For the 375 Celebration, the 375th year for the city of Montreal, several monumental sized lighting shows were made. One was the lighting of the Biosphere on Jean Drapeau Parc with different colors. The Biosphere was created for the Expo 67 in Montreal by Buckminister Fuller and was the American Pavillion. I haven't been inside but I love looking at it when I come here. I went to the Parc just to capture this image. I love walking around Montreal because there is always something of interest to see and to learn about.
Friday, December 30, 2016
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Living: Montreal Winter 2016
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Vieux Montreal |
Friday, November 27, 2015
Living: Snow in Montreal
(Draft)All I wanted was a little snow for my trip to Montreal to make being there even more magical than it normally is. I watched the predicted weather forecast for a month on accuweather.com. It would predict: snow then no snow, snow, then no snow. And as the forecast came out for the week I would be here again no snow. So your can imagine how surprised I was to look at the weather a few days after I arrived and saw that snow was predicted for that night. Well needless to say I woke up several times in the middle of the night, like a child wanting to catch a glance of Santa on Christmas eve. I threw off the bedsheets and ran to the window, threw back the curtain and just started outside looking for white flakes in the sky. I was hoping to see the first snow fall. At midnight, no snow. Then I woke up, again still no snow. At 5:33 am, I went to the window and saw snow on the ground and the sidewalks. It didn't seem like it was snowing so I started making breakfast, toast and tea. I put the bread in the toaster and I turned on the tea kettle for water. At 6:00 am , I walked to the window again, it was really snowing. I opened the door on my 6th floor balcony and was laughing. It's snowing! The white flakes dances in the air and I tried to catch them. So I ran inside and then ran around the hotel room trying to figure out what to wear and get dressed fast to go out and be in the snow. The accuweather only stated a few flurries for the next hour. I wanted to take advantage of this opportunity it might not last.
I got all my clothes on and put a hand warmer in my pocket and ventured outside into what would be an unknown to me. This was my first time seeing snow as an adult. Snow was falling from the sky and some flakes landed on my eye glass lenses. I took my grey water resistant bookbag off and grabbed my umbrella. Ok, now I will stay drier and be able to see clearer. I decided to walk up Avenue du Parc and make my way to Mont Royal. It was still dark outside. The snow was like a rain shower. It was coming down faster and it was all around me dancing in the air. I put my tongue out to try to catch a few flakes. I felt happy and young.
As I started the uphill climb to the base of Mont Royal off of Avenue du Parc, I questioned myself. Was this really a good idea? It is cold. I am getting cold and frozen stuff is falling from the sky and I don't have a valid metro pass so I cannot jump on the bus for a warm safe ride back. I kept walking. I pulled my fleece scarf with the fringed edges over my face and mouth. All anyone could see of my face would be my eyes and glasses. Just then, my lenses fogged up. Okay I'm getting to see there is an art to this snow thing and I am on the learning curve. I finally reached the sculpture at the base of Mont Royal. I took several pictures of it this summer, now I will have fall pictures. I liked that I chose this location because it was early and people were not yet visiting this area and there were no footprints in the snow. I took out my camera and my cellphone and snapped a few pictures. I was really cold and hungry to, the bread was still sitting in the toaster.
I went back to the hotel to warm up and eat breakfast. After an hour, I looked out the window and realized it was still snowing. That was it. I decided I was going to spend the whole day outside. I walked around Montreal aimlessly, turning down streets I had not ventured onto before. It was a cold 31 F and I was loving the opportunity to have this experience.
I got all my clothes on and put a hand warmer in my pocket and ventured outside into what would be an unknown to me. This was my first time seeing snow as an adult. Snow was falling from the sky and some flakes landed on my eye glass lenses. I took my grey water resistant bookbag off and grabbed my umbrella. Ok, now I will stay drier and be able to see clearer. I decided to walk up Avenue du Parc and make my way to Mont Royal. It was still dark outside. The snow was like a rain shower. It was coming down faster and it was all around me dancing in the air. I put my tongue out to try to catch a few flakes. I felt happy and young.
As I started the uphill climb to the base of Mont Royal off of Avenue du Parc, I questioned myself. Was this really a good idea? It is cold. I am getting cold and frozen stuff is falling from the sky and I don't have a valid metro pass so I cannot jump on the bus for a warm safe ride back. I kept walking. I pulled my fleece scarf with the fringed edges over my face and mouth. All anyone could see of my face would be my eyes and glasses. Just then, my lenses fogged up. Okay I'm getting to see there is an art to this snow thing and I am on the learning curve. I finally reached the sculpture at the base of Mont Royal. I took several pictures of it this summer, now I will have fall pictures. I liked that I chose this location because it was early and people were not yet visiting this area and there were no footprints in the snow. I took out my camera and my cellphone and snapped a few pictures. I was really cold and hungry to, the bread was still sitting in the toaster.
I went back to the hotel to warm up and eat breakfast. After an hour, I looked out the window and realized it was still snowing. That was it. I decided I was going to spend the whole day outside. I walked around Montreal aimlessly, turning down streets I had not ventured onto before. It was a cold 31 F and I was loving the opportunity to have this experience.
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Old Port, Montreal in the Afternoon
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Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Living: Official arrival in Montreal November 2015
So I got off the plane with a pounding sinus headache and I felt like I was going to faint. I had my backpack on, my small purse, a big jacket from the company Columbia with a faux fur trim on the hood, and my rolling carry on luggage. I approach the ascending escalator and I freeze. "Really!", I thought. This is the second time today I don't know what to do with an escalator. I kept looking at it moving and it seemed so fast, I put my rolling carry on the moving step and away it went so I step on after it. I chalk up the escalator weirdness to slow brain function due to sinus headache and I'll leave it at that. Once I approached the top of the escalator I was cool. Then I realized that the walk to customs was long. The head for pounding the nausea was coming and I just knew I had to press on. Get to customs was my goal. I saw an airport worker and asked desperately, "Is there any water here?" "No," was the reply, "You'll have to wait to you get through customs." "Really! Really!" I shouted in my head. "Thank you," I replied and moved on feeling weak and like my head was going to explode. I know it was all going to be ok, if I just moved on and acted like a trooper.
RESTROOMS. Yeah, a mini oasis. I entered. It was a small restroom with three stalls. Yes, the first stall was empty. I took what seemed like forever in there. Everything was like in slow motion and when I reappeared on the other side of the door a line had formed. Faces were staring at me as I opened the door. Back to the mission, get through the customs line.
I saw a group of over 80 people in front of me rushing to customs. I guess their plane just arrived. I step on a moving sidewalk. I just stood there, letting the sidewalk do all the work. I saw a small child giving his mother a hard time by not following her. I said aloud, just loud enough for him to hear," I am going to turn in the dinosaur on your backpack and I am going to eat you." The child ran as fast as he could to his mother. Headache induced shock value tactics, maybe.
Customs. Finally in sight and I was fading fast. I just need to taste water and I will be fine. As I get to the bottom to actually enter the queue, a lady guides my section to the shortcut line. Yes, I was loving me some shortcut right about now since I totally needed it. The line was the manual line. You didn't have to use the machine or fill out the questionnaire. Bonus. It was my turn to go to the counter and I was feeling pretty green and apparently I was looking it also. The customs agent asked if I needed emergency help. I said, "No, I'll be find once I get some water." She directed me to a water fountain in immigration. I walked to the office that was empty located right behind the customs desk and drink from the water fountain. First a sip and then I drank to hold as much as I could in my mouth. I walked out the sliding glass doors with the water still in my mouth. I still needed to go claim my luggage.
What another escalator! I stood at the top and told myself you really need to figure this out. I awkwardly placed my carry on luggage on the step and it started moving quickly away and again I stepped on to chase after it. "This is ridiculous!." I thought. "How could I forget how to use an escalator?" That being the least of my problems and I remembered that my head was pounding. At the bottom, I saw the information monitor . The carousel numbers for the arriving flights are there. I walked to carousel number 7. People were gathered around the snakelike conveyor belt. Within a few minutes I saw my luggage. Happy because this meant I was closer to the outside where I could get a bottle of water. Mission: focus and get water.
I walked through customs and something familiar, the STM machine. I did not however recognize the rest of the airport. I purchased my bus ticket and then went over to the bus counter and asked how to get to the bus. She said to the right. She pointed to a corridor and I looked in the direction of her finger. Then I asked about water. She said there was a water fountain down there as well. Then I saw the words " Mrs. Fields" in bright red neon lights. "Is that a mini market?", I thought. I walked inside. I saw the refrigerator wall with Gatorade, juice, WATER!! glorious water. I grabbed an Evian and deliriously walked to the counter knocking over my luggage. I asked the clerk. Do you have this unrefrigerated? I had walked past the room temperature ones. He went back for me and grabbed one from a hundred lined by in neat rows rom the first shelf I had passed on the way to the refrigerated section. I paid and opened the bottle, spilling some water on my luggage and started drinking. I felt a little better just knowing I had access to water that I could drink. I started heading for the bus. I put the cap on the bottle and dragged myself and my things to the bus that was waiting there on the curb.
On the bus, my head was pounding. I was trying to hold off the nausea so, I kept drinking water. I was taking a moment, focusing on my breath and blowing my nose a lot. Okay I can do this I thought. "Next stop six," the bus driver said and stopped only a few seconds later to pick up a man. "Next stop seven," the bus driver announced. I blurted out, "What that was six?" "I just missed my stop, can you drop me off here." The bus driver replied with a firm," No." Now I calculating how much further I would have to walk in the cold with this headache, dragging my luggage. Really doesn't matter, I am just going to have to do it. As the bus driver steered the bus to the curb to stop, I gathered my bookbag, my purse, and my two pieces of luggage. I stepped off the bus and onto the sidewalk. It was dark and cold and I knew I just had to keep moving.
Strapping the grey 17.5 pond carry on bag on top of the lighter black checked luggage with a new green and blue luggage strap was a difficult task for me. Why was I not getting this? Oh I am tired, have a headache, and now I am cold. I managed to get the two pieces of lugguage to merge into one unit so I would only have to grab onto one handle to navigate the streets. Immediately I looked a few feet ahead on my on the sidewalk and I started to move forward. I saw several cracks in the cement pavement, it looked like the end of the sidewalk would just fall in the street it was so badly cracked. No use thinking about it, just navigate around it.
I had to walk an extra 3to 4 blocks to make up the distance of the two bus stops. As I got closer to figuring out where I was I decided to turn up Phillips. Ahead of my I saw empty wooden benches in a courtyard of a church. I decided to stop and tie my boots and close my eyes and take a deep breath. When I opened my eyes, I noticed it right away. My sinus headache was instantly gone. Like it just dissipated out of my forehead. So happy, I turned to walk up Phillips Street and saw the Christmas lights and the people gathering to go out for the night and the area was all a glow. I officially arrived in Montreal at that moment.
RESTROOMS. Yeah, a mini oasis. I entered. It was a small restroom with three stalls. Yes, the first stall was empty. I took what seemed like forever in there. Everything was like in slow motion and when I reappeared on the other side of the door a line had formed. Faces were staring at me as I opened the door. Back to the mission, get through the customs line.
I saw a group of over 80 people in front of me rushing to customs. I guess their plane just arrived. I step on a moving sidewalk. I just stood there, letting the sidewalk do all the work. I saw a small child giving his mother a hard time by not following her. I said aloud, just loud enough for him to hear," I am going to turn in the dinosaur on your backpack and I am going to eat you." The child ran as fast as he could to his mother. Headache induced shock value tactics, maybe.
Customs. Finally in sight and I was fading fast. I just need to taste water and I will be fine. As I get to the bottom to actually enter the queue, a lady guides my section to the shortcut line. Yes, I was loving me some shortcut right about now since I totally needed it. The line was the manual line. You didn't have to use the machine or fill out the questionnaire. Bonus. It was my turn to go to the counter and I was feeling pretty green and apparently I was looking it also. The customs agent asked if I needed emergency help. I said, "No, I'll be find once I get some water." She directed me to a water fountain in immigration. I walked to the office that was empty located right behind the customs desk and drink from the water fountain. First a sip and then I drank to hold as much as I could in my mouth. I walked out the sliding glass doors with the water still in my mouth. I still needed to go claim my luggage.
What another escalator! I stood at the top and told myself you really need to figure this out. I awkwardly placed my carry on luggage on the step and it started moving quickly away and again I stepped on to chase after it. "This is ridiculous!." I thought. "How could I forget how to use an escalator?" That being the least of my problems and I remembered that my head was pounding. At the bottom, I saw the information monitor . The carousel numbers for the arriving flights are there. I walked to carousel number 7. People were gathered around the snakelike conveyor belt. Within a few minutes I saw my luggage. Happy because this meant I was closer to the outside where I could get a bottle of water. Mission: focus and get water.
I walked through customs and something familiar, the STM machine. I did not however recognize the rest of the airport. I purchased my bus ticket and then went over to the bus counter and asked how to get to the bus. She said to the right. She pointed to a corridor and I looked in the direction of her finger. Then I asked about water. She said there was a water fountain down there as well. Then I saw the words " Mrs. Fields" in bright red neon lights. "Is that a mini market?", I thought. I walked inside. I saw the refrigerator wall with Gatorade, juice, WATER!! glorious water. I grabbed an Evian and deliriously walked to the counter knocking over my luggage. I asked the clerk. Do you have this unrefrigerated? I had walked past the room temperature ones. He went back for me and grabbed one from a hundred lined by in neat rows rom the first shelf I had passed on the way to the refrigerated section. I paid and opened the bottle, spilling some water on my luggage and started drinking. I felt a little better just knowing I had access to water that I could drink. I started heading for the bus. I put the cap on the bottle and dragged myself and my things to the bus that was waiting there on the curb.
On the bus, my head was pounding. I was trying to hold off the nausea so, I kept drinking water. I was taking a moment, focusing on my breath and blowing my nose a lot. Okay I can do this I thought. "Next stop six," the bus driver said and stopped only a few seconds later to pick up a man. "Next stop seven," the bus driver announced. I blurted out, "What that was six?" "I just missed my stop, can you drop me off here." The bus driver replied with a firm," No." Now I calculating how much further I would have to walk in the cold with this headache, dragging my luggage. Really doesn't matter, I am just going to have to do it. As the bus driver steered the bus to the curb to stop, I gathered my bookbag, my purse, and my two pieces of luggage. I stepped off the bus and onto the sidewalk. It was dark and cold and I knew I just had to keep moving.
Strapping the grey 17.5 pond carry on bag on top of the lighter black checked luggage with a new green and blue luggage strap was a difficult task for me. Why was I not getting this? Oh I am tired, have a headache, and now I am cold. I managed to get the two pieces of lugguage to merge into one unit so I would only have to grab onto one handle to navigate the streets. Immediately I looked a few feet ahead on my on the sidewalk and I started to move forward. I saw several cracks in the cement pavement, it looked like the end of the sidewalk would just fall in the street it was so badly cracked. No use thinking about it, just navigate around it.
I had to walk an extra 3to 4 blocks to make up the distance of the two bus stops. As I got closer to figuring out where I was I decided to turn up Phillips. Ahead of my I saw empty wooden benches in a courtyard of a church. I decided to stop and tie my boots and close my eyes and take a deep breath. When I opened my eyes, I noticed it right away. My sinus headache was instantly gone. Like it just dissipated out of my forehead. So happy, I turned to walk up Phillips Street and saw the Christmas lights and the people gathering to go out for the night and the area was all a glow. I officially arrived in Montreal at that moment.
Monday, November 23, 2015
Living: From yesterday Montreal
I was sitting a café indoors at the bar seats that are parallel to the window overlooking the street. I sat down leaving one seat between me and the gentleman already there. I got my food and began to eat when I noticed that he was writing on white notebook paper with blue lines that looked as if they were pulled from a book. He laughs. "He is a writer", I thought. I thought." I am writer too." I looked over to him and asked, "Are you a writer?" He said something in French and then said in English, "It is just a hobby of mine." I went back to eating my food. When he got up to leave he said to me, " Have a nice day." I turned and replied, "Bonne Journee." A voice in my head said try to write what you think. I forgot to pack my journal so I started on a napkin but I think all the good thoughts happened before I started writing it down because I was noticing some cool things out the window before I started writing. Here is what I captured.
You must love your cat if you are willing to walk for blocks in the cold with a large bag of kitty litter on your shoulder. What kind of gloves are those? People behind me speaking French. Should I listen? I am getting hot. This bookbag is heavy. I have to blow my nose again. What time is it? I really need to sit up straight. My ear itches. My back hurts when I sit wrong. I like the jacket in the Boutique window. Really again! (blows nose) 1:28pm I like this weather, especially since I have this jacket. Sit up straight. Really (blows nose) Montreal men are good looking. This ragout tastes good. She is wearing a jacket like the one in the window. Chinese girl. Green hair. Litter on the sidewalk. Rolling stones playing. Ahh my back. That lady is only wearing thin tights on her legs. This guy looks interesting. I wonder if the cold stops people from shopping. her legs must be cold. Dan Foggerty playing. The reflections of the lights inside look cool when you look outside (seems like a philosophy of life) Noticing chills on my head. this is a lot of food. If I stay her long enough, it'll help me later. The hot chocolate here, isn't that hot. It just tastes good. I feel a hot chocolate mustache (wipes mouth) Ahh I feel full. My hands hurt from the luggage yesterday. Oh I wonder if she lives there. Couple looking in the window and go inside the boutique. What time is it? 1:42pm. I am going to ask for a to go bag.
You must love your cat if you are willing to walk for blocks in the cold with a large bag of kitty litter on your shoulder. What kind of gloves are those? People behind me speaking French. Should I listen? I am getting hot. This bookbag is heavy. I have to blow my nose again. What time is it? I really need to sit up straight. My ear itches. My back hurts when I sit wrong. I like the jacket in the Boutique window. Really again! (blows nose) 1:28pm I like this weather, especially since I have this jacket. Sit up straight. Really (blows nose) Montreal men are good looking. This ragout tastes good. She is wearing a jacket like the one in the window. Chinese girl. Green hair. Litter on the sidewalk. Rolling stones playing. Ahh my back. That lady is only wearing thin tights on her legs. This guy looks interesting. I wonder if the cold stops people from shopping. her legs must be cold. Dan Foggerty playing. The reflections of the lights inside look cool when you look outside (seems like a philosophy of life) Noticing chills on my head. this is a lot of food. If I stay her long enough, it'll help me later. The hot chocolate here, isn't that hot. It just tastes good. I feel a hot chocolate mustache (wipes mouth) Ahh I feel full. My hands hurt from the luggage yesterday. Oh I wonder if she lives there. Couple looking in the window and go inside the boutique. What time is it? 1:42pm. I am going to ask for a to go bag.
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Living: Montreal arrival
Draft__When I arrived on the plane, and I was looking out the window expecting to see all the fall leaves golden and orange. I was too late. The trees are sleeping now and all I saw were the few evergreens among miles of bare brown branches. It was okay. I knew that Montreal would still be magical to me. I do Angel card and Energy card readings on myself, yeah I believe in that sort of stuff and that sorta stuff believes in me because it honestly guides me to the truth. Before I left Miami, I did several readings and the card that stuck in my mind is that I would have several delays. My first thought was please not the trip. I will move around energy to change that!
I took the 747 bus into the city from the airport. I got on the bus just fine, actually it was just sitting there waiting for me to get on. The bus driver said next stop 6 and then drove what seemed like two feet to pick up a guy and that was stop six. He didn't say "Stop six" when he stopped the bus. I rudely blurted, "That was stop 6! I just missed my stop . Can you let me out here." Yes the answer was ,"No." I got at stop 7. I missed my stop by three or four blocks! I had a sinus headache, it was cold outside. I had to drag all my stuff. No use complaining. I had to get to the hotel, so I just started walking to the west until I saw something vaguely familiar.
It was 45 degrees fahrenheit but I was sweating! sweating! what does the Omniheat technology in the jacket work that well! I am glad I didn't get that other double lined jacket. It is much warmer here than I anticipated. Actually that is a weird thing for me to say because my experience of cold is opening up my freezer door and standing there thinking, "That's cold."
I turned the corner at Phillips, not exactly sure where I am and the Baie, a familiar clothing store. I saw the Christmas lights and groups of people and it was like "Ahh" angels singing to me, magic. I struggled to get the wheels of my luggage over the cracks in the side walk. Navigating would take more of an effort from this point on and I would also have to push the luggage uphill. I was close to the hotel though, but not that close. When I finally made it to the hotel, I was hot, sweaty, and just wanting to sit for a moment.
I walked up to the reservation counter and said,"J'ai une reservation pour Borrero." I walk across the room to the garbage can and throw a tissue out and walk back to the corner trying to get my jacket off. "It's hot in here, wow, it is hot in here!" "Can you spell that." the concierge asked. "B-O-R-R-E-R-O," I spelled and it was obvious I had an American accent. "We don't have a reservation for you under that name." the concierge replied. "I immediately said," Don't tell me that. Just tell me you have the room I want." I knew I had printed out the receipt from Expedia. Oh and Expedia you messed up big time. The concierge found the reservation under my first and middle name. I wasn't freaked about the situation. I just know things will turn out well, just not the way I always expect. I have gotten used to this as a theme in my life lately. "May I have 4 extra rolls or toilet paper and two large towels sent up to my room." I asked. The concierge looked at me as if to say, " What do you need all that for?" but replied, "Yes." I got the key and went up to the room.
When I opened the door to the sixth floor room, immediately I was like what, "It's hot in here." I walked over the window and tried to open it, it was stuck then I went to the door for the
balcony and opened it and propped it to stay open with an end table. Right then it when I heard a knock on the door. The concierge delivered the toilet paper and towels. "Thank you." I said and invited him in. He looked shocked because in the two minutes it took him to come upstairs I had already flung my stuff all over the place. It was the same look my Dad used to give me when I would come from college to visit and I would walk in and unpack immediately by opening my suitcase and throwing things out of it as if to say I am marking my territory. "How does this heating system work? Is it the air forced thing at the bottom?" I asked pointing to the vented strip along the wall. "Can I control the temperature?" The concierge walked over to the thermostat and showed me where the controls were. I told him to turn it all the way down. "I came from Florida to experience the cold." I thanked him again and he left.
I took out some more things form my suitcase. I couldn't help myself and I turned the computer on. I needed to see what time La Panther Verte, my favorite restaurant, closed. Nine o'clock. If I leave here I can go to the grocery stores and the Jean Coutu, the pharmacy store and get back in plenty of time to walk to La Panthere Verte. I walk two block still sweating. I go to Couffin Bio first, they close at 7pm and when I looked in the girl was mopping the floors preparing for the closing. I left with two bags. I ran across the street to Jean Coutu for candles and a lighter. Something I always do now when I come to Montreal to let the angels know I am here. When I asked for a lighter, because they are behind the counter, the clerk pick one up and asked "It's $1.39 is it ok?" I said sure, not caring I was just thinking I need something to light the candles with. I paid and throw the items in my already filled bags. It was only later when I lit the candle that I noticed the lighter said "love" on it. Okay time to go to Provigo, water and baking soda, check.
I get back to the Hotel room. Un pack everything quickly. take off my huge winter coat. Take off my glove. Wait, where is my other glove?! What! come on I have just been here for a few hours! I frantic look in m jacket's pockets, the bags, my bookbag. I look on the floor. I grab my jacket and I go into the hall. no. I go in the elevator, no glove. I go onto the street and head back to the stores. I hope I have enough time to go to La Panthere Verte. I could use some food.
I go to Couffin Bio, good they are still opened, "I stick my head in the door, "Did I leave my glove. It would have been on the counter." "No", was the response. I go to Provigo, surely the clerk remembers me my ten dollar bill wouldn't get accepted by the machine. I saw her. I could tell she recognized me. I asked, "Do you see a glove?" Holding up the hot pink glove I had left. She said no. I went to the main counter. I didn't either bother to try my French. "Did anyone turn in a glove?" No, she shook her head. In a hurry, oh wait, this is my second delay. I started walking back to the hotel looking on the street. I cannot believe I lost my glove, I just got here. No change your thoughts I th
ought immediately to myself. I am sure I am going to find my glove it is not lost. Just then I looked up and on the side of the the sidewalk on personal property was a small guide rail with a hot pink glove draped over it.
I smiled big and took the glove and said aloud, "Thank you whomever you are. Thank you." I kissed my gloved and put it back on. Thinking about street germs for a brief moment. Not caring. And walked straight to La Panthere Verte and ordered Hot Chocolate and Falafel, my favorite.
I took the 747 bus into the city from the airport. I got on the bus just fine, actually it was just sitting there waiting for me to get on. The bus driver said next stop 6 and then drove what seemed like two feet to pick up a guy and that was stop six. He didn't say "Stop six" when he stopped the bus. I rudely blurted, "That was stop 6! I just missed my stop . Can you let me out here." Yes the answer was ,"No." I got at stop 7. I missed my stop by three or four blocks! I had a sinus headache, it was cold outside. I had to drag all my stuff. No use complaining. I had to get to the hotel, so I just started walking to the west until I saw something vaguely familiar.
It was 45 degrees fahrenheit but I was sweating! sweating! what does the Omniheat technology in the jacket work that well! I am glad I didn't get that other double lined jacket. It is much warmer here than I anticipated. Actually that is a weird thing for me to say because my experience of cold is opening up my freezer door and standing there thinking, "That's cold."
I turned the corner at Phillips, not exactly sure where I am and the Baie, a familiar clothing store. I saw the Christmas lights and groups of people and it was like "Ahh" angels singing to me, magic. I struggled to get the wheels of my luggage over the cracks in the side walk. Navigating would take more of an effort from this point on and I would also have to push the luggage uphill. I was close to the hotel though, but not that close. When I finally made it to the hotel, I was hot, sweaty, and just wanting to sit for a moment.
I walked up to the reservation counter and said,"J'ai une reservation pour Borrero." I walk across the room to the garbage can and throw a tissue out and walk back to the corner trying to get my jacket off. "It's hot in here, wow, it is hot in here!" "Can you spell that." the concierge asked. "B-O-R-R-E-R-O," I spelled and it was obvious I had an American accent. "We don't have a reservation for you under that name." the concierge replied. "I immediately said," Don't tell me that. Just tell me you have the room I want." I knew I had printed out the receipt from Expedia. Oh and Expedia you messed up big time. The concierge found the reservation under my first and middle name. I wasn't freaked about the situation. I just know things will turn out well, just not the way I always expect. I have gotten used to this as a theme in my life lately. "May I have 4 extra rolls or toilet paper and two large towels sent up to my room." I asked. The concierge looked at me as if to say, " What do you need all that for?" but replied, "Yes." I got the key and went up to the room.
When I opened the door to the sixth floor room, immediately I was like what, "It's hot in here." I walked over the window and tried to open it, it was stuck then I went to the door for the
balcony and opened it and propped it to stay open with an end table. Right then it when I heard a knock on the door. The concierge delivered the toilet paper and towels. "Thank you." I said and invited him in. He looked shocked because in the two minutes it took him to come upstairs I had already flung my stuff all over the place. It was the same look my Dad used to give me when I would come from college to visit and I would walk in and unpack immediately by opening my suitcase and throwing things out of it as if to say I am marking my territory. "How does this heating system work? Is it the air forced thing at the bottom?" I asked pointing to the vented strip along the wall. "Can I control the temperature?" The concierge walked over to the thermostat and showed me where the controls were. I told him to turn it all the way down. "I came from Florida to experience the cold." I thanked him again and he left.
I took out some more things form my suitcase. I couldn't help myself and I turned the computer on. I needed to see what time La Panther Verte, my favorite restaurant, closed. Nine o'clock. If I leave here I can go to the grocery stores and the Jean Coutu, the pharmacy store and get back in plenty of time to walk to La Panthere Verte. I walk two block still sweating. I go to Couffin Bio first, they close at 7pm and when I looked in the girl was mopping the floors preparing for the closing. I left with two bags. I ran across the street to Jean Coutu for candles and a lighter. Something I always do now when I come to Montreal to let the angels know I am here. When I asked for a lighter, because they are behind the counter, the clerk pick one up and asked "It's $1.39 is it ok?" I said sure, not caring I was just thinking I need something to light the candles with. I paid and throw the items in my already filled bags. It was only later when I lit the candle that I noticed the lighter said "love" on it. Okay time to go to Provigo, water and baking soda, check.
I get back to the Hotel room. Un pack everything quickly. take off my huge winter coat. Take off my glove. Wait, where is my other glove?! What! come on I have just been here for a few hours! I frantic look in m jacket's pockets, the bags, my bookbag. I look on the floor. I grab my jacket and I go into the hall. no. I go in the elevator, no glove. I go onto the street and head back to the stores. I hope I have enough time to go to La Panthere Verte. I could use some food.
I go to Couffin Bio, good they are still opened, "I stick my head in the door, "Did I leave my glove. It would have been on the counter." "No", was the response. I go to Provigo, surely the clerk remembers me my ten dollar bill wouldn't get accepted by the machine. I saw her. I could tell she recognized me. I asked, "Do you see a glove?" Holding up the hot pink glove I had left. She said no. I went to the main counter. I didn't either bother to try my French. "Did anyone turn in a glove?" No, she shook her head. In a hurry, oh wait, this is my second delay. I started walking back to the hotel looking on the street. I cannot believe I lost my glove, I just got here. No change your thoughts I th

I smiled big and took the glove and said aloud, "Thank you whomever you are. Thank you." I kissed my gloved and put it back on. Thinking about street germs for a brief moment. Not caring. And walked straight to La Panthere Verte and ordered Hot Chocolate and Falafel, my favorite.
Saturday, October 24, 2015
Living: Falling in Love with Montreal
I went to new heights during my August trip to Montreal. In July, my first time back to Montreal in five years, I saw these people hanging from wires and walking on wooden planks. I thought totmyself at the time, "I need to be brave enough to do that." So in August when I returned suddenly to Montreal, I decided to try the Voiles en Voiles experience of walking through the planks of the Pirate Ship theme attraction. I was 13 feet ( not 35 feet like the higher level) above the air attached to a zipline. The expereience had its ups and downs and I saw many adults and kids experience the struggle that one has with heights and trusting the zipline and oneself. It was definitely a memorable experience. The summer in Montreal was wooing me with the fun, attractions, and beautiful weather.
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
living: Montreal, Canada
When I found myself, the second time this summer in Montreal, I decided that I wanted to see the Cross atop of Mont Royal. I kept seeing it from a distance when I was walking down in the city. I worked my way back to the Chateau on Mont Royal, after sweating and climbing through trails I newly explored, I finally reached it towards the top, the Chateau that is. I rested a bit and asked the information desk attendant for directions to the Cross. Ten minutes up the main path. I was so close before. I was super tired and exhausted, but that didn't matter. I came to see the Cross. I walked on the path for 8 minutes when I realized, the Cross was close. I felt it and as I rounded the corner there it was. There were about fifteen tourists at the foot of the Cross; talking and taking a break from hiking up Mont Royal. I joined them by sitting at the foot of the Cross. After a few people left, I took some photos and decided that I was going to figure out the fastest way back down Mont Royal that didn't involve too much walking. I did find it. The road and the second overlook of the city. I really enjoyed exploring this and I fell more in love with Montreal and I want to know more.
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
living: falling in love with Montreal, Canada
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Thursday, August 6, 2015
Living: My No poo method of washing hair while traveling
I recently went to Montreal and I wanted to do some videos while I was there. Here is one on using baking soda to wash your hair while traveling.
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