12 October 2021

Montreal, October 11-12, 2021

The second Monday in October, this year October 11 was Canadian Thanksgiving.

We celebrated with a food walk

First was  French Hot Chocolate from  Au festin de babette, the best hot chocolate I've had outside France, dark, thick and not sugary.

Bocadilla's in Le Plateau-Mont-Royal which specializes in Venezualian food. We shared Arepas and empanadas.

Apartments near dumpling Restaurant

For dinner we shared potato pizza from our walk and homemade dumplings from a restaurant between Kristen's apartment and the nearby park. 

And we had pistachio doughnuts for dessert.





On the morning of the 12th we picked up filled croissants from the patisserie on the way to the subway station.  I took the train home arriving late that night.  


















10 October 2021

Montreal, October 9-10, 2021

 We left early on Saturday morning and walked to where we had rented a car through Turo. There was a snafu in getting the code to the car which put us in heavy traffic, worse because Canadian Thanksgiving was on Monday, so there were more people leaving town. In some respects that was a bad time to go away for the weekend, but the weather was perfect for hiking--high 70s--and the leaves were gorgeous.

We drove to Mont Megantic National Park.  We had planned to hike up to the top and then back down, but it was so crowded that we weren't allowed to park at the bottom. Since we already had a park pass, we were allowed to drive to the top where we parked and then walked along the ridge and clambered over big rocks. 








St Joseph 

Then we drove to Magog where we stayed at a hostel. It was our first time, and we didn't really like it.  We walked around Magog and had Italian for dinner followed by ice cream next to the river.


Sentier Massawippi Sainte-Catherine-de-Hadley--early morning hike through the woods, gorgeous views, very few people, We arrived very early, walked down to the beach along the river and then walked back to the car.




Next stop was Coaticook Forest Luminare Gorge Park.  Arriving just as it opened, we walked across the longest suspended footbridge in North America.  We hiked until early afternoon then had lunch at the restaurant there and drove back to Montreal


The longest suspended footbridge in North America


The Belding Corticelli Factory which made thread and sewing supplies such as scissors.  It was built in 1883 and abandoned in 2004.

On top of the Lookout Tower




08 October 2021

Montreal, October 7,8

 Kristen worked both Thursday and Friday, so I walked around. Thursday I took the metro with Kristen to her work and then walked up and down and around Mont Royal, a small mountain in the middle of Montreal near McGill University.  I walked about 15 miles total.



View from Mount Royal

McGill Space Institute--Kristen's office is to the left of the stairs.



St Joseph Oratory

On the way home we stopped at Chocolat Favoris  to get chocolate coated ice cream cones.  The best coated ice cream I've ever eaten.













Friday I ventured further afield. First I walked to the Jean Drapeau Park, crossing over the Jacques Cartier Bridge to Jean Drapeau Island, the site of the 1967 Expo World's Fair.  The island had been expanded with all of the fill excavated from creating the metro system in the 1960s.  First I walked around the island, along a river, past an old tower, and to the biosphere.





Biosphere from Expo 67


Then I took the Metro to the  Notre Dame Cathedral. It was closed to visitors, but I had a hot chocolate and a chocolate-pistachio filled croissant at Tommy's, a nearby cafe situated in the old British Empire Building.









After that I walked to McGill and hung out in the park until Kristen came.  I had walked close to 15 miles total.  


06 October 2021

Montreal, October 5-6, 2021

 Tuesday 5 October: I parked my car at my co-worker's house in Windsor and took the train to Montreal transferring in Toronto. It took me all day, but I had plenty to do on the train, and I enjoyed the ride. I arrived at 8:30 PM, and Kristen was there to meet me. We took the metro back to her apartment.  

Wednesday 6 October: Kristen's birthday. We celebrated with breakfast at L'Avenue: Red Shakshouka is a Middle East/North African dish of eggs poached in a sauce of tomatoes, olive oil, peppers, onion and garlic, commonly spiced with cumin, paprika and cayenne pepper and green shakshouka, a Tex-Mex adaptation of the more common Shakshouka. Definitely the food highlight of the trip!!



After that we walked to the Biodome, originally constructed as a velodrome for the 1976 Olympics, consists of 5 ecosystems in the Americas: The Laurentian Maple Forest,  the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the Labrador Coast, the Sub-Antarctic Islands, and the Tropical Rainforest. Each of these contained plants and  animals in their ecosystem, and they were very realistic. One of the spectacular things is that the walkways were at ground level, overhead, and in the case of the Gulf of the St. Lawrence, went under the river.

We arrived at the Laurentian Maple Forest just as they opened and were in time to see the beaver walk past with a stick in its mouth and then dive into the water and swim to its house. Since it is both shy and nocturnal we didn't see its face again.




When  we went around the corner we saw the beaver's feet and tail underwater with the rest of it inside its lodge. 




We also saw otters, puma, and a porcupine sleeping in a tree. The porcupine was well camouflaged in the leaves; we would not have seen him if we weren't paying very close attention.  




The next biosphere was the Gulf of St. Lawrence. First we looked throught a port hole  at the fish swimming; then we walked along a pathway under the river, looking into the huge sturgeon and the schools of fish.  Finally we walked up to the top and looked at the birds swimming on top or perching on rocks and at the fish from the top. 



The Sub-Arctic Labrador Coast  and the Sub-Antarctic Islands were in the same section. While the locations are polar opposite, the barren rocks must look similar.  One exhibit had penguins; the next puffins. 

The final section was 
the Tropical Rainforest.  We could hear a lot of birds, but the parrots were the most obvious. The river had either alligators or crocodiles. The foilage was, as expected, lush and exuberant. We heard a lot of birds, and we saw capybaras, the largest of the rodent family.






View of Tropical Rainforest From Above
 
Next on the agenda was the zipline. We took the metro to the Old Port of Montreal and walked around the old town for a bit before the zipline opened. 



 The zipline crossed over the Bonsecours Island.  It was a fairly short zipline, perfect for a first zipline attempt and a lot of fun.






After the zipline we walked along the Lachine Canal to the Atwater Market where we had lunch and walked around the market.  We walked back to Kristen's apartment on Rue Fabre Street. On the way we stopped at the Matcha Green Tea store. Kristen had green tea ice cream, and I had a pastry without green tea.  
Dinner was on the balcony from the nearby Krapow takeaway, vegetarian krapow and the special which was a Vietnamese salad.