Thursday 9 August 2007

More about Vancouver

We had a magical last day in Vancouver. After our usual later start - without too many moans and groans - we set off for the Sky Train station and bought a Day Pass which costs $8. We then boarded one of the frequent trains to Waterfront Station.

By the way Sky Trains do not have a driver. We discovered this disconcerting fact on the way to Braid in Coquitlam on Tuesday night. We realised that we could see both ends of the train and no driver. Apparently they are all controlled from one central point. It does feel slightly odd but it is only because we are used to the joys of Scotrail. The other difference is that all trains are "Fare Paid" which means you put money into a machine and buy a ticket. There are no ticket offices at the stations. We have been told that random checks are made but we have yet to see one and yet everyone buys their tickets. We noticed this in other cities as well. Face it the Canadians are either very honest or afraid of getting caught. When we commented on the lack of real rules we were told there are all sorts of rules but the country is so big it is hard for many to be enforced. For instance, in Vancouver you are only allowed to water your garden on certain days according to whether you are an odd or even number. Bearing in mind the amount of rain they get this water ban appears to err on the cautious side.

Back to our day ... the Sky Train links to the Sea Bus, a frequent ferry service between downtown and North Vancouver. We walked onto that, 15 minutes later we were in North Vancouver and Longsdale Quay a truly superb market and shopping destination. We then caught a bus from there to Grouse Market and took the cable car to the top. However it was 3000 feet higher up and colder and mistier there. We did see bears and a lumberjack show...

It was another occasion when our brains were wired to stupid. We were staying in the city so we were in city mode. We grabbed sunglasses and a waterproof and headed off to explore North Vancouver. We explored Longsdale Quay which offers a mix of fruit and vegetable stalls, craft stalls and food concessions with independent shops on the floor above. Shopped out we hopped on the bus to the mountain. Funny that word "mountain" did not ring a bell, after all we have spent a considerable time in the unpredictable mountains with the colder weather, mist, mosquitoes and bears. Anyway we were completely unprepared - I had my crocs on, Eilidh her converse, Gordon his open toed sandals. The bus ride from the quay to the mountain was between 15 and 20 mins and then the cable car took 6 minutes. We stepped off into another world of mist, rain and cold. We were assaulted by zillions of blasted mosquitoes and there were bears. It was all a shock to the system. Catching the efficient transit links we were back in downtown in 40 minutes. Shopping and people watching - what a contrast. As it was our last night Eilidh agreed we could have sushi again as long as we followed it by crepes on the way home.

The pictures below show Gordon and I with Larry and Loreen at the Beach, Dr Sun Yat Sen Garden, Gastown steam clock and environs and creatures we encountered whilst on Grouse Mountain.

Well not much I can add except to say that it has just been awesome. All expectations more than met and exceeded. Flicking back through this rambling blog is a great reminder of the times we have had, but it makes it more difficult to come to terms with the fact that, in less than 24hrs, we will be back home. It goes without saying that I am going to be sorry to leave.

I hope the pictures have given a good account of our trip. No doubt I will bore the pants of some of you poor folk with the full package of pics back in Glasgow, but until then, its bye from the three of us here in Vancouver.






























Pictures as promised!

These all relate to Vancouver, the International Fireworks Display, The Aquarium and Stanley Park. More to follow before we leave!!!



























Tuesday 7 August 2007

Vancouver - A Fabulous Place to be

Wow! Stuart got 6 A's in his Highers!!! Good Job Stuart!

On Saturday morning we grumpily, grouchily and grudgingly packed up the RV and left the site by 7.15 am. We were on the 9am ferry bleary eyed and needing breakfast. Crossing over, with some trepidation about traffic, maps and directions we set off to find Anackis Island and the Fraserway RV office. The clock was ticking we had to be there by 11.30 am packed, clean, gas full, black and grey tanks empty. Why did our stuff not fit back into the bags? We have acquired a motley collection of additional stuff that two of us think absolutely essential. I think we will need to get another luggage bag and pay extra. Gordon's suggestion that I ditch my extensive and growing collection of Canadian authored books and one of the extremely heavy Harry Potter hardbacks (Eilidh and I couldn't wait for the other to finish) is very unreasonable and yes we do need that many pairs of shoes and those clothes. I can see that Thursday morning will provide plenty of family bonding moments. I digress I know but isn't that what teachers are meant to do - or what their pupils hope they will do? We did make it in a less frazzled state than we thought we would and were directed to a parking spot. A young man poked his head inside and then gave a cursory glance around the outside. It took all of 60 seconds compared to the precise, painful and pedantic hand over we had in Calgary. Could it have been one was Canadian and one German or is that generalising national traits too far? We will all RV again.

After checking into the hotel we ventured down Robson to look for lunch. This is the shopping equivalent of Buchanan Street but has far better views as at each intersection you can see mountains or sea. Back at the hotel we phoned the Chungs (we meet them at Big Bar Ranch) and arranged to meet at a Safeway Parking Lot. I think there is a picture below of us all - Larry, Loreene, Nathan, Jordan, Courtenay and two of us as someone has to take the picture.

They picked us up and we took our picnic to the beach to watch the grand finale of the HSBC Festival of Light. This is an international fireworks display that takes place in English Bay in Vancouver. We ate a wonderful picnic of fried chicken, salads, sushi and nibbles washed down with coffee and iced tea and before we knew it there was the most amazing sunset. Eilidh and Courtenay had fun on the beach and an extremely complicated game that meant they had to guard a log in case the boys stole it. Larry had brought a radio and at 10 we turned it on so we could hear the music as the fireworks went off. Wow! We had never seen the like. At the end the Chungs insisted on driving us all the way back. What a great day.

Sunday was spent exploring Canada Place and Granville Island via the trolley bus tour. The bus drivers deserve an extra special mention as they all exhibited a wry and biting sense of humour often directed at Americans who had no idea they were being made fun of. Monday we went to Stanley Park and the Aquarium and Tuesday was China Town and Gas Town followed by an excellent dinner at the Chung's house. Over to Gordon ...

It is going to be interesting getting back home. Surprising how much additional items you acquire along the way. Pleased to report that we were however able to leave the 2.5 foot marshmallow toasting fork, squeegee mop and pan scrubber on the RV. Both Sally and Eilidh did take some persuading over these items.

Vancouver would appear to be everything people say it is and more. First impressions were a little disappointing due to the huge expectations of what we would find, but a few hours into our stay here and the city's charms soak in. Every where you look there are points of interest. The mountains, the sea, diverse skyline, public art, fountains, open tree lined spaces, clever landscaping.

There is a buzz about Vancouver but it is very different from Glasgow. There are all the exclusive boutiques anyone could wish for but a more gentle, laid back pace to it all. Shops seem to remain open until 10pm or later every night and city dwellers make good use of this time to browse and dine. Casual smart seems to be the dress code for the majority of the city workers.

We have found people to be very helpful. Stand for a few minutes trying to figure out a Sky Train map and someone will helpfully volunteer to assist you. On our way back to the hotel from Stanley Park we were advised that a No.19 would be our best bet. We checked with the driver and he cheerfully confirmed that he stopped within a couple of blocks and would call out to us when we were to get off. Time passed and we began to recognise some of the surrounding land marks to our hotel. Should we get off? Had the driver forgotten about us?

The driver then announced that the next stop was the end of his route and all passengers were to get off...except those going to the Sandman. Everyone eventually got off leaving ourselves and another couple on the bus. The driver then announced that he would drop us off at the front of the hotel before heading back to the depot! Sure enough he stopped right outside the main door and thanked us for visiting Vancouver and wished us a good day.

As you can imagine we have been trying to see as much as possible and have covered all of the key areas of interest in downtown, although I could go back to them all and spend a least a day in each of them exploring. Robson Street for its shops, Gas Town for its ambience, Granville Island for its markets and Stanley Park for its location and diversity and these are just a few of my highlights.


Hi! I can't believe that we only have two more days until coming back to cold Scotland! What a scary thought!! The fireworks where amazing! I had a fab time with Courtenay! It was so good to have someone my own age! The winner of the competition was Canada! Uptil the last couple of days we have all been good about not shouting at each other in the mornings but since we have been in Vancouver breakfast has been a bit hay wire so we think that must be why we have been getting annoyed with each other! uh oh, i am getting as bad as mum with the digressing, that can't be good!!! On Sunday we went to granville island there was lots of really cool markets and street entertainers! On Monday we went to Stanley park! I had a really fun time at the aquarium there were so many fish to look at! I liked the totem poles too! Last night i had a really awesome time with Courtenay! We watched a film and generally just had a laugh! Right well i better get going! love eilidh xxxxx

Off to get the sea bus pics following later.......................



Monday 6 August 2007

Victoria

On our first night we got the water taxi across to the main bit of Victoria. I really liked the water taxi because it was very low down and near the water! When we arrived there was lots of music and street entertainers! It was very cool!!!

We wandered around for a while then went to Earls a big restaurant chain in Canada. It was surprisingly good! The next day we went to an All-star Converse shop! I got a really cool pair that only arrived that day!! I thought Victoria was a really nice city with lots to explore! T.T.F.N (Ta Ta For Now-Tigger) xxxxxxx

We left Ucluelet shrouded in morning fog but as we made our way away from the coast and back into the mountains the fog lifted and we had unsurpassed views again of mountains and lakes. We had decided not to stop in Coombs on the way back as once was enough. After 3 hours Eilidh and I were hungry and needing a stop but Gordon had that look. He was staring intently ahead at the road and view (essential really bearing in mind there was still a bit of RV rallying going on) and playing across his face was the idea that this was probably a six hour drive and we had to keep going. After some persuasion we finally stopped at a small town called Ladysmith perched high on a hill overlooking the water below with views of the mainland Coastal Mountains in the distance. We found a very smart and pleasant coffee shop and had panninis and coffee. The nearer we get to Victoria and Vancouver the higher the number of good coffee shops we find in each area. Ambling back to the car we met a man out walking his pet of 19 years. He swore she was the most loyal and rewarding pet ever. She was a white parrot (cockatoo perhaps?) riding up on his shoulder. I snapped a pic but not being the expert it was into the sun and the bird has a white glow all round it – perhaps the photo could spark a mystical cult.

Several hours later we were on the outskirts of Victoria and the dawning realisation that we had forgotten to look up directions to this place. After consultant of maps most of which did not give enough detail we made a guess and headed right over a bridge as this was a westish area and it was a harbour. Our destination was West Bay Marine Village. After Eilidh prompted me I remembered our BC Atlas had city maps and was able to find our destination. Eildih meanwhile had been following instructions and had the laptop open in front of her searching for a wireless signal.

The site was breathtaking as we were parked on the marina edge looking over a collection of boats and the most funky and architecturally original float homes – these were not house boats but houses built on floating docks. I want to live in one … as Eilidh said above we took a water taxi and explored the city and Earl’s by night. There is no equivalent to Earl’s at home but it is a little like a Di Maggios but with a much more eclectic menu and has a bar and screens and good décor, in fact nothing much like it at all.

Our second day in Victoria we walked into downtown all along the water past old houses and condos and condos. It was a unique experience having the wild and salty smelling water and small beach area on one side and modern city living on the other. The walk took about 45 minutes and came out downtown at the Parliament buildings and Wharf side. We strolled around the more interesting and funky shops in market square and stopped for lunch and a very large jug of strawberry marguerittas in a Mexican café. Suffused with a warm pink glow we continued exploring the city which has a very recognisable and accessible shopping/restaurant area which is why it is considered British as that is more like home even if the architecture and pleasant laid back attitude are not so familiar. What was even better was the museum was open till 10pm which meant we could still go and visit the highly informative and beautiful First Nation floor and then the Titanic artefact exhibition which was very well done and finally an exploration of land and sea environments in BC dating back to the ice age. The large life size woolly mammoth surrounded by real ice and then a thunderstorm made Eilidh leap in the air.

We have to be up and away from the site by 7.15am tomorrow so we may be a little bleary eyed.

This is a cop-out by me in terms of this post, time is odf the essence and we need to be going. So my contribution is the pictures below. We all know that my photographic skills are at least better than my English ones anyway. Victoria was great though!