If you wanted to see what montreal was like, you could just
google images ‘things to see in montreal’, and probably find much better
pictures than the ones I took. So to make it worth your while to read this,
I’ll say more what I did/experienced. My way of exploring a city probably isn’t
very normal, I’ll do about 10 minutes of research, compromised pretty much of
googling ‘top 10 things in montreal’ and choosing a couple that sound cool,
seeing where they are on google maps, and choosing 2 or 3 that are close to
each other for that day and keeping in mind the others for another day. For me
exploring a city isn’t just about the ‘places to be’, or main attractions, but
also what’s inbetween, the parks, small shops, restaurants with patios,
pedestrian streets. And I certainly don’t have a set plan or route, my
instructions for the day are just a sticky-note sized general directions (I
don’t have a smart phone). This leads to getting lost a lot, but that’s fine.
It’s not really lost though, as J.R. Tolkien said, “not all who wander are lost”.
If I see something cool, I’ll go check it out. And then I see something else,
so I go to that. And something else. And before you know it, I have no clue
where I am anymore or how to get to where I was originally going, although I
usually know the general direction. This
will make more sense if I actually tell you what I did, so without further ado,
here’s what I did in montreal
Friday:
Friday:
Did a quick google
search, made a plan for saturday, walked around, checked out the huge orange
across the road. Problem was that I was
right by car central, 3 lanes of one-way traffic, then 4-lane highway in each
direction, and another 3 lanes of one-way traffic. Not much for the walking
interest. went for supper at a restaurant. The other co-op student went home
(he lives in montreal), and the two supervisors were in a hotel downtown, so it
was just me. It’s weird eating out by yourself, especially after ordering and
waiting for your food. but plenty of opportunity for people watching – the
father-son duo 2 tables down, dad in dress pants, collared shirt and nice
shoes, son in faded and ripped jeans, flip flops, a normal t-shirt and
checking his blackberry all the time, the middle-aged lady at the table beside
me with heavy makeup complaining about the service, the family a couple tables
down with a very energetic and outgoing mom making her two daughters laugh, the
cute elderly couple with the man who holds his wife’s arm when he’s talking to
her, and her looking at me every once in a while with a kind smile like I’m her
grandson, the waitress’s surprised smile when I order a root beer, as the only
logical explanation for a young 20-something unshaven male to eat out by
himself is to drown his sorrows in beer. You are a bit more noticeable though, and people glance your way more often. Updated the blog that evening.
Saturday:
Walked around, found a sign for a cross, so went to that. Found a trail off to the side, went along that for a while, ended up at a parking lot. Wanted to go to the cemetery that I had seen on google maps previously, had no clue where I was. Asked an ice cream vendor, they said it was on the other side of the mountain. Darn. Walked back up the trail, walked past the cross, and all the way back to the chalet-thing (about 4km). found a map (hallelujah!) that told me where to go. Headed out towards the cross again, but turned down a different way. Found a cool park, and an area that the map said was a sculpture garden. Walked through the cemetery for a bit, but access to the larger half was closed.
Walked down to cemetery entrance into pretty rich residential area. Getting dark, feet and legs and knees and body hurt, and no restaurant in sight. Eventually found someone walking a dog, asked him, said nearest one was probably another 15min walk away. Lovely. Eventually made it, passing even more nice mansions. Had supper, asked them to call a taxi at the end. Made it home.
Sunday
Looked up bixi, a bike rental system, that seemed
like a good idea. Found the nearest one (about 20min walk), then biked
downtown. Had lunch, visited art museum that had a cool modern art exhibit, wandered around, tried to get to old montreal/notre dame area,
noticing roads getting less and less bike-friendly and more industrial, knew I had to go right, but roads to the right were all dead ends, and the river was right there. Saw a bridge up ahead, so continued on to get closer. Got a pic, turned around, found a bike station
that had at map (hallelujah!), got back downtown. Found a
cathedral and participated in a catholic mass for a while, and just hung out in
there for a bit. Decided time to head back, planned out a route, cool biking
through downtown, found cool fountain place and random fog machines, turned
onto Victoria heading west (I didn’t register at the time that it was
west, it was just ‘that way’, but for here I’ll say it was west), and suddenly
it’s one-way going against me. Go south one street, turn right to go parallel.
Runs into T intersection, don’t want right as that goes back to Victoria, so go
south and take next right. It’s one-way, going the wrong way. Again. Go one
more street down, it’s pretty residential, and eventually it takes a left (even
further away from Victoria), and then left again, so I’m going backwards. I
turn around and see a small footpath going west, so I go down it. It meanders a
bit and comes up to a road also going west. Follow it for a bit, but it’s a
dead end. Back track, head north and then west again, dead end. Notice signs
saying ‘terrian prive’ (private property), so I try and get out of it. A couple
dead ends later, and I’m back at the original T intersection I was at a while
ago. Screw this, I’m going north to Victoria. Decide to see what’s one street
north of Victoria, it’s also one-way, but in the right direction! Wonderful.
What’s not so wonderful is that there’s a pretty huge hill facing me. Make it
up to the top (here’s the view looking down as I was taking a break), go for
one block, and there’s another bloody hill about as big as the
other one. Make it up that one as well
on the big 3-speed bixi bike, and it seems to be flat for a while. Then it goes
downhill for about 5 blocks, and no stop signs. Pure bliss J. Run into another
bloody T intersection, and remembering what happened last time I turn towards
victoria, which has turned back to 2-way. It’s pretty dark by now, and the
people are probably wondering what a guy is doing on a bixi bike so far away
from any station (I’m at the very edge of their service area). Finally make it
to the outermost bike station, park it. Find a subway for supper, sit outside
where there’s a bunch of Philippino guys playing chess. The last game to finish
was a young teenager (probably 13-15ish) playing an older guy, and after they
finished the older guy was saying all the things the younger guy did wrong (the
old guy probably won), that his close game wasn’t good, that his style was very
English, that he should work on having a plan. After the young guy left, the
old guy was saying that he was very good, and that he could win an upcoming
tournament. It was interesting to note how differently the old guy described
the young guy once he was gone. Walked all the way home.
Monday
Decide to explore downtown/old montreal some more, as well
as a science museum that I had found. Walk/bike to downtown through Victoria,
too many stop signs on the downhill part. Very annoying. Wander around what I
guess was old montreal with cobble stone streets. Random fighter
airplane does 2 flybys, very noisy and didn’t
know what was going on the first time. Weird. Found another cathedral (there’s
a lot of them), decided to visit that one. Very impressive, also had organ
music going. And it was in there, with soulful organ music and amazing art and
architecture, that I found myself...
Walk/bike down the
port/waterfront area, go to the museum, find out they have an imax as well.
Decide one on reefs would be pretty cool, but not till 4:30. Pretty cool
museum, some stuff on FRP in bridges and how moment of inertia affects
deflection, stuff I had learned pretty in-depth in school. One really cool
thing on brain activity, where 2 people put some sort of headband on their head
that measures something, and there’s a ball inbetween them, and somehow by
thinking hard it would move the ball towards the other person, and the
objective was to make the ball go to the other person’s side. Had no idea how
it worked, but it looked pretty cool! Another cool thing was a table with a
bunch of cubes, and by positioning them and turning them it made different
beats/tunes, so you could make some pretty cool music with it. Here’s a pro
playing one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mgy1S8qymx0
Played around with that for a while. Eventually time for the imax, amazing
variety of fish and coral and color. Really cool.
So that was my time in montreal. Probably my favourite thing
about the city is the architecture – there’s no cookie-cutter subdivisions.
Well, there probably are, but not that I saw. All the houses are stone and very
different, some even looking like castles. And in the downtown area you’ll have
steel-and-glass skyscrapers right beside old stone cathedrals.
Another cool thing is their taste in soccer – the soccer
jersey count for the weekend was 2 AC Milan, 1 Chelsea, 1 Bayern Munich, 1 Real
Madrid, 1 Valencia, 4 France, 1 Spain, 2 Brazil, and about 15 barcelona.
The plan after Montreal is to head south into the US, and stop at Binghampton, US, for the weekend. Bye for now!
The plan after Montreal is to head south into the US, and stop at Binghampton, US, for the weekend. Bye for now!

very cool Jeremie! I love your way of taking in a city. Looking forward to following your adventures. You are aware that you have the coolest job ever right?
ReplyDeleteeven with long days and 5:30am alarms, it still is a pretty cool job!
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