Archive for the ‘Vacation’ Category
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part eight in a series)
Let’s start this part of the epic with some foreshadowing. (I love being obvious.) I was nervous about running out of Canadian money, so I stopped at the friendly ATM machine just outside the subway station to get another $20. This would turn out to be a very, very good idea. We bought our last two tokens, and boarded the train. The first trip was quick, and the switch to the east/west line was simple. This would be the last time that day that something could be described as both quick and simple, or even one of the two.
When we finally arrived at the end of the Bloore line, we were already tired of traveling. The train was rather full, and we were forced to stand for the majority of the trip. At the station, we spent a fair amount of time looking at bus maps because I’d stupidly thrown away the nice map that the tourist assistant booth people had given us, since we were no longer going to wander the streets of Toronto. Unfortunately, it was where the bus number was written.
The bus maps on the wall of the station were confusing, and just as we were getting frustrated we saw a sign for the express bus to the airport. It had a number as well, but that didn’t matter. We went out to join the bunches of other luggage-lugging folks out on the sidewalk.
Not our bus. Not our bus. Our bus! Drives by without stopping? Not our bus. Our bus!
We did manage to board the bus when it came back around. Ever have the pleasure of standing on a bus while it drives on the highway? I didn’t think so. Allow me to assure you that it’s terrifying.
We got off at our terminal – the flights to the USA terminal – and spent a fair amount of time searching for the American Eagle desk. There wasn’t one. But the American Airlines desk also had American Eagle written on the sign in little letters. We got our boarding passes, had our luggage weighed, tagged, and handed back to us (huhwha?). We were then handed forms and directed to customs.
There were no pens on the tables in the customs room (which looked like a high school gymnasium with posts and tape keeping people in orderly lines), so I dug into the luggage and pulled out the pen I’d bought at the CN Tower. Name. Address. Reason for visiting Canada. Value of items purchased. Boring. Boring. Boring.
We waited in line, and when my turn came, I told the “friendly” customs officer that the purpose of our visit was baseball. Move on to another line, at the end of which my checked luggage went through an X-ray dohicky. I moved my luggage, as they told me to, over to the belt. Now for human security. Another line. Off with the shoes. X-ray for the carryons.
Walk, walk, walk. Grab some food at the primary terminal, wait for the shuttle. I find this entertaining, as it is basically waiting for the opportunity to wait. The shuttle comes, we go over to the satellite terminal (which is apparently temporary in Toronto – they’re building something better – Boston should try that).
After sitting down and starting to eat our snacks, I started to notice that everyone in our terminal seemed kind of upset. I overheard people on phones saying they’d be home late. I saw franticly gesturing people at the desk in the terminal. Then I heard the tragic word “delay.” So I brought my boarding pass over to the desk and asked about our 5:00 flight. She said it probably wasn’t going to be wheels-up until 8:45, if not later. In shock, I asked if there was anything I could do about that, and she told me, “No.”
So we started the waiting game. We watched as one trio of business people spoke quickly and firmly to their secretaries on cell phone earpieces, trying to schedule a different flight. We saw an anxiety ridden father continually bother the people at the desk while his twenty-something daughter rolled her eyes. We heard one lady say she would be home on time because she got to the airport very early and rescheduled (if only I’d thought of that!). We learned that the delays were due to major flooding in Boston, NYC, and Phili. And hours slowly passed.
I realized that I’d better call Foxwoods and let the Two Trees Inn know that we were coming and please, please don’t give up our room. Of course, I don’t have a phone number. After trying some less intelligent ways, a friendly nearby passenger suggested 555-1212. Duh. After discussing new and interesting ways to spell Ledyard, we got a hold of the desk at the hotel, and they said they’d leave a note and not give up the room.
We ended up chatting with the father-daughter team bound for Maine and with an exhausted looking girl hoping to get home to Australia. This, along with various bits and pieces of food, purchased with my last remaining Canadian dollars and cents (I was left with precisely seven Canadian cents), carried us until 7:30, when a plane pulled up to the gate that was “our plane.” We could not be guaranteed that we’d get on early, since the pilots would have to be asked begged to get right back into the air after having just landed.
We did get on the plane “early” at about 8:00, and the first good thing in hours happened. They bumped up our wheels-up time, and we were in the air at 8:15 or so. The flight was uneventful in itself, with a good amount of turbulence, and we landed at… well… I didn’t look, but it was late.
Luggage, where’s our luggage? Oh, right, back downstairs where we came in. There’s the bag. Now where the hell do we go to catch the shuttle back to our car? Ah, it says it on the ticket they gave us when we arrived.
Another waiting game. We watched as bus after bus for different rental companies passed by. And everyone we saw getting onto these busses looked as exhausted as we felt. Finally the shuttle came, and we went back to our car.
Pay the “cheap” $60 fee to leave. Miss the turn to get out of Chelsea. Spot a sign for I-93. Take a tunnel. Take a bridge (the pretty Tobin – this made up for getting lost). Realize I’m low on gas. Commence freaking out…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part seven in a series)
This time, we finally had it. We confidently walked up the stairs from the Union Station subway station across the alley into the bottom floor food court of Union Station. We took a right, went past the Commuter Bar (I think that’s what it was called, literally!), and ignored the sign that told us how to get to the Sky Walk. We went up the stairs, passed the candy store, and went up the ramp and up the escalator into the glass tunnel through the sky.
The Sky Walk is an interesting device. It is wide enough to be a two-lane road, separated into those lanes by narrow metal columns. It is a continuous archway, made completely of glass with varying degrees of tint. It is not air conditioned – it is a hot house in the summer (though I imagine it is quite pleasant in the bitter winter). It first crosses a huge number of train tracks; I stopped once to watch a two story tall commuter train leave from Union Station. About two-thirds of the way through, there is an exit on the left which goes to stairs that go up a level and back across the train tracks to the convention center. At the end, there are some glass doors which unceremoniously drop the walker into the Sky Dome / CN Tower area.
Now that we were familiar with the trip to the stadium, everything just breezed by. One change, however, was that the previous two days’ super-talented drummer (who screamed “Go Jays!” every time someone threw money in his hat) had been replaced by a mediocre guitarist. Mike commented that they should possibly get together and start a band.
We went to our seats (two to the right of the previous two nights) and settled in for the game. Just as the first inning was getting going, the two seats in front of us were filled by Jays fans. This would not bother me; it is their stadium. But the guy on the left had a habit of screaming rather nasty things about every Red Sox player, and in a tone that actually screamed to me, “Mental patient!” His buddy was a more quiet type, but he did jump to his feet along with his friend on every yell. This again would not bother me; excitement is good for baseball. But this guy was wearing pants that were a bit too big and a bit (okay, completely) belt-less.
After seeing this guy’s ass-crack and hearing his friend’s terrifying scream for the fifth time, I got up to go get a pretzel. Mike came with me, and when we returned… well… we didn’t. We chose seats about 10 rows further back – the area was empty, since the Blue Jays don’t really come close to selling out their games. We had a much more pleasant time watching the game from that point on, especially as the Red Sox eked out the win in the rubber match.
Food consumed at the park on day three: 1 pretzel, 1 bottle of salty mineral water, half of a bag of alternating blue and pink candy floss.
[Side note to the people at Fenway: The pink stuff resembling cotton candy in a cup sucks. Please go back to real cotton candy. And have it in blue. Thank you.]
We went back to our hotel room that night, after checking the news to see about Gabe Kapler. That night, he had snapped a tendon in his leg while rounding second from first when Graffanino hit a home run. At the game we had no idea what happened. I was too busy cheering the home run to see Kapler hit the ground, and we were all wondering what they would be able to do to get his run to count!
After heaving a big sigh, we went to bed.
I snapped awake early the next morning, because I wanted to do some real exercise at least once this week. I got dressed in my sweat pants and tank top and decided I was hungry. So I threw on a sweatshirt and went down to grab a muffin for breakfast. I then tried to figure out how to get up to the 27th floor. I knew I couldn’t take the red elevator – it only went to the 2-7 and 25th floors. I eventually found the blue elevator which went to the 26th. Before looking for the stairs, I grabbed a bottle of Dasani (non-salty non-mineral just-plain water) from a vending machine.
It wasn’t a long search, and soon I was swiping my key card to get into “Deck 27.” There was a huge pool, and as I signed my name, I spotted a Jacuzzi, a weight room, several cardio machines, and a training circuit. Perfect!
I had a lot of time, so I did a huge variety of things. I started with the treadmill, moved over to the stationary bike, and then started weights. I went into the weight room to work on my abs, and came back for some circuit machines. I finished the day with a long stretch session, and felt much better. I went back to our room for a shower, woke Mike up, and we commenced wasting time before our flight.
While we were checking out, the lady asked us if we’d like to leave our luggage. We said yes, and she pointed us to the bell man station again. She then asked if we would need transportation provided to get to the airport. We politely declined, saying we were taking the subway. She seemed shocked, but we assured her we knew what we were doing. Mike figures the hotel must get a cut of the airport express fee.
After we left our luggage, we went over to the mall. It was pointed out to us from the Hippo Tour on Tuesday, but it was difficult to distinguish from surrounding buildings – It really did not look like a mall. We went in one entrance, and started poking around the stores. We found a neat board game store where we wasted most of our time. We went up various escalators and down others. This mall is five stories tall and three city blocks long. It has TWO food courts, in addition to a variety of other restaurants. Ridiculous!
We took advantage of one of those restaurants for lunch. It was a very nice place, with an insanely exciting dessert menu. We each got a light lunch anticipating the need for dessert. We chose to share a piece of chocolate cake with chocolate icing, chocolate sauce coating the entire slice, whipped cream dollops surrounding the plate, and chocolate shavings sprinked over the entire thing. Chocolate!
After lunch, we went back to the hotel to grab our stuff and started the much-longer-than-it-ought-to-have-been trek back to the states…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part six in a series)
It was my turn to pick the touristy event of the day, so I chose to go to a museum. We looked at the map, and staring at us in big letters spanning a few city blocks was the Royal Ontario Museum. We studied the map a bit more to figure out which subway stop to go to, and after a quick breakfast, headed on over.
When we got out of the station and looked around, we were once again lost and confused. So we picked a direction and walked until we could see street signs. Luckily, this time we picked the right direction. Unluckily, there was construction, and where I thought the museum should be there was plywood. We kept walking anyway, and eventually saw what Mike lovingly refers to as the spaceship that landed on the museum. He calls the new part of the New England Aquarium the same thing.
The “spaceship” was not yet complete. The metal framing was up, and there were construction workers hanging from various places doing… something. But we knew we were close. We walked around the corner, and there it was – the old museum building. We followed the signs, and walked in the door to what was obviously the backup lobby.
It only cost $8 Canadian to enter the museum. That’s pretty darn awesome. We got our maps, and headed over to the stairs, where we saw the first awesome thing – two huge totem poles. They reached up and up and up… four stories high! And every carving was beautiful. I really love museums.
We went up one flight of stairs and found that the first floor was closed for construction. Up another flight, and half of the second floor was also closed! Not to be deterred, however, we began traipsing through the natural history portion of the museum. We looked at lizards and turtles (stuffed), birds and butterflies (preserved), deer and lions (…some other euphemism for dead…). We went through the bat exhibit, where they made you feel like you were in a cave surrounded by bats – definitely creepy.
This whole wing took us more than an hour to peruse, so we headed back down to the lobby to grab some lunch. I had an egg salad sandwich and Mike had a hot dog. My sandwich had far too much mayo on it, but it was still pretty tasty.
Once we were done eating, we went back over to the stairs to go up to the third floor. This floor had all its’ wings open. First, we explored gothic and renaissance art. This was followed by armory, including an exhibit showing the commonalities between mideval armor and hokey goalie’s padding.
Next we found the exhibit explaining the construction. The new wing(s) of the museum will be housed in a “Crystal.” The models and mock-ups were all on display, along with a framed window to the outside where you could see the construction workers putting up dry wall. It is sad we would not be able to see the wing – it looked like it was going to be very exciting. But it was interesting to see the evolution of the idea from napkin (literally!) to drawing to model after model to computer rendering to blueprint. I find architecture fascinating.
We continued along the other end of the museum, investigating the history and artwork of Muslims, Egyptians, and Greeks. We saw transcriptions of the Quran, a real live… I mean dead… mummy, a reconstructed wall from an Egyptian temple, and a scale model of Athens. The temple wall interested me most of all, as they had a 10 minute story to go along with it. It was about a queen who brought a group of heroic people to a new land and brought back riches. I could not do it justice; just know that it was fascinating.
We had finally finished the museum, nearly 6 hours later. I cannot imagine how long it will take to go through the entire place once they reopen the first floor and open the Crystal! I’d probably go back to Toronto just for the museum – it was pretty awesome.
We were in need of some dinner before the game, so we headed back to the downtown area to look for a restaurant. There was a light drizzle in the air, but it didn’t bother us too much. We ended up going to this restaurant that we’d walked by a few times earlier in the week. The neon sign outside read “Jack Astor’s” and had an interesting defect. The letters “tor” were slowly blinking on and off.
This place had an extensive cocktail menu, so we each ordered something that interested us. I got a frozen drink which was half raspberry and half lemon. Like literally, they poured two different drinks into one glass, but as they were frozen, they stayed mostly separate. It came with frozen raspberries and was extremely tasty. Mike got something that tasted like coconuts. I dislike coconuts. He loves them, so good for him :).
While looking at the menu, I noticed that my choice came with two side dishes. I found the list of such things, and decided on the mixed veggies and the one pound baked potato. Now think about that for a minute. How big do you figure a one pound potato is? Let me tell you, it’s pretty huge. It could make a meal all on its own – especially if you got all the toppings (butter, sour cream, cheddar cheese, and bacon). I chose to get just the sour cream and cheddar cheese. Oh, and I had some awesome chicken along with that potato :-D. Mike got some stir-fry thing that he was pretty excited about.
After our awesome dinner, we went back to the hotel to change for the final time into our Red Sox gear…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part five in a series)
After going a quarter mile up away from the earth, we decided to go over to China Town for dinner. I had heard so many people say that we had to. So we went back over to Union Station, and promptly got lost again. That station is horrendous for tourists! I’m not even sure how the locals manage it. We eventually found the streetcars were looking for. Yes, streetcars! So neat! When we got off, we just started walking along the road, looking at makeshift fruit markets, tourist trap gift shops, and the occasional restaurant. We decided on a place that had dumplings in the title.
It was rather early for dinner, but we’d decided to eat early and go back to the hotel to change into Red Sox gear afterwards – in order to be friendlier to the locals. So when we got in there, the only people eating were the staff. We were told to pick our seat, and then were brought menus. We obviously got dumplings (you have to get the item in their title!), along with some shrimp & noodles, beef & broccoli, and some fried rice. Holy food, batman! And boy was it delicious.
When we got the dumplings, it occurred to me that there were no forks in sight. This is not a problem for me; I’ve been able to use chopsticks almost as long as I’ve been able to use forks. But poor Mike could not get a dumpling to his plate, let alone to his mouth. I asked the proprietor for a fork, and after a couple jokes, he found one somewhere in the back.
We thought we would be able to easily walk back to the hotel. We jumped up a block to College Road, and started trekking. When we finally reached University Ave (about 20 minutes later), Mike pulled out the map and said, “Well, we’re one third of the way there!” Good grief! There were three avenue blocks between where we came from and where we were going to, and we thought they’d all be the same size, give or take, as the blocks in the other direction. Boy, were we wrong. So, since we were getting tired, we pulled out our tokens and got on the next trolley traveling east. 300 feet later… “Dundas Street.” Woops! Stupid map lied to us!
Turns out there were two maps, actually, a walking map and a public transportation map. The walking map was to scale. The transport map… not so much…
We got all dolled up in our Red Sox gear (#7 Trot Nixon jersey!), and took the now familiar trip down to Union Station. After a bit of wandering about, we found the Sky Walk, and landed at the Sky Dome. We had the same seats as the previous day, 31st row, directly behind home plate. I cannot express how awesome that is. It’s awesome, I say!
We made friendly with the folks around us, many of whom were also wearing Red. We spread out across our row a bit, and had more room than the night before, as the guys to my right did not make a repeat appearance.
I had previously decided that today was going to be drunk day, so I started off the second inning with a beer. I was kind of intimidated by the beer guys, to be honest, so I had to get up and go to the bar. I understand how bars work. I ordered myself a Labatt, and apologized to the bartender for having only a twenty. He punished me by giving me only coins as change. Twelve dollars in coins isn’t quite as bad in Canada as here in the US, though, since they have toonies – the two dollar coin.
The game itself was actually kind of depressing. We never really led, and the game ended with a lot of happy Blue Jays fans. Labatt is pretty good, though, so the game also ended with a couple of drunk Red Sox fans, in the form of Mike and myself.
Food consumed at the park on day two: 3 and a half Labatts, 1 Bud Lite, and some peanut M&Ms. Okay, so it was mostly liquid food.
We were giggling and wobbling all the way back across the Sky Walk into Union Station. Greeting us at the station was a candy store! Candy is awesome, and seems even more so when you’re drunk. I selected a few different kinds of jelly beans while Mike went for the sour patch kids and jelly feet (FEET!?). Candy, drunkenness, and passing out ensued…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part four of a series)
Mike had made reservations for a Hippo Tour on Monday afternoon for Tuesday morning, so we had to wake up at a reasonable hour. We were still quite tired, but much more rested since we had, you know, slept. I was also on Claritin, since the too-nice-for-people-like-us hotel had down pillows. Luckily, though, I realized it before any major disasters occurred, and I just stayed on the stuff until after we returned home.
The hippo tour was in-tense. The previous tour got back late, so we were waiting along the road for a while. When the bus pulled up, it was just barely dripping, and was completely full of people who would have had blue hair, had it been fifteen years ago. A coach pulled up behind the Hippo (who’s name was Happy), and the little old ladies and occasional old men got off one bus to get onto another.
Once Happy was clear of them, we were allowed to get on board. We sat down on some squishy benches, and took note of the craziness. This thing was basically a school bus with a prop in the back. It had capacity for at least fifty people, though there were only about twelve in our group. The whole bus was painted purple and the seats inside were an interesting shade of maroon. Happy the Hippo was about ready to take off and our tour guide got on the mic to start telling us about the town.
We learned that Yonge Street is the longest road in the world, Elm Street has all kinds of fancy restaurants, the CN tower was built so that the locals could get better TV reception, and the ferry to the in-city airport is the worlds shortest ferry ride at something like 32 seconds. Apparently the current mayor won the election based on a “we will not build a bridge to the airport” platform.
By far, though, my favorite story was about the city hall. It was designed by a rather famous architect (please don’t count on my memory for anything like details!), but he was outrageously over budget. As punishment, the politicians refused to put his name on the building or acknowledge that he had designed it – they wanted to prevent him from making it into the history books. Unfortunately for the politicians, he was not quite done with the building yet. So as punishment for them, he immortalized their ugly sides as gargoyles along the roof and doorways. He also carved into the stone his name, “architect,” and the year.
After we went through much of downtown, Happy brought us to the edge of Lake Ontario. The tour guide made sure we were all clear on the going in the water thing (apparently the previous group thought they were just going BY the water), and had us all urge Happy the Hippo into the water. By chanting something silly like, “Go, Happy, Go!” A honk of her horn, and splash! into the water we went.
We saw the water park, the old disco, and a brand new windmill. And then we turned around and went back to where we started. Honestly, it was probably the crappiest part of the tour. Can we say, “Gimmick!”?
When we got back to shore, we were quite hungry, so we started perusing the menus on that same street. We found a Tex-Mex restaurant (of all things), and I got the “lunch-sized” quesadilla. Nothing lunch sized about it. Either that, or they think dinner-sized is the size of Texas itself. It was tasty though. And! I almost forgot. They didn’t give us mints with our bill – they gave us lollipops! Sweet! Literally!
At this point, we made the decision to head over to the CN Tower. Let me just express this up front. I am afraid of heights. I am afraid of enclosed spaces. Elevators make me ill. But here we were, going to the tallest building in the world, where I’d have to go up in an elevator which was full of people and has a window so you can see how far the ground is from you.
EEP!
But I promised Mike, so up we went. Before getting to the elevators, however, we had to go through security. They had neat bomb-sniffing archways. Imagine a metal detector, except a bit deeper, and with air jets all around. Each person in turn stands under the arch, and has puffs of air blown at him. Clever technology, I think.
And… up!
And up…
Up…
60 seconds of elevating time. I really hate elevators. But I survived. Once we reached the top, I gingerly stepped up to the windows to look out. It wasn’t a particularly clear day (in fact, the weather people had warned that it was very smoggy that day), but we could still see forever. We discovered where various buildings we had driven past in Happy the Hippo were, and what some of the things our tour guide had skipped were. It was honestly quite neat.
Then we went down a flight of stairs to the glass floor and outdoor deck. Yes, outdoor. Right. Outside up wicked high in a wicked tall building. Great. But I did it. The glass floor, however, was too much for me. The furthest I got was a toe (not weight bearing). Mike walked across the whole thing. There were people laying down on it, taking pictures, and (AUGH!) jumping up and down on it. I never understood why people aren’t more scared of things in general.
Next on the tallest building tour was the sky pod. This was another 33 stories higher, and another 45 seconds in an elevator, to the highest observation deck in the world. At the top, I surpressed my fear long enough to take a picture of a family (that refused to get close together without some serious prodding). And then peaked over the edge to look down. If this were a screen shot, the people would be two pixels tall. The only reason you could spot them, really, was their shadows. This was very, very, very tall. And I was done.
Down, down, down, ground floor…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part three of a series)
The subway ride down to Union Station was uneventful, as we were now full-fledged professionals at riding the Toronto subway system. But when we got to the other end… not so much. We had heard that there is a Skywalk that goes directly from Union Station to the complex where the CN Tower and the Sky Dome are, so we started looking for it. But really, that became impossible. We finally found ourselves giving up and walking the streets towards the tallest structure in the world.
After passing the sign for the Hippo Tours, we finally found ourselves in the right place. We headed toward one of our two available gates for entry into the stadium. Compared to the area around Fenway before a Red Sox game, this place was dead. There were people mulling about, and a few short lines of people waiting to enter the park, but none of the insanity, beer-drinking, sausage-eating, or packs of people. We were quickly inside looking for our section.
Mike got us some awesome seats. We were just 30 rows back from home plate. HOME PLATE! Like straight on. It was amazing. And we had the same seats for the whole series. Sweet!
We took note of the fans around us – most of them were wearing Red! Just before the game, the two seats to my right finally filled up… with a couple rather knowledgeable Blue Jays fans. It’s alright, really. It is their home turf.
Now here’s something you don’t see every day. Picture yourself a high school dance troupe – like the cheerleaders only without pom-poms and with more rhythm. Then picture they grew up to be about 20-25. Then imagine they do a dance routine with Ace the Blue Jay (man in foam suit) out in center field. Then picture this all being announced by an MC. A master of ceremonies at a baseball game?! O… K…
Now, to add to the insanity, between innings these cheerleader/dancers throw various prizes out into the crowd. More insanity in the stands comes from the vendors. “Popcorn! Peanuts! Licorice!” screams the guy with “Snack Man” emblazoned on his yellow shirt. These people don’t unitask! Another “Snack Man” carries various sodas and water. Yet another screams out one of my favorites, “Ice cream bars! Ice cream cones! Ice cream sandwiches! Yankees suck!” I think he probably got a lot of business.
But the real popular guys, their shirts don’t say “Snackman,” they say “Bud Lite.” They don’t all carry Bud Lite either. A variety of different types of beers poured just feet from you and handed to you for your drinking pleasure, without needing to even stand up! Chants of “Beer, beer, beer, beer, beer, beer, beer, beer!” and “Who wants happy juice!” echoed throughout 8 innings of every game. I’m sure if I dared someone to get a beer every time one of these guys went by, I’d probably have to carry that person off to the hospital. They came around very often!
There were a couple extreme Jays fans down and to the left of us. One was in an old-school blue uniform top and a matching blue fishing hat, and the other was in a newer uniform top and had a blue horn thing that he must have gotten as a giveaway at one of the previous games he’d been to. Mike overheard that they were going to 18 this year. Makes our 6 look kind of piddly. These guys knew how to root for their team, though. They were hollering and tooting and screaming and cheering the whole game. And any time a “Let’s go Red Sox” chant started up, the guy with the horn used his insane volume to shut us up. Very impressive.
The game itself started off well, got nail biting, and went into extra innings. I’ll spare you the details. But we won in the end, and that was a fabulous feeling.
Food consumed at the park on day one: 3 chicken fingers (not as good as Fenway), a huge pile of fries (very awesome), and one bottle of water (salty mineral water seems very popular in Toronto, I think it’s gross).
We found the Sky Walk for the way back to the hotel, and crashed like we fell from the top of the CN Tower…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part two of a series)
We were assured by the lady on the phone from the hotel that it would be easy to find the Airport Express bus, which we thought was the only way to get from the airport to downtown Toronto. We also were quite sure (based on my experience with traveling in London) that our ATM cards would work in Canada – if only possibly on one of the accounts. So many lies in those sentences…
After an emergency pee (who’s going to use the bathroom on a plane the size of a short bus?), we walked up to the first ATM we found, looking for pretty Canadian money. No go. We found another. No go. At this point, Mike finally saw a sign for Airport Express. It led to an empty hallway. Desperation was starting to sink in, and then, as if with a choir of angels, the tourist assistance booth appeared.
Two very friendly people offered us maps, told us how to get to the Airport Express bus, assured us that they take credit, and then asked, “So, why are you taking the bus, anyway? The subway is only $2.50.” We looked at each other, and subway it was! They circled the appropriate stations and pointed us to the exchange window, where they happily took 30 of my American dollars and turned it into 30 Canadian dollars, some change, and a huge fee. This was by far the worst exchange rate of the century, but it got us some cash so we could get on to public transportation.
An express bus took us to the subway station, and we were once again lost. It was not exactly obvious how to get down to the trains, and would we need to pay again? But there was a different ATM machine. Desperate, we tried this one, and it gave forth shiny green twenties, at a much saner exchange rate, and with only an average ATM fee. Newly rich, we followed some other less clueless looking folks down some stairs, and got on the train.
The subway trains in Toronto make the T in Boston look like a decrepit underground crawlway. They’re clean, they look new, and they move fast. We took the subway east into the city, and after a very simple change of lines, we arrived at College Station, we came up some stairs, took note of another friendly-looking ATM machine, and found ourselves in a mall food court.
Huh?
We decided that we actually were hungry, and we would like to have lunch, thank you very much, so we took turns guarding the pile of luggage while the other went off in search of food. As I sat at the table, surrounded by bags, I took note of the surroundings. Business-types eating a quick lunch, solitary people searching the items for sale in the grocery store I just noticed, globs of people hurrying towards the subway entrance, a couple a nearby table eating noodles… Noodles… I like noodles… Ooh! There’s a noodle store! I had noodles for lunch.
Once we left the odd demi-mall, we found ourselves standing lost, yet again. We knew our hotel was only two blocks away – but which two blocks? We headed about a block in one direction, and Mike suddenly felt that was the wrong one, so we turned around. We got to a major intersection in the other direction, and I took the map and realized that Mike was initially right. Back downtown, and there’s the hotel. Thankfully, since that duffle bag was getting out of control.
I chatted with the first of many front-desk people, knowing that we were rather early for our 3-o’clock check in. She did a preliminary check in or some such thing, and handed us a reference number. She then pointed out the head bellman, with whom we could leave our luggage while we traipsed around the city for a while. The luggage tickets joined the reference card and map in my cargo pants’ pocket, and off we went.
Mike had some interest in the market that was supposed to be downtown by the lake, so we took off in that direction. We found instead, a very pleasant park. There was a fountain approximately 20 feet wide, with a wide path around it, and benches surrounded by annual flowers. Behind the benches a short wall went up to the level of the grass, where a few trees and other plants were scattered around, and where people laid out, soaking in the greenery. An adorable little dog was having an argument with a drainage grate, while his buddy just bounced around. I want a puppy.
After a rest, we continued on our trek towards the marketplace. When we finally reached it, it occurred to me that this was Monday, and markets are closed on Mondays. The whole area was dead, with the exception of a couple people taking out trash and sorting through boxes. Well, there went that plan. But we had seen another park next to the cathedral, so we headed back there for another relaxing moment. Well, mostly relaxing – there was some construction going on in the path in this larger green space. But we sat there watching the birds and squirrels for quite some time.
Eventually, we decided to head back to the hotel, since the lady had said that our room would likely be ready by 2:30. We arrived back at just about that time, and I went up to talk to yet another front-desk person. “Nope, not ready, but I’ll call the housekeeping people and make sure it gets bumped up the list.” I figure that’s okay, because check in is technically at 3:00, so we just sat on the sofas in the lobby for a while. At a couple minutes past three, I went back up to the desk. Nope. I asked how long it would be and she said an hour.
An hour?!
I heaved a sigh, and we decided to go back to our friendly neighborhood food court and get a snack. We discovered that this College Park is not a mall, not an office building, not a grocery store, and not an apartment building – but all of the above. It is totally a self-contained city within a city, complete with indoor access to the subway. These people go out of their way to make sure they never have to go outside in the winter.
We while our hour away, and return to the hotel. I talked to the fourth front-desk person of the day, and was able to tell her that she was my favorite, as she handed us our keycards. We collected our luggage (and tried to figure out how much and how to tip the guy) and headed up the red (not green and not blue) elevator to our room. More weary-traveler rest happened, and we got dressed in our Red Sox apparel (so carefully selected from umpteen stores within the week previous). We were headed downtown to the Sky Dome…
My First Grown-Up Vacation (part one of a series)
My alarm was making all of the weird noises it does every morning, in a vague attempt to wake me up. I looked at it, and it said 3:39. I squinted to make sure I read that right, and hit the button to turn the alarm off. I could have sworn I set it for 3:30… I don’t remember hitting the snooze button…
The clock read 3:42 when I finally rolled out of bed, nearly clunking right back to sleep there on the hard wood floor. I shuffled into the bathroom and took a shower, the whole time muttering to myself, “Don’t fall asleep in the shower; that would suck.”
I woke up Mike and started shoving last minute items into my backpack. I made sure I had my passport. I collected the trash and took that out to the dumpster. I checked again that I had my passport. As we piled the bags by the door, mike handed me the headphones I’d forgotten while I was busy making sure for the fifteenth time that I had my passport.
We brought our bags – one for checking, two carryon bags, one purse, and one small overnight bag for later – out to my car and took off eastward. The drive to the airport was relatively uneventful, and by this point, I was pretty sure I was awake. We successfully found the off-airport parking in Chelsea, and took the shuttle – which seemed to be waiting just for us – into terminal B.
We got our boarding passes, checked one ginormous dufflebag, and went over the ridiculous security station. Shoes? Seriously? You want me to take my shoes off? O… k…
Once I managed to get those back onto my stubborn feet, we went down to gate B30, where we’d wait for a shuttle that would take us to the special (as in ed.) terminal where American Eagle flights leave from. We waited in the deceivingly short line for some Dunkin’ Donuts and filled our slowly awakening stomachs with muffins and bagels. The shuttle came shortly afterward, and we were really on our way.
If you’ve never been to gate B30 at Logan, you’re missing out big time. To get to the shuttle, you have to walk out an exit clearly marked “Emergency Exit Only,” and walk down a sketchy stairwell that looks like it belongs in a decrepit public middle school. The shuttle has about 10 seats, but they cram about 40 people and all their carry on bags onto it.
I just remembered one neat thing about riding on the shuttle. From where I was standing, I could see straight out the front of the bus. We had stopped, and I looked out to see if we had reached the terminal, but no, we hadn’t. We were stopped at a traffic intersection, yielding right of way to a 737. That was neat.
Once you get to the Amelia Earhart Memorial Satellite Terminal (or some such thing), you walk out into an area with no obvious markings. We followed the bulk of the people and found ourselves looking at a sign that read B30d-h. We were supposed to be on B30b. There was no obvious sign for B30b, but there was definitely nothing else in front of us except for the one door for five “gates.” So we turned around, and it turns out that the dinky little waiting room we’d walked through was for B30a-c.
We sat down, and were soon joined by the people who had been in line in front of us when we were getting our boarding passes and checking our luggage. They were obviously Red Sox fans, in full regalia – well not FULL regalia, but definitely wearing tons of gear – and we struck up a conversation based on our common ground of identical vacations. I never got their names, but they were very friendly people – approximately my parents’ age.
Our new friends had bought their vacation as a package – airfare, hotel, game tickets, airport express bus tickets, everything all together. I cannot imagine how much more they must have paid for such a luxury. We bought the game tickets on the Blue Jays’ website the day they went on sale, at actual face value. We got our flight and hotel together in a remarkable deal on Hotels.com. And we figured on public transportation for everything. The internet is awesome, by the way.
After a brief trip to the bathroom to wash my face, I went to the ridiculously small news stand / food stand to purchase some chewing gum to go along with my ginger ale that I’d bought earlier from the Double D. See, I’m not exactly good at flying. In addition to my fear of heights and of enclosed spaces, I also had a terrible incident where I got an ear infection at high altitude, then proceeded to fly on two three-hour long flights. The second landing, I screamed the whole way down, and ever since, I’ve had a terrible time getting my ears to pop. The ginger ale makes me burp to get rid of the adgeda from the fears and the gum helps my poor little ears.
Our plane finally was ready for boarding, and we headed out into the cardboard tube jetway. We followed directions and our new friends, and found our seats in row 8 – on the wing. See, American Eagle flies these ridiculously small jets (at least their jets!) that have precisely 37 seats (I counted). The shuttle we took to the satellite terminal was bigger.
Despite all of my fears and adgeda, the flight was quite pleasant and very short. Then the most awesome announcement ever came from our flight attendant – “We will be deplaning [cool word!] via steps, so be careful!”
Steps! NEAT! It’s like I’m some kind of international superstar or leader of the free world! I get to walk on the tarmac!
We got off and found that we were once again in a satellite terminal. We took the Canadian (and therefore much cleaner and brighter) shuttle to the main terminal, and went through the friendliest customs ever. I got a smirk from the customs officer when I said we were there to see baseball games. We collected our luggage from the baggage claim, and were off into the wilds of Toronto…