I’m flying out of Goose Bay as we speak. I’m on a little plane, full of French
Canadian hunters, on my way to Halifax then Vancouver via Toronto. This efficient trip makes up for the milk run
of last time. I’ll be at YVR by 4:30PST
which is as best as I can ask for as I fly 4,000 miles across this great
country of ours. I’ll miss hearing “it’s
a nice day out there eh me luv?” Every.
Single. Day. Boy do people love talking
about the weather here. Just when I got
a hang of the accents, or most of them, I’m leaving. People from Black Tickle remain the most
challenging for me and I still needed to ask them to slow down up until the day
I left.
Overall my Labrador experience was awesome. The kindness and generosity of the people I
met made up for my frustrations with the inefficiency and in my opinion some of the
archaic hospital practices. The hospital
has so many staffing issues and they bring in so many locum nurses, yet there
are no full time lines available. It’s
pretty broken and I don’t envy the higher ups.
There are however positions available in the small native communities up
the coast. One nurse who agreed to a
two year contract said she was getting a 40K signing bonus for committing to
the two years. She would be living in
Nain, a northern community of 1,000 people so she probably deserves the
money. I heard on many occasions that
the expired food in Goose Bay grocery stores gets sent to the northern Native communities, and
that fresh fruit and vegetables that come in sell out in a matter of
hours. This obviously compounds the problems
of the population that already has a lack of health care and self care. Poor
diet is a huge reason why the hospital services so much hypertension, bowel issues, obesity,
pancreatitis etc. I guess it was naive
of me believe that basic fresh food was available to all Canadians and it’s
something I won’t take for granted again.
My time is flying by.
I can’t believe I’ve been off work three months. I’m going to be home for only 10 days and
leave on October 28th for my next adventure. I’m doing two 6 week stints in Inuvik,
Northwest Territories, two degrees north of the Arctic Circle! I secured the position after a gruelling 45 minute phone interview. The interview challenged my medical surgical and
pediatric assessment skills that I’ve been out of touch with for some time. Thank you Andrea, Sarah and Heather for the
tips! From what I hear there is a lot of autonomy as a nurse in the Arctic so
that is something I am looking forward to.
In the 10 days at home I need to get outfitted for the -30 weather and
buy a Costco sized bottle of Vitamin D to help with the almost constant
darkness. I’m pretty nervous about these
next few months. I think more nervous
about the lack of daylight than the cold which is hard to believe. Inuvik is on the ice road (as in Ice Road Truckers) so the winter time is
apparently when food is MORE accessible, not less, as the ice road is frozen and
trucks can drive to town (pop. 3,500!).
I’m staying in a hotel with a kitchenette as the nurses residency is
full. There is no oven other than the
toaster type so I’m going to be eating a lot of soup I think.
I figure if I can handle a winter in the Arctic Circle I can
handle just about anything. Someone in
Goose Bay was saying how brave I was for taking this year off and travelling/working. I don’t think I’m brave so much as not
afraid to be scared and I think there’s a difference. Being scared of something is more of a reason
to do something, not less. I’ve never
regretted doing anything that I was scared to do. At the very least you grow from the failure.
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