon and shad."
Today, we buy a Tim Horton Coffee and go down beside the old Moncton Wharf (which is no longer there) and watch for the Tidal Bore. When the Bay of Fundy Tides rises faster than it can get up the river it creates a wave running up the river followed by the higher tide. Betty and I watched for 6 months almost 2 or 3 times a week before seeing it.
The Telegraph Journal writes "Fort Folly First Nation Chief Joe Knockwood recalls the tidal bore that came up the Petitcodiac and the loud rumbling sound that signalled its arrival."
"It was high. It was beautiful," he says. "It's one big wave coming upriver and that's the tide coming in "¦ you can hear it. It's just rolling, rapid. It's a lot of noise like a river tearing a huge wave."
Fort Folly First Nation is located downriver from Moncton just outside of Dorchester.
God keep you..
Pour les enfant (francais) "Rappelle le Vague de Marée qui est monté le Petitcodiac et le son grondant bruyant qui a signalé son arrivée ». « C'était haut. C'était beau, » il dit. « C'est une grande vague qui vient en amont et cela est la marée qui suive » ¦ vous pouvez l'entendre. Il roule juste, le rapide. Il est beaucoup de bruit comme une rivière déchirant une vague énorme ».