Monday, September 26, 2016

Au Revoir Montreal

We leave Montreal tomorrow. On Sunday we headed from  Westmount up and over Mount Royal to eventually end up at the Jean Talon market. Here is Montreal's Beaver Lake.
 Next stop the Chalet du Mont Royal. What a beautiful view of the city. And Norman.

The weather was perfect and so many people were enjoying the last warm days before the winter arrives. 

As we headed down the hill we came upon more gatherings. This drumming group meets every Sunday, Tam-tam.  Far out and groovy. 

At the Mordecai Richler gazebo was a DJ and I think a punk group. This gazebo was just renovated for $700,000. Money well spent???
When in Montreal you must take in all that is French. Norm and I have never had poutine. Duncan said the place to go is Banquise on Rue Rachel. We tried Sunday but got caught up the Montreal Marathon, too many people lined up. But never fear we made it on Monday.
And we ate it all.
Norm even went for Quebec cola with maple syrup!
By the time we made it to the market we had walked about 12 km. We can only wish Victoria could have such an impressive market, beautiful produce.



On Monday we walked along St. Denis and St. Laurent towards McGill. Graffiti are at another level here.

Crazy
Some of the homes in the area are delightful if not unusual. 

Montreal even has a "pocket park" called Halte Pietonne. 

And here is a look at how it used to look on St. Laurent at the department store called Warshaw.
If sterilized drinking glasses are important then this is the pub for you.
Or if pastries are your choice, these ones I think are blessed.
Good bye Montreal. 

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Discovering Montreal

Life in Montreal is at a slower pace than in New York, Boston or the New England states. Staying at our free Airbnb with cousin Ineke makes a nice difference. 
We arrived in Montreal Thursday afternoon and felt right at home back on the Metro.
Berri-UQAM Metro station for those who recognize the underground.
some of the things that make Montreal Montreal.... The subway here is cleaner and brighter than New York's much older underground railway.
Bagels, smoked salmon and cream cheese (and Yellow Bunny)
Construction everywhere, this is in front of McGill. Below we were unable to get to the Montreal Musem of Art due to construction and a gas leak which brought fire trucks, ambulance, police and of course only in Montreal a man watching in his suit plus nice white sneakers sans socks.
Norm looking through the gates at the entrance to McGill.
We hiked up Mount Royal Park. A beautiful and cool day.

Montreal also means shopping at Simons. Winter sweater!
Public art..
Moose in Montreal
This one is called the Student L'Etudiant.
Off to Old Town Montreal since the museum was not open for us. And again we came upon a wedding in front of the Notre Dame Cathedral.
Horse drawn carriage called a caleche. 
Only in Montreal?? Maybe lots of places in the eastern winters. 
This afternoon we attended not one but two craft fairs! Lynn, friend of Ineke (ours too) drove us to the POP Montreal festival craft show. Excellent fair but so crowded and hard to move about. Next an Etsy show. 
What fun. The location was once the CPR's Angus yards, where the railway fixed locomotives. 
 Check those steel girders.
Even outside the girders look artistic??

Dinner at Magpie on the Plateau, not far from Boulevard St.Laurent, and yes pizza!
 
Topped off with ice cream at Kem Co Ba.
Ohhh  there is a bagel store next door. You have to have bagels in Montreal, Fairmount Bagels.
 
I think we have had more than enough to eat tonight. 

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Goodbye USA

Our last full day in the USA. Montreal here we come. We stayed at the lovely Bel-Aire Motel, not as classy as the Palmer Motel in Manchester Center but comfortable.

(Yes, that's a queen-size bed.) And it was only a three-minute walk to the surf-style breakfast called The Spot in an old gas station. Again real maple syrup!
Today's plan is to take local transit since we returned our car. Online it says the fare is $3.50. If we purchased a Presto Pass it would be $2.75, but we're not here long enough to make it worthwhile. Once at the bus stop we see the fare is $1.25, getting better all the time. The bus driver asks if we are seniors, yes, now it is 60 cents! But wait, our first time on the bus? Yes, okay no charge. Nice eh?
We rode the bus south to the Shelburne Museum. It is one of the nation's most diverse museums of folk art, design, and Americana. There are over 100,000 works exhibited in 38 buildings on 45 acres. A lot to see! Electra Havemeyer Webb started collecting pieces, especially folk art when she was 17. 
This round barn is 80 feet in diameter and was built in 1901, and are supposed to be more efficient in handling feed and hay, and the manure the cows produce. Guess who built the first round barn? The Shakers in 1826. Inside the barn there were displays of horse-drawn coaches.

This is a Surrey with the fringe on top.
Many buildings at the museum had unbelievable collections: dolls, wine glasses, toys, old general store items, glassware, pottery, old presse ... But above are razors for shaving. There were at least three times this many, collected by a New England judge. But even more interesting were the trivets. Willam Paley from Ontario had 2,000 trivets. When he died he left them all to the museum. 
And more...
More trivets
This is the largest collection in the world. Collecting postcards doesn't seem so bad.
The quilt display was remarkable. Dominique Ehrmann from Quebec starting quilting just 11 years ago. This one above is 3 dimensional and is wild! What a piece of art.
Another one of Dominique's.
Above is a quilt from the 1800s.
Last ime we were at the Shelburne Museum there was a display of rug hooking. One woman had hooked  a rug for every state and they were massive in size. This time only a few historiical rugs were there but we saw this stair runner in one of the homes. Inspiring me to do more rug hooking.
The Ticonderoga is a 220-foot paddle wheeler that used to travel up and down Lake Champlain until the early 1950s. Eventually with cars on the scene, the Ti (as the tour guide called her) was not in demand. In 1956 the Shelburne Museum bought the Ti and her moved to its present location. It took 65 days through the winter to get her here, dragged up the hillside from Lake Champlain The tour guide (who loved giving tours, and used to work as a sailor herself) told us more than you might want to know about the Ticonderoga. We learned about pistons, pilots, firemen who shovelled coal, the crankshaft, paddle wheels, the dining room, the captain's quarters, the engineer, bells, whistles... You got the idea. She was a great source of information. 
Norman needed a rest on these lips after that.
The last two exhibits we wanted to see were the Circus posters and Grandma Moses art show. We were not allowed photos. The photo below I took from a booklet I found outside the show. 
The Papering the Town: Circus Posters in America displayed the advertising posters that were the mass media of the day. Most of these posters were plastered on barn and house walls. The majority of this exhibit came from the exterior of a house in Colchester, Vermont. With great care the posters were removed often some up to 20 layers thick.
The second exhibit of Grandma Moses showed her folk art paintings of mostly mid-century American culture. Her work is a lot like Maud Lewis of Nova Scotia. (We like Maud better)
 
To finish off the perfect USA holiday we had pizza, wood-fired Naples style in Burlington. it was delicious, almost as good as Pizza Primastrada back in Victoria.