Category Archives: roadtrip

Montreal

Montreal had never really been much of a blip on my radar of places to visit one day.  But the little I read about the city after deciding to include it on this little drive led me to believe that I would quite enjoy it – at the least, there would be good poutine (which was on my quite long list of “things I must eat while in Canada & the States”).  A city of neighbourhoods, with excellent food it sounded good fun to explore for a couple of days.

We easily found our way on to the island (curiously, Montreal is an island in the St Lawrence River – I did not know that beforehand) and then to the apartment.  Apparently, our neighbourhood was good for food so we just wandered out the door to the end of the block to peruse the local haunts – Jane spied a good looking cupcake shop that was noted for a later date.  What followed at a rather too-hip-for-me cafe was the best meal I’ve had in ages – scallops on a barley risotto with vegetables done to perfection.

It turned out that one of the biggest & best markets in the city was only a few blocks away, so we headed down there after breakfast Saturday.  That probably wasn’t the best idea as I was immediately hungry again – I shouldn’t go into detail of the huge range of produce & meat that was on display.  I managed to cross a bagel off the list; Montreal bagels are supposed to be a little sweeter than most – either way, it was better than I used to bake.  I think we managed to sample half as many plums as we ended up buying – delicious & many varieties.

Jane was aware of the Bixi public bicycle sharing scheme in Montreal from a previous visit.  I was familiar with the concept from London & other European cities – a bit of research shows that the London system is a Bixi system (the largest, with Montreal second) – Bixi being a company set up by the city of Montreal.  Basically, there are over five thousand bicycles at four-hundred docking stations all around the city – for the measly sum of seven dollars for twenty-four hours, one can have have as many half-hour rides as desired (if you take a bike for more than thirty minutes, you get charged extra).  As it turns out, it’s an absolutely fantastic way to see the city.  The bikes are very solid (tough, but pretty heavy), easy to ride, comfortable, internally geared (the range of three is plenty) & with a handy basket on the front.  That is pretty much how we saw a lot of Montreal on the Saturday – interspersed by a fair bit of walking & eating too.

The local church

Not the kind of picture I usually snap while riding bikes, c.f. this

We ditched the bikes for a stroll, rather – a brisk steep walk, to the top of Parc du Mont-Royal – through plenty of leaves to kick around and brilliant colours.

It got a little cloudier

Looking over McGill University to downtown

We spent a fair bit of time riding near water – either along canals or over the river.  Montreal was the biggest industrial centre in the country until surpassed by Toronto in the second half of the twenty-century – strangely, I always find old silos & other industrial relics fascinating. As I write that, I realise that is a little weird – but think of the hundreds of people that used to work there making all sorts of things.



We went downtown for a little while, but I wasn’t overly impressed as it was sort of European, but not properly so.  The neighbourhoods were much more fun – so we walked back to where Jane stayed last time & found a great hot chocolate & more cakes.  We returned to the same cafe for dinner – I got to have my poutine & it lived up to all expectations; I eat more meals without meat that I ever used to.  I’m not sure this one really counted as it was probably so full of fat & such artery-clogging ingredients.

We worked out we’d biked & walked over forty kilometres the day before (just as well with all the food), so it was a little slower start on Sunday.  With still some of our twenty-hours left on the Bixi bikes, we headed off to the botanical gardens in the autumn crispness.  There were some cool lanterns in the Chinese Garden – although I suspect they are better at night.  I narrowly avoided being eaten by a tiger.

There were a few bugs too

Up much too early, the Montreal stay was over as I dropped Jane off at the airport for her to depart to her new life as an optometrist (that bit’s not new) in small town Nova Scotia. It’s not really far to the border & I was gone from Canada again by eight o’clock.

I had no idea that I’d enjoy Montreal so much – but I fear if stayed longer I’d eat well too much and put back on all the weight I lost over summer, plus some more. The whole time I was in Montreal however I did find something very disconcerting about it. It’s so obviously North American with American cars, big wide streets laid out on a grid, Canadian brands and so on – but all the signs & speech is in French, everyone’s better dressed & the food so good, it feels continental. It’s very difficult trying to reconcile all this – will people get upset if I just assume they speak English (most seem to be bilingual)? Annoyingly, the rest of Canada seems to make an effort at being bilingual with their signs, but you get to Quebec & there is next to English on the major signs – that seems a little rude, so I suppose that fits in well.

Anyway, Montreal – well worth a visit for a few days at least, if not more.

A day in Ottawa

First priority in Ottawa was a trip to MEC (the big outdoors store in Canada) for Jane to buy useful things after Air Canada predictably lost her bag somewhere between Buenos Aires and Toronto.  Usually I could spend ages in there, but the after a few minutes all the driving and the time-zone change caught up with me & I proper fell asleep in the car – which was just as well, as I had ages to wait.  Our hotel suite was surprisingly massive with a full kitchen – much pasta & cheese sauce was cooked, slightly less consumed.  For some reason, Jane thought it a good idea to bring a feijoa flavoured bottle of vodka all the way from NZ.  But feijoas & vodka (!) – it smelt & tasted like I haven’t had for years & remember fondly from growing up with many such trees in the yard.

A crisp fall morning arrived & after over-indulging in the breakfast buffet we set out for a fair bit of walking.  Ottawa is a very nice capital indeed – with plenty of grand buildings, lots of parks and a great big river (that forms part of the border between Ontario & Quebec).  Confederation Boulevard is a 7.5 km route around Ottawa & Gatineau (the adjoining city that is in Quebec – a bit like Buda & Pest, but you can’t join the names together in a catchy manner) that links many of the capital’s important sights & is used ceremonially for state visits.  Being so, it makes a good easy walk around to see such things if one has limited time – we walked most of it, stopping off near the start to get tickets to a tour of the Parliament Buildings. Most notably on the walk, we saw a beaver – I’d only seen their dams before; this one looked a little lost in the Rideau canal’s locks.

Parliament

The Round Library (the only part of the centre block of the old parliament to survive a big fire in 1916) & Parliament across the Ottawa.

Museum of Civilisation

Back at Parliament a little early, there was enough time to sneak in to the Commons chamber while it was in session.  I say sneak: we had to got through security & then still leave our bags at the desk.  I’ve never been to a session of the Commons in either of the two countries I’ve voted in – so this was a new experience.  It was a little underwhelming – of the 308 members that the Commons has at the moment, there were between twenty & thirty present.  Obviously the debate wasn’t really that interesting – something to do with drugs in communities if I remember correctly.  Thankfully, we had a tour start-time to meet – so we exited.

The tour and guide were quite interesting with a good mix of history of the buildings & Canada as a country.  Strangely, there were a lot of questions – we managed to get into the Senate room as it wasn’t in session, that wasn’t so interesting.  Going up the Peace Tower (that’s the big tower in the center of the complex), the elevator has small windows so you can see some of the large bells that form part of the carillon – which is a musical instrument made up of at least twenty-three bells that is played using a keyboard linked to those bells.  I had previously heard the chimes on the hour & thought it a particularly musical bell tower – with fifty-three bells, it was not surprising.



Back across the Ottawa to Gatineau – we’d just walked across that far shore & bridge.

Jane hadn’t made it out to the rather large Gatineau Park on her previous visit & had wanted to, so after scoffing some more of the previous night’s pasta we left Ottawa-proper and headed out for a very pleasant drive through many beautiful trees changing colour.  Eventually, we got to Pink Lake (stupid bridges that go right over a rural road, but don’t connect to it). Always nice to get out of the city for a brisk walk, we fair charged around with still plenty of time to marvel at all the shades of yellows, orange, red, green & brown – but I still didn’t manage any decent photos.

Confusingly, Pink Lake is named for a family that once owned nearby land & is in fact more likely to be bright green due to algae.

Perhaps taking a quick photo is safer than texting – my poor attempt at capturing all the marvellous colours we were seeing.

With just a couple of hours along the scenic route (north bank of the Ottawa) to go, we set off for Montreal.  Just in case it wasn’t clear – Ottawa was really nice. With no success in finding a short notice airbnb place for Ottawa, it was great to get notice on the drive we had a whole apartment to ourselves for three nights in a nice neighbourhood.

Back in Canada!

Back when I had a list of places I wanted to spend a week or so visiting before I eventually head back to New Zealand, Boston was high on that list. If one is going to go to Boston, one may as well get there for a New England fall – many months ago it seemed like a good idea to book a trip to the USA (the fourth in four years, who’d have thunk?) less than three weeks after getting back from the RVO & Africa. Along the way it transpired that it was much easier to get nice flight times in & out of Toronto than Boston. As I’d never visited eastern Canada while I lived out west in the Rockies, it seemed logical to tie such a visit in with Boston and make a mini-roadtrip of it – after all, driving around North America is such fun. Mid-year the list went out the window as I realised I wanted to ride my bike more…

Well, as I got back from the RVO & Africa and straight back into a demanding month-end at work and then got a cold – none of this seemed all that sensible. Not to mention two inter-continential vacations almost back-to-back seemed just a little self-indulgent – thankfully the spring & summer through which I took no time off work was a cracker and let me ride a lot. Consequently, & very strangely, I wasn’t particularly excited by the prospect of more travel so soon – I managed to keep the trip pretty quiet by only letting on if asked rather direct questions that I couldn’t worm out of – so I didn’t have to talk about it & pretend to be wildly excited. Of course, through all that, even if I wasn’t excited I knew I would love the trip and all doubts would disappear as soon as I landed in Canada – I mean, I’ve loved each of my previous American road trips & this would be same with Ottawa, Montreal, Boston & Niagara Falls being the main destinations to string together.

By some fluke of timing, very good friend of my sister & the family, Jane was due to land in Toronto for a year in Canada only twelve hours or so after my arrival. First store seen on landing at Pearson – Tim Hortons, of course. After deciding a Fiat 500 is a ridiculous vehicle for a American roadtrip & that I should upgrade to a small SUV, I was straight back to driving on the other side of the road. Once safely & comfortably ensconced in my airbnb room, it was time to head out & wander. I was not far off Lake Ontario, & like Lake Michigan earlier in the year, it’s hard to believe a lake can be so big – or Great if you will (the five Great Lakes have a surface area less than ten percent smaller than all of New Zealand). I’m not sure if it’s just a reflection on Toronto, but I don’t have a single photo of the city. Nonetheless I was loving just wandering the city blocks, seeing buildings & stadia I’d previously heard about; being Wednesday night, half-price wings with yam (sweet potato) fries & a beer seemed entirely appropriate.

Picking Jane up from her friend’s house (disturbingly both she & her friend thought I sounded English, which is just weird – they definitely had Kiwi accents) we hit the road east with many hours to catch up on news as we got off the freeway as soon as possible to drive around the lakeside. Most facilities had closed for the season, but the Thousand Islands area was rather quaint. To officially be included in the group, an island must be above the lake level all year long, be more than one square foot and have at least one living tree – so there are some pretty small islands to see. What was surprising was just how small some of the islands were that had proper big houses on them. But I never quite captured those well when we were driving – so imagination needed below.



Wow, there are photos of me on this trip – well, a few

The fall/autumn timing was already paying off as the countryside was littered with very pretty foliage in the midst of changing colour.

Back in Utah!

After a repeatedly & much-delayed flight from O’Hare, I was back in Utah for my fourth visit in less than four years – being one of my favourite western states, I was much excited.  That excitement was muted a little by the lateness of the hour, picking up the rental car & completing the easy drive across Salt Lake City to Jeremy & Pam’s house.  It was fairly late in the planning of the trip that I realised I did actually, sort of, know people in SLC – having met Jeremy & Pam riding a very nice river trail in central Oregon two years previous.  They came through for us time & time again during our Utah stay.  With the late hour, there wasn’t much to do apart from say hello to those I’d kept from sleep, make a bed and hit the hay.

Waking up, I was a little concerned & surprised that it wasn’t much warmer than the dreary English weather I’d left behind.  After a brief, more awake, re-acquaintance with Jeremy & Pam they were off to work & we were out the door to a huge breakfast at a diner (complete with learn-your-US-presidents placemats – mostly remembered for the impressive quiffs of bygone centuries) chosen by Jeremy (as this trip progresses you’ll see we began to take any of Jeremy’s recommendations as gospel).  With a bit of faffing round looking for odds & sods for me, our small convoy (two Subarus) set off south for Moab.

It was a pretty leisurely drive down south over a pass as we struck off I-15.  The fresh snow was concerning considering ten days of mountain-biking & camping, but not too off-putting.

We stopped in Wellington City, of all places, for a playground expenditure of energy for Finn. I think I may have been the most worn out. I should have mentioned by now that I flew to SLC to meet best-friends from living in Canada, Alex, Megan & their son Finn for Moab adventures – this time biking. Moab being possibly the most famous mountain-biking destination, I was thrilled to be back (I had been here with Valerie on the roadtrip two years ago) and salivating at the chance to ride proper bike trails with rocks, climbs, singletrack and all those good things.  The plan was to camp for our entire stay, but rolling into Moab it was much too cold to be setting up camp with a toddler (a handy excuse), so we got a cabin for the night.

In the morning it was off to Poison Spider to pick up my rental bike – more about that later (except to say it was at the low end of the Moab rental bike range and cost more to hire than a late-model Subaru Forester – cars are cheap in the States!). And off to ride!