Name |
Value |
Date of Issue |
June 30, 1993 |
Year |
1993
|
Quantity |
15,000,000 |
Denomination |
43¢
|
Perforation or Dimension |
13 |
Series |
Canada Day, Provincial and Territorial Parks
|
Series Time Span |
1993 |
Printer |
Canadian Bank Note Company, Limited. |
Postal Administration |
Canada |
Condition |
Avg Value |
M-NH-VF
|
Only available to paid users |
U-VF
|
Only available to paid users |
* Notes about these prices:
- They are not based on catalogue values but on current dealer and auction listings. The reason for this is that catalogues tend to over-value stamps.
- They are average prices. The actual value of your stamp may be slightly above or below the listed value, depending on the overall condition of your stamp. Use these prices as a guide to determine the approximate value of your stamps.
Pane of 12 Stamps
Quantity Produced -
Unknown
No Images Exist for this Layout.
Official First Day Cover
Quantity Produced -
Unknown
The diverse, cross-country beauty of the nation is depicted on 12 provincial and territorial parks stamps to be issued for Canada Day 1993. At this park in New Brunswick, visitors marvel at the curiously shaped "flowerpot" rocks, huge vegetation-topped formations along the shore at Hopewell Cape on Shepody Bay at the northwest end of the Bay of Fundy. Micmac legend has it that some of the tribe were captured and enslaved by giant whales that once inhabited the bay. Dashing to shore as a means of escape, the Micmacs were turned to stone as they reached the water's edge. This is but one legend as to the creation of the "flowerpot" formations. In reality their existence resulted from the earth's surface tilting and cracking as the last glaciers melted. Water entered the cracks and through freezing widened the cracks to allow pillar to stand alone. The sea and tidal waves attack and finally topple the flowerpots. But according to geologists there is sufficient material to continue forming these flowerpots for 10,000 years to come. With its picnic areas and nature trails, visitors stroll along the sandy shore past old Acadian dykes to observe these wonderous "rocks" of nature. The stamp designs convey the feeling that the artist visited these spectacular locations and was awed by their beauty.
Designed by Malcolm Waddell Based on an illustration by Jan Waddell
Canada Post Corporation. Canada's Stamps Details, No. 10, 1993, p. 18, 27-28, 30.
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