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Thursday, August 23, 2018

Touring Montreal

There is a saying most everywhere in Canada that we only have two seasons.......Winter and Construction season. Well that is true for Montreal no doubt but they also have lots of festivals and the current one running with no end in sight is called the 'Orange Cone Festival'! Yep, everywhere you turn, or try to turn, there is construction. Bridges are closed, new ones are being built, roads are so rough you can lose a filling, and detours around the mess take you miles from where you want to go. Now don't get me wrong.......construction is a good thing. Good infrastructure is important and I like to see new projects happening. As a tourist in a strange city with totally insane drivers to contend with......I can do without the construction. But as they say.....deal with it!

That said, my carefully laid plan on how to get to the Grayline Tour Bus at Dorchester Square quickly went off the rails when we came upon road closures and detours. Thank God it was 8 AM on a Saturday morning and not the peak of a weekday rush! Regardless we found our destination and a great parking spot. We decided to take the 3.5 hour tour of the city. It was a regular bus and not the cool double decker that are so great for picture taking, but this bus went to places the hop on - hop off bus did not.



Our tour started near here.

There are lots of these. I think you pay your money to unlock a bike, ride it, and return it.

Chinatown area. Not very big in Montreal, but every city has one.

There are incredible flowers everywhere. Montreal is a VERY clean and pretty city.

Another mode of transport!

I like the starburst my camera leans gave me. This is the famous Notre Dame Cathedral.

Jacques Cartier


The statues on the front of the cathedral









Interesting buildings.....

........and architecture!

Very old building with a modern mail box. Did they really have to place it here??

Interesting stone work.

Cobblestone streets. Very cool.

Opposite the cathedral in the square

The carvings show natives in various tasks.


Canals

This is called Habitat 67. They were built to house folks visiting Expo 67, the Worlds Fair in 1967.

Now they are high priced condos.

Downtown Montreal. A vibrant city.

A portion of the grand prix course. We made a short run with the bus! Cars aren't allowed.

The old United States pavilion for Expo 67. It is now a biosphere of sorts. 

The 'gay' area of Montreal. See the Pride balloons all ready to go for the big parade that was toking place on Sunday.

Cavalia horse show is in Montreal for a long run.

The stairways to the second floor apartments. The mail delivery folks must deliver to the second floor suites. Imagine the ice issues in winter!


The olympic village for the '86 Olympics held in Montreal. Now? You guessed it......condos!

The Big O, or the Olympic Stadium. An impressive structure. The highest inclined support in the world at about 300 feet.

The Notre Dame Cemetery. Lorne Green is buried here, along with about one million others. The largest cemetery in Canada.

St Joseph's Oratory. The largest church in Canada. Seats 2400.

Ninety nine steps. Say a Hail Mary prayer at each step and your prayer will be answered.

Beautiful grounds.

Olympic Stadium from the overlook on Mont Royale.

City view

Artwork

Back near Dorchester Square where we started.


We had a great tour guide. He was full of facts about the city, most of which I have now forgotten of course. We had a very skilled driver as well. How we didn't wipe out several pedestrians and cars I have no idea! The buses are huge and the roads are NOT.

By 1 PM we were back and starving so we headed across the street to Dunn's Restaurant. Montreal smoked meat sandwich and a deli pickle hit the spot. Cheryl tried Poutine and it was not such a hit.

With a full belly we wandered around the area.

Mary Queen of the World Cathedral. See story below.


They were preparing for a wedding and I snuck inside

Look at the dome!

So impressive!


Very small bride!....or maybe flower girl!


Shamelessly stolen from Steve and Dianne (Living the Dream)!
Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral (French: Cathédrale Marie-Reine-du-Monde) is a minor basilica in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and the seat of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Montreal. It is the third largest church in Quebec after Saint Joseph's Oratory (also in Montreal) and the Basilica of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré east of Quebec City. The building is 101 m (333 ft) in length, 46 m (150 ft) in width, and a maximum height of 77 m (252 ft) at the cupola, the diameter of which is 23 m (75 ft).

The statue of Sir John A MacDonald was spray painted by vandals. His statues are the target across the country these days for something he did over 150 years ago. Some say he was the architect of the Indian residential schools. You can read about it here. The vandalism took place on Friday and we visited on Saturday. Most of the red paint had been removed.

Sir John A MacDonald. First Prime Minister of Canada.

Sprayed with red paint by vandals the night before. They pretty much had it cleaned up.

Wilfred Laurier. First French Prime Minister of Canada. He was Prime Minister from 1896 - 1911.


War memorial in Dorchester Square.




By 3 PM we had enough and dreaded the drive home. We got some instructions from the Tourism lady, then we missed a turn after crossing the St. Lawrence River. With a few curse words we managed to get back on track and a short hour and a half (yikes) drive we were home unscathed. I can't believe how busy the roads are around here! Construction and detours make them a bit much for this prairie boy.

We drove half way across the city to take the Jacques Cartier Bridge to the south shore.



We arrived safely at our campground and enjoyed some quiet time. Tomorrow is another busy day!

.....and that was Our View From Here!

5 comments:

  1. Excellent blog Dave! Couldn’t imagine trying to drive our truck through Montreal. So much to see there. Quebec City is even better. Safe travels!

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  2. Looks like you made the most of your time there. The city has some incredible history and architecture!

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  3. Glad you managed to manouever around that city without too many problems. Wow ... not my kind of place to drive. lol

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  4. Looks like you be ready to drop after a tour that busy. It is amazing that we all think we know our History until you take a Tour then you hear things never mentioned in school.
    Be Safe and Enjoy!

    It's about time.

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  5. Dave what a wonderful post once again! You guys are just killing it with sightseeing! Beautiful city and so much history. Great pictures!!

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