Wednesday, 26 September 2012

transportation in PEI




people use ship to cross the river and airplane  cross the city and that hippo car can go on the water i
long time a go people use ship 












PEI culture
PEI build Island section
is every year has one times
is they PEI build day
people go to street to watch about the Tangible
PEI economy












High labour force participation: In 1997, PEI's labour force was 71,100 people, out of a working age population of 107,300, giving PEI a labor force participation rate of 66.3% -- well over the Canadian average and the highest in Canada other than in the Prairie

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

anny house

attractions

this is call Annie
of the green gables



















that is a flames book 
people this book so they build a same house in the book 

pei government

     pei government



government know some people income can not get that much money
so government have this job for poor people they just stand they and they can get money




The P.E.I. government has announced a new round of road tenders, focusing on rural roads.
Prince Edward Island has rewarding career and work opportunities in a variety of industries including the growth sectors of aerospace, bioscience, information technology and renewable energy. 
Aerospace

  





fisher is P.E.I most in portent job 
people like seafood  many people is fisher 

P.E.I history

                                                      This is early history

Prince Edward Island was first inhabited by the Mi'kmaq people. They named the island Epekwitk (the 
pronunciation of which was changed to Abegweit by the Europeans), meaning "cradle on the waves. They believed that the island was formed by the Great Spirit placing some dark red clay which was shaped as a crescent on the pink Waters.




Prince Edward Island is steeped in history and heritage. Prince Edward Island is known as the "Birthplace of Confederation" because the capital city, Charlottetown, is where the idea of Canada was born. Early Mi'kmaq settlement dates back thousands of years before the historic Charlottetown Conference. Early European settlers arrived mainly from Scotland, England and Ireland. The Island's Acadians have their roots in France.