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Wineries of Southern Ontario

by Pat - 0 Comment(s)

During a recent visit to my sister in Toronto, we spent a couple of days exploring the Niagara Region. The only thing we really planned was overnight at the Prince of Wales Hotel in Niagara-on-the-Lake, which was offering a great deal for an upgraded room and dinner for two.

Although the drive is on the 403 freeway, it’s quite an interesting drive, at least once you’re past Burlington, with Lake Ontario on your left. Once you’re within the Niagara Regional Municipality you’ll see all sorts of signs for wineries and it’s best to leave the highway for the backroads.

Before we went we saw self-drive wine tasting tours offered online (e.g., $20 to taste at 3 wineries). Not wanting to commit, and having viewed wineries before, we decided to just see where we ended up. Turns out that there are loads of wineries, some are affiliated (e.g., in the same valley) and offer maps and free tastings, and even if they charge it’s free if you buy a bottle or two. The most they seemed to charge is $2 a taste. Tasting the wines was fun and made a change from the Okanagan wines we’re more used to in Calgary. Many of the wineries offer other goodies, including local cheese.

Once you’ve tasted your fill, there are other delights: we hit pay-dirt in the small town of Jordan, with a lovely casual café as well as a fancier restaurant, an antique store with great prices (even including Ontario HST!) and an art gallery co-owned by a friend of a friend. Walking around Niagara-on-the-Lake (and trying to avoid the crowds) is also fun with lots of nice, browseable shops.

I have to admit that late May in southern Ontario is quite lovely: warm weather without humidity; they don’t even understand the concept of late snow falls, let alone Monsoon June!

Gerry

Check out some of these great titles for touring the Niagara region!


Canada Day 2012

by Patti - 0 Comment(s)

Celebrate Canada Day 2012 in Calgary, with tons of family friendly activities!

 

At Heritage Park, the first 2012 guests before 10:30 a.m. will be treated to Heritage Park’s famous hot pancake breakfast.

Fort Calgary offers children’s activities including pony rides and petting zoo, a spectacular car show, featuring 100 classic and antique cars, and a full day of entertainment featuring the Blue Mondays House Band and plenty of special guests at the NMC stage. If you arrive early enough, you can catch a free pancake breakfast, starting at 9:00 a.m.

Click on the following link to see more events that are taking place at a variety of locations across Calgary: http://www.calgarycanadaday.ca/

In Canmore, you can enjoy the Rotary Pancake Breakfast (who doesn’t love free pancakes!!!) at Centennial Park from 8:00–11:00 a.m., which will be followed by a Canada Day parade, marching band, fireworks and more: http://www.canmorealberta.com/canadaday/

Don’t forget that the entry into Banff National Park is free on July 1st, so you can visit the town of Banff, and celebrate Canada Day with great entertainments and performances till 11:00 p.m.!

http://www.banff.ca/activities-events/festivals-special-events/canada-day

 

 

Wineries of British Columbia

by Pat - 0 Comment(s)

We have some great books on touring the wine regions of British Columbia as well as recipes inspired by B.C. wine. Check out these books to get the insider scoop on how to find some wonderful wine tours.

John Schreiner's Okanagan Wine Tour Guide by John Schreiner

The lush Okanagan Valley is internationally acclaimed for its wine industry. Updated and revised with more than 60 percent new material, John Schreiner's Okanagan Wine Tour Guide provides succinct insider profiles of each of the region's 129 wineries, and for the first time covers winery producers from Creston, BC. Included are thumbnail sketches of wineries and winemakers, as well as everything you need to know to take a fascinating self-guided tour through the valley that produces 95 percent of British Columbia's wines. Schreiner peppers the book with fascinating facts acquired through his own winery visits, and gives his recommendations about what to sample from each cellar. Maps, addresses, telephone numbers, and website addresses round out this comprehensive guide.

Island wineries of British Columbia by Gary Hynes

Winner of the Gourmand International Wine Books Award 2011 for Canada

Celebrate the unique flavours, terroir and grape varieties that can be found only on the wine islands off the west coast. A collaborative effort from the writers of EAT Magazine, Island Wineries of British Columbia is your guide to a growing wine culture and the food movement that accompanies it. Starting with the history behind the regions wine production, this book is an intimate conversation with local wine producers, their individual stories, their most memorable creations and where you can find their beautiful wineries. Complete with maps and suggested wine tasting excursions, Island Wineries of British Columbia also explores the island's meaderies, cideries, fruit wines, artisan distilleries and craft beer. You’ll find recipes from some of the regions most talented chefs, including offerings from Café Brio, Camilles, the Sooke Harbour House and Stage Wine Bar; each recipe has an emphasis on local ingredients and provides exquisite pairings of wine and food.

Winefeast: Eat, Drink & Discover BC Wine by Troy Townsin

This beautiful book features more than 120 tantalising wine-inspired recipes that have been collected from BC's top winery chefs and winemakers. Legendary chefs like Michael Allemeier from Mission Hill Winery and Bernard Casavant from the Burrowing Owl have contributed their favourite cooking-with-wine recipes to this compilation, making it a must-have for anyone with an interest in Canada's culinary hertage. The recipes focus on gourmet cooking that uses easy to find ingredients and simple instructions so that both novice and experienced cooks can recreate these culinary delights at home. Winefeast introduces readers to the world of wine and contains informative, and at times humorous, sections on how to taste wine and improve sensory evaluation skills, how to cook with wine, as well as histories of all the different grapes and wine styles that are produced in British Columbia. There are also sections on food and wine pairing as well as detailed maps and region-specific guides with wine touring highlights so that visitors and locals alike will have all the information they need to tour BC's spectacular wine country. The book contains mouth-watering food shots and breathtaking scenic photography by Gary Faessler. Winefeast is the perfect gift or must-have keepsake for anyone with a passion for food and wine. With a copy of this book and a bottle of BC's finest, readers will have no problems creating a 'wine feast' that will delight guests and quench their thirsts for BC food and wine knowledge.

Pat's Picks - New Arrivals in the Travel Collection

by Pat - 0 Comment(s)

Camping: Our Favourite Sites in Britain

Time Out applies its expertise to the world of camping with comprehensive reviews of 100 fantastic campsites in England, Scotland and Wales. Each site is illustrated with beautiful photography and detailed information on facilities provided; attractions and activities in the area; the best eating and drinking options; amusing the kids and the general pros and cons of each site. Whether you're after forest hideaways or beachside retreats; beautiful or jolly; remote or urban; with family or just friends, Time Out Camping covers it all, whatever you're looking for.

Walking Palestine: 25 Journeys into the West Bank (Interline Walking Guides) by Stefan Szepesi

With the images of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict so dominant in our minds, walking for leisure is the one activity probably least associated with the West Bank region. But Stefan Szepesi's book wanders well off the beaten track of Palestine as only a synonym for occupation and strife, exploring its inspiring natural and cultural landscape, its intriguing past and present, and the hospitality of its people. The book takes first-time walkers and experienced hikers, as well as armchair explorers, through Palestine's steep desert gorges, along its tiny herders' trails, and over its quiet dirt roads running past silver green olive groves. With side stories and anecdotes on heritage, history, culture, and daily life in the West Bank, the book ventures into the traits and character of Palestine today. Walking Palestine also offers a wealth of practical walking tips, including references to local guides, the West Bank's best leisure spots and countryside restaurants, and charming places to spend the night.

Only Pack What You Can Carry: My Path to Inner Strength, Confidence, and True Self-Knowledge by Janice Holly Booth

Magnetically written by former CEO of a North Carolina Girl Scout Council and award winning CEO for the Western New York chapter of a national arts-in-education organization, this uniquely engaging travel journal describes four keys to unlocking personal and spiritual fulfillment: solitude, introspection, courage, and commitment. Through a series of compelling travel essays and deeply thoughtful memoirs, Janice Booth draws readers into each adventure-ranging from a solo hike through Northern California to galloping across the fields of Ireland to a short stint with the Circus Arts learning the flying trapeze-and shares her secrets to a fuller life through traveling alone. Step by step, she demonstrates why leaving everything - and everyone - behind for a few days (or more!) is the best path to inner strength, confidence, and true self-knowledge.

Also, available in an electronic version.

A Sense of Direction: Pilgimage for the Restless and the Hopeful by Gideon Lewis-Kraus

Irreverent, moving, and thought-provoking, Lewis-Kraus riffs on the perpetual war between discipline and desire, and its attendant casualties. Across three pilgrimages and many hundreds of miles, he completes an idiosyncratic odyssey to the heart of a family mystery.

Early Boarding and Other Benefits of Travelling with Children

by Kari - 1 Comment(s)

Our favourite places to stay and books about them!

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There’s a great new series of books by Lonely Planet publishers. The City Series books include tidbits of information, displayed collage style, and interspersed with pictures. The difference from a Dorling Kindersley type book is the humorous tone and the inclusion of cartoons. Simon and I read Rome: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know by Klay Lamprell. Other cities covered are Paris, London, and New York. There is also a large almanac volume called The Travel Book: Cool Stuff to Know About Every Country in the World, which Simon devoured over a weekend.

Like most kids, Simon loves looking at old photos of himself, and repeating favourite family travel stories. We were reminiscing about the coolest places that we’ve slept. Number one on my list is a retired caboose outside of Kamloops. When Simon was 5 and train crazy, we drove out for a railroad vacation. We visited the spiral tunnels, the driving of the last spike near Cragellachie, the Revelstoke Railway Museum, and Beardale Miniatureland near Revelstoke. Hostelling International Shuswap Lake has 3 cabooses, so I rented all 6 berths in one so we could have the run of the place (and being a hostel, it was still cheaper than a hotel) There were llamas, a firepit, some canoes, and a tasty communal pancake breakfast.

In Italy, some religious orders offer rooms for hire. We met a lovely Benedictine nun in San Gimignano. She rented rooms to support the other nuns who were cloistered. It’s called Monastero di San Girolamo. She was a helpful hostess, and we felt we were friends after a week. When we left, she said, “I’ll see you again.” When we questioned her about that, she said she meant in heaven of course.

There’s a Zen Buddhist centre in an apartment building in Paris called Maison Zen, and if they don’t have students, you can rent an apartment. There are steep stairs, goldfish in a garden pond, and lovely watercolours by the owner on the walls. The key appeal of this memory is the time my friend Gail took Simon out to find breakfast. They brought back Pain au Chocolat pastries from three nearby bakeries in the name of comparison tasting.

Renting an apartment in an historic part of town allows you to live like the locals and really get a sense of a place. I love waking up early and walking around before the other tourists arrive en masse. Favourite neighbourhoods in which I pretended to be a local were Greenwich Village in New York, Mont St. Michel in northern France, and quiet Cannaregio in Venice. In Venice there was a fruit and vegetable market just outside the door so we could buy fresh basil to make brushetta. There was also a fresh seafood market, and Simon was relieved when a couple of live snails escaped back into the water.

Closer to home, we stayed in a sod house at Hummingbird Haven by Cochrane. The Great Canadian Barn Dance near Pincher Creek is also an interesting place to go for a weekend if you ever had a hankering to play the washboard.

Staying in campgrounds is always memorable because you are right there in a beautiful location, and it’s so wonderful to have a walk just before you go to sleep. One of our favourite places was Joshua Tree National Monument in California. I loved the black shapes of the boulders in the dusk. The National Park Service in the U.S. has many great campgrounds. Phantom Ranch at the bottom of the Grand Canyon was built in the 1920s. Everything that goes into the ranch must come down the river, or be carried by mules. They had a very calm and steady mule who always carried the eggs. Other great national parks we recommend are the little cabins in the Okefenokee swamp in Stephen C. Foster State Park in Georgia, USA and the Cinnamon Bay Campground in St. Johns, US Virgin Islands.


My favourite place NOT to stay? The ice hotel near Quebec City! It was great to visit during the day, but looking at the great blocks of ice that made up the beds convinced me that a room at the Quebec City hostel was a better choice! We do like staying in hostels, partly for the expense, but also because it’s easy to meet people and chat with other travelers. Simon often found other kids to play with, and we sometimes hooked up for joint sight seeing.

Rounding out our favourites list is the Nickelodeon Hotel and the Sheraton Vistana condos, both in Orlando, Florida. The former has water slides, game shows in which guests are slimed, and the lifeguards throw cream pies at the kids who run on the pool deck as a joke. The latter are quiet timeshares that rent out when they aren’t full. Because we’re often in hostels, Simon liked the luxury of a jetted tub and multiple pools to choose from. There were also feral cats to feed the leftover bits of those monstrous huge turkey legs they sell in DisneyWorld.

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I grew up reading about kids having all kinds of adventures. I personally blame my travel bug on The Bobbsey Twins and National Geographic’s World magazine. It’s Tintin, Asterix, and The Good Times Travel Agency who captured Simon’s imagination. We recommend The Good Times Travel Agency graphix series by Linda Bailey and Bill Slavin. Three siblings travel to ancient China, Greece, the Ice Age and Middle Ages in a fun comic format. Now those kids have slept in some wild places!

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