The Telegram (St. John's)

Giving the gift of light to Goose Cove

Musgrave Harbour man enjoys giving homemade ID cards to strangers

- BY GLEN WHIFFEN glen.whiffen@tc.tc

Ron Mccarthy of Musgrave Harbour delivers some decorative lighthouse­s he made to Goose Cove near St. Anthony. One of the lighthouse­s is for the town to display for its Come Home Year events in August.

Ron Mccarthy believes it’s important for everyone to know who they are.

That’s why the Musgrave Harbour resident has been handing out his homemade ID cards for the past eight years.

Mccarthy makes them by cutting driver’s licence-size rectangula­r pieces from the slats of old window blinds and attaching a little round mirror. He then adds wording at the top of the card: “My I.D. CARD. ‘Sure, that’s me in there!”

His face brightens to a big smile as he places one in your hand.

“I’ve handed out thousands over the past eight years,” chuckled Mccarthy. “I just do it for a good laugh. They’ve gone all over the world.”

Mccarthy’s family is originally from St. Julien’s on the province’s Northern Peninsula, but the family relocated to Goose Cove, near St. Anthony, where Mccarthy grew up.

He left the province in 1998 to find work in Alberta and retired five years ago from his job as a scaffolder in Fort Mcmurray.

When he and his wife, Lynn, moved from Alberta to Newfoundla­nd upon his retirement, they decided to settle in Musgrave Harbour on the province’s northeast coast.

“We love it here,” he said. “We are right by the ocean.”

Mccarthy was in Goose Cove recently and, in addition to handing out the ID cards, he had a number of small, decorative lighthouse­s in his pickup. He builds the roughly four-foothigh lighthouse­s from “old-fashioned clapboard,” which is hard to get, he says.

There are a few of his lighthouse­s around the Goose Cove and St. Anthony area, mostly made for family and friends.

One of those lying in his pickup was for the town of Goose Cove, for a special celebratio­n this summer. His lighthouse­s sell for about $200.

“I got one here for the Come Home Year in August for Goose Cove,” he said. “I don’t build many. I had built a few for some family members and then some other people wanted one, so I built a few more.”

Mccarthy said the ID cards and the lighthouse­s are only a hobby he’s gotten into. But, he says, there’s one more item he makes.

“I make weather forecaster­s,” he said with a chuckle. “There are two walnuts on them. If the walnuts are swinging it’s windy, if they are wet it’s raining, if they are hot, it’s time to sit under a tree. And if you see three walnuts you’ve had too much Screech!”

 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ??
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? Ron Mccarthy of Musgrave Harbour delivers some decorative lighthouse­s he made to Goose Cove near St. Anthony.
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM Ron Mccarthy of Musgrave Harbour delivers some decorative lighthouse­s he made to Goose Cove near St. Anthony.
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? Ron Mccarthy says he’s handed out thousands of his homemade ID cards during the last eight years while living in Alberta and Newfoundla­nd, and everywhere else he’s been.
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM Ron Mccarthy says he’s handed out thousands of his homemade ID cards during the last eight years while living in Alberta and Newfoundla­nd, and everywhere else he’s been.
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? One of Ron Mccarthy’s lighthouse­s sits in a boat in Goose Cove, near St. Anthony.
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM One of Ron Mccarthy’s lighthouse­s sits in a boat in Goose Cove, near St. Anthony.
 ?? GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM ?? A Ron Mccarthy-built lighthouse sits near a home in Goose Cove, near St. Anthony.
GLEN WHIFFEN/THE TELEGRAM A Ron Mccarthy-built lighthouse sits near a home in Goose Cove, near St. Anthony.

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