Montreal Food Coma

We left Quebec City just after noon and took the express bus to Montreal.  It is a good thing and that we got to the bus station a little bit early because the bus left 15 minutes earlier than the posted departure time.  After checking into our hotel around 4:15 and settling down, we headed off on our culinary food adventure for the evening…

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First stop to Schwartz's Deli, famous for their smoked meat sandwiches, which is cancelled make corned beef this place reminded me of the joint we went to in Nashville Tennessee where you are in a big line and you order from a limited menu and eat at communal tables

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We shared a plate Meal, which is basically meat, some sliced bread, and mustard. That's it.

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Even between the both of us, we were not able to finish it and we ended up taking some leftovers back with us

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Stop number two was to an ice cream shop, but they were closed on Monday. So we went to stop number 3, Fairmont Bagels, which has been known as Montreal's best place to get a bagel.

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I got the museli bagel and Lisa got the cinnamon and raisin. Breakfast for tomorrow!

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Our final stop was Juliette & Chocolat, restaurant that specializes in all things chocolate. Brownies, cookies, hot chocolate, cakes, ice cream, it goes on and on

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12 pages worth of calories!

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I I went with the brownie sampler plate and a scoop of vanilla ice cream

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Verdict: all the desserts were delicious, unfortunately we just didn't have enough room for them. My brownies were super sweet and I probably would not order them again later. Just too much good food to eat

Quebec City Meanderings

Full day walking all over beautiful Quebec City… it felt like we were in Europe with the foreign language,  cobblestone pedestrian-only streets and so many historic sites and monuments.

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Saint-Roch Church, the largest church in Quebec City

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St-Joseph street

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Underpass mural art

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Looking down Saint Paul Street

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Funicular up to the old city

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Lunch.. Lisa got the French onion soup

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Looking down Du Petit-Champlain

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Fairmont Lê Chateau Frontenac

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St Lawrence River from Terrasse Dufferin. The cruise ship below is the Holland America Veendam, a cruise that we had looked at booking but it was too expensive

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Lisa walking along the perimeter of La Citadelle

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Fountaine de Tourny

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Parliament Building in background

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Another view of the Fairmont Lê Chateau Frontenac, the most photographed hotel in the world

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Basilique-Cathedral Notre-Dame

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Inside the church

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Dinner, outdoor patio near City Hall

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Street performer on St-Jean

Ottawa’s Byward Market and a Train to Quebec City

We spent our last morning in Ottawa in the Byward Market, eating breakfast and wandering through the area before returning to our Airbnb to get our bags and catch our train to Quebec City.  After yesterday’s full day of walking,  this was a low-key travel day.

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They sure have some fun cookie designs

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This particular bakery sells "Obama" cookies

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The indoor market

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Next year will be Canada's 150th year and they are currently in the midst of a lot of construction projects underway to help with next year's celebration

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Scenes from the train, lots of pretty country and river crossings

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Gare-du-Palais, out train station terminus in Quebec City

Canada Day in the Nation’s Capital

Happy 149th Canada Day,  a national holiday to celebrate the unification of Canadian provinces to create one country.  We spent the day visiting museums and partaking in the festivities with the rest of the citizens.  One local mentioned that in the almost 20 years that he has lived in Ottawa, he has only had one Canada Day where it was dry. Would we luck out for this day?

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Canadian Museum of Nature

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Queen's Lantern

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Queen's Lantern from the inside

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Dinosaurs exhibit

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Supreme Court Building

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Inside the courts

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In the throes of chaos

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Canadian Snowbirds air stunts

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They closed off a number of streets around the capital to accommodate the thousands of people that descended upon the capital

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We say enjoying cheese curds

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Canadians for the day

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National Gallery and spider sculpture

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Notre-Dame Cathedral Basilica

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Museum of Canadian History

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Looking across to Parliament Hill from the History Museum

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History Museum, interior

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Canadian Coat of Arms

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Mask from the Indigenous Peoples exhibit

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Napoleon and Paris exhibit

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Dusk sets, almost time for fireworks

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Unfortunately for us they closed the bridge to get to the other side, so we were stuck at the history museum. The rain started and we had to make a choice weather to watch the fireworks at 10 p.m. and then hope to get the right bus back where to start walking towards the other bridge and hope to watch the fireworks from there

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Fortunately for us, we did manage to watch the fireworks from the second bridge

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After the fireworks, it was just a 15-minute walk back to our air Airbnb

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Oops, I Messed Up

A few months ago while planning for this vacation, I had originally booked train tickets from Toronto to Montreal.  However, since we were leaving Toronto on the eve of Canada Day, I thought “Why don’t we just spend Canada day in the country’s capital?”  It seemed like a perfect opportunity, since the train stops in Ottawa on its way to Montreal.  I priced the train fare for Toronto to Ottawa and found that it was actually more expensive — probably because I had lost out on the cheap booking window.  On top of that, if I wanted to modify our tickets, Via Rail would impose a $30 change fee for both tickets.  Instead of going through all of that trouble, how hard could it be to just get off in Ottawa en route to Montreal?

After a very long day of walking all over Toronto, we were ready to get some good rest.  But the combination of doing a load of laundry and chatting with our host meant that we didn’t get to bed until midnight.  Before sleeping, Lisa asked me how long the train ride was and what time we would arrive into Ottawa.  I didn’t exactly research this, so I went online and looked up our train #62, 9:20am Toronto to Montreal.  And what I found was perplexing … there was no arrival time for Ottawa.  Even more confusing — there was no stop for Ottawa.  What?  I could have sworn that the train stopped in Ottawa on the way to Montreal.  I double checked the timetable and sure enough, there was a 9:20am train that went from Toronto to Ottawa — train #52.  That was not the train we were booked on!  I consulted the train map and here’s when I panicked.  Yes, the train does go to Ottawa.  But it has to detour on some other track to get there.  The main track goes to Montreal.  That’s the train we had reservations for.  Train #62.  Train #52 is actually attached to our train and goes along the same tracks until it detaches from us and then goes on its own merry way on the other track to Ottawa.  Doink!

So what could I do?  We couldn’t just stay on the train to Montreal, because I had no cancellation reservations in Ottawa plus transportation already set up that we would lose our money on.  I tried to modify our existing tickets to change it to train #52.  Unfortunately, only business class fares were available and the change would cost us an additional $225.  It was now 1am and I just needed to come up with a plan B.  I totally messed up, assuming that our train would drop us off in Ottawa.  No dice.  So I came up with this:  get off in Kingston, which is about halfway between Toronto and Montreal, and get a bus to Ottawa.  I checked online and it would have to be a 2 1/2 hour Greyhound bus ride with about a 4 hour layover in Kingston at a cost of about $65 for both of us.  Instead of arriving in Ottawa by 1pm-ish on the train, we would arrive a little bit past 6pm and lose a whole afternoon.  But c’est la vie — this was the best choice we could make at 1am and I booked the tickets.

Long story end — our train got into Kingston a little late so our layover was not as long, which was a shame since we really enjoyed exploring the downtown core and the picturesque waterfront area.  We did make it to Ottawa by 6pm with our short diversion to Kingston, a bonus, unplanned-for stop on our journey across Canada.  Oops, I messed up, yes I did.  But it worked out okay and it is just another story that we can look back at and count our fortune that we were flexible enough to make it work.

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