Having gone as far south this morning as the ocean would let us, and having finally found and settled into our B&B, we decide to head north to see what the water there looks like (and it did look, you know, more northern).
PEI’s horseshoe shape means you can drive from one coast to another in less than an hour at almost any given point. (Not from side to side, obviously. That would take a whole 3 ½ hours.)
Forty-five minutes of pastoral joyriding later, we come upon the gentle community of Brackley Beach. Located in the center of the northern coastline, it boasts a goat's milk soap factory, a beautiful art shop/fine restaurant, at least one cool mailbox (pictured), and the island’s only drive-in movie theater.
The latter is the reason we’ve come tonight, and we are the third car in line when the gate opens. We pass the time writing in our journals and Leighann’s pen ‘splodes all over her fingers. She and Charlie Brown should have been pen pals.
We donate blood to the local mosquito population playing mini-golf while we wait for the movies (it's a double feature!) to start. A broken-down, 40-foot tube slide watches us sadly from the nearby woods, covered in weeds and haunted by the ghosts of long-ago childhoods. The mangled remains of a large swimming pool are further evidence that this was once a multi-faceted summer attraction; now the movie screen and the mini-golf course are all that are left hanging on. (And we use that term loosely about the mini-golf. The course looks like it hasn't felt the reviving touch of a caretaker since Lucy Maude Montgomery played there, if she was, as is safe to assume, a putt-putt enthusiast.)
Running and swatting, we return to the car and tune our radio to the Drive-In station, which plays oldies hits leading up to the films and provides audio during (there are also speakers next to each parking space, but this way the bloodsuckers can't get in). The double feature tonight is Pixar's "Up" (which we've seen before but enjoy as much or more a second time) and the Ryan Reynolds/Sandra Bullock romcom "The Proposal" (decent genre flick, with appropriately rural setting for most of it). Sometime during Up the sky starts to drizzle rain. Watching a movie through light rain seems extremely odd, as does starting our car and driving away during the credits.