Friday, September 12, 2008

The Maritimes

Yesterday was a traveling day. We left our little B&B, and headed east. We bypassed Quebec City and Montreal, finally stopping at the first provincial park we came to in New Brunswick, just outside Edmundson. It was the next to the last day the park would be open this season, so we lucked out. We talked to Jon and Jamie before we went to bed, and found out that Sophie was pretty sick from eating a variety of refuse around the site. Jamie took her to the vet and got her some flagel, so hopefully she is better today. We made a dinner out of cheese, crackers, several different kinds of beer, and chocolates and called it a day.

Last night was the first night I was really cold in the tent. I had to get up during the night and turn up the heater after I found myself shivering in my sleeping bag. But the heater did the trick, and I slept in until 7:30 a.m. This morning when we finally got on the road at 11 a.m, the temperature was 48 degrees, so you know I had my heated clothes cranked up to high for most of the day!

We had breakfast, packed up, and then went over to the New Brunswick Botanical Gardens, and then to the NB Classic Auto Museum. The gardens were lovely even though it was at the end of their season. I’ll upload pictures tomorrow from Steve’s camera.

We finally got on the road about 11 a.m. and headed to Grand Falls to see the visitor center there. In the spring the falls are supposed to be 9/10’s the size of Niagara Falls. Today, they were quite lovely even at low water levels.

Some NB conservation officers stopped us in the parking lot of the Grand Falls and chatted about motorcycles and travel and their jobs. They said there was a lot of poaching going on in NB and Quebec. People were killing deer and moose to trade for drugs. Apparently a very heavy, mob based drug traffic scene goes on out of Montreal. They cautioned us to be on the lookout for moose on the route we were taking, and that they had seen a monster one two days ago. There were certainly lots of highway signs warning of moose traffic today but we didn’t see any, thank goodness.

Tonight we are staying at the Berrypatch Campground just outside of Bathurst. We are the only campers, so we have the place to ourselves. We’ve done laundry, caught up on the internet, and had a nice dinner of salad, baquette, and a nice Australian shiraz. Right now there are fireworks going on in town, but we haven’t figured out the occasion yet.

Tomorrow we will stop in town at the Farmer’s market for breakfast, and then head south along the east NB coast.

Ontario and Quebec

So this morning we woke up to a beautiful sunny day. Steve had gotten up earlier and turned our new heater up to high, and it was toasty warm in the tent, but very chilly (not quite frost) outside. Our campsite was next to a small lake, and the steam was rising off the lake, making it all very magical. We had a breakfast of cereal, coffee, and strawberry muffins, and headed off after getting the tent packed up. We are getting pretty efficient at packing up the tent by now.

We passed Ottawa and stopped at a tourist info center and decided to alter our route a little, and go off the beaten path for the night. We stopped at a cheese/chocolate/apple store along the way, and have some wonderful cheeses stinking up our ice chest. We are working on eating the chocolate caramels.

Tonight we are staying at Le Cite de la St. Lawrence B&B in St. Alexis-des-Monts. It is definitely off the beaten track. We are the only guests and the place is in a quiet small rural French Quebec town. I actually miss my little trailer tent nest, which is compact and cozy.

We had a pretty exciting day today. Steve is a great driver, he has maneuvered our rig down the highway amid the roaring semi’s, through pot holes, through construction gravel and traffic that was just insane, learned how to back the bike and trailer up, and has not yet dropped the bike! But the most masterful thing he did today was to get us on the ferry from Hudson to Oka. I have never seen a ferry like this one before. It is pulled by a power boat back and forth across the river. After the ferry is loaded, the power boat takes off and tugs it across and picks up speed as it gets near the other side, then steers to the side and gets out of the way as the ferry sort of rams into the other side. What an experience! But even better was getting the bike and trailer on and off the ferry. The approach has about a 10 inch drop, so the ferrymen put out some boards for the tires to go on. But the drop is not completely covered up, there are still gaping holes to drive into. So they directed Steve across the boards, and after the bike crossed, they quickly moved the boards so that the trailer wheels would also go across and not into the holes. I was screaming as I watched this happen getting on the ferry (I had insisted on getting off the bike before he tried this), and laughing on the other side as they did the same thing. These guys had obviously done this a lot and had their timing and moves down perfect!

I have a few pictures, but they don’t do justice to the event! Steve said at dinner if he had known what he was going to face as we took the turnoff to Oka, he wouldn’t have done it!

Well, I guess that is it for tonight. Tomorrow we head for New Brunswick.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Ontario, Canada


This is the slider swing from the Driftwood Campground we stayed at last night. I thought it was very cool, and reminded me of my childhood when these swings were all over the place.

Well, we have internet tonight at the Renfrew KOA, but it is V E R Y slow so I'll try to upload pictures tomorrow night at hopefully a faster connection.

The Spragge KOA was right off of busy highway 17, so we passed it by and went on to the Chutes Provincial Park. I guess the KOA's cater to the big rigs (I don't think we qualify) who have some soundproofing. The picture to the left is taken at Chutes Provincial Park as we were getting ready to leave.

We started out yesterday with a visit to Big Spring State Park in Michigan, Kitsi-itsy-bitchy- or something like that in Ojibiwa. We were the first to arrive at the park, and the ranger tasked us with feeding the fish while he went about his other morning chores. It was a very cool park, had a manually operated raft that took you out over the Big Spring that you could see 50+ feet under water with an artesian spring literally erupting from the bottom of the pond. It wa almost volcanic, except it was at 45 degrees fahrenheit.

After feeding the biggest trout I've seen for a while, we continued on our trip and crossed into Canada at Sault St. Marie. Northern Michigan was very windblown and bleak (Steve says it would have been nicer if the sun was shining), but by the time we got to Ontario, the sun was out but it was windy. We had a great lunch overlooking the Soo locks, and then traveled on east on Hwy 17.

Wow, the semi's own the road! They were all barreling down the highway at 10 or 20 klicks over the speed limit. One obviously missed a turn, and when we came by they had three tow trucks trying to get him out of the ditch on the opposite side of the road.

Chutes Provincial Park was about 1/2 mile out of Massey where we had located the local LCBO (local govt. liquor store) and restocked our cooler with yummy beers. After setting up the tent, we took a stroll around the campground and met a very nice couple with a beautiful wooden boat that they were taking to Lake Superior. They had a Ford Ranger like Jamie's only it was blue and had the niftiest pop-up camper in the truck bed! He had searched all over for a camper that would fit his truck, and found a manufacturer in Chicago. He had driven down to get it from upper Ontario, Canada.

It rained last night, but we stayed dry in our camper. Unfortunately the blower fan on our heater had died, so today we stopped at Home Depot in North Bay and got another. Boy does it generate the heat!!! That's good, because things were a little damp from yesterday.

Today we went past Sudbury and its nickel smelters. Steve said it looked a lot better than the last time he had seen it, but the trees and shrubs were still stunted from the acid rain from the smelters. I guess they have cleaned them up some.

We spent most of the morning in heavily wooded landscapes, and then suddenly....cows and pastures and farmland! I think I prefer the farmland! Certainly the smells.... reminds me of my childhood visits to my Uncle Adolph's farm in Minnesota.

We finished our day with a trip to a super Walmart to restock some supplied. We had a heck of a time finding any grocery stores today, so we finally gave up and got some directions from the KOA manager to the closest grocery store...Walmart. We finished our day with soup and salad.

Tomorrow we continue on our trek east, but we have decided to quit as close to 4 p.m. as we can, either in a motel or camping park.... so, we'll see what happens. We'll certainly try to post pictures tomorrow.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Upper Peninsula, Michigan

Tonight finds us in the small hamlet of Thompson (mile 1,917) on the North shore of the Upper Peninsula in Michigan. It was an uneventful ride up from Sturgeon Bay except for the flashing red lights of the Wisconsin Highway Patrol. The very nice officer informed me that I was speeding (in a construction zone, no less!) but he let me off with a warning. Cool!

We passed in and out of views of Lake Michigan and stopped to gander a closer look at a small but very pretty county park / campground filled with eccentric but kind people who just had to fill us in on the local color. Motorcycles just tend to get conversations started.

Tonight, we are in a beautiful campground right on the shoreline of Lake Michigan. It has been raining but we are snug in our little wheeled wonder with a campfire going between us and the beach. Truly a charming spot!

Tomorrow we will enter Ontario, Canada, and have plans to stay either at Chutes Provincial Park or Spragge KOA. We'll see what the day brings.