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flight to Halifax from New York and then 30 minutes into town. The temperature
is 30 degrees lower here and I hope not to have to worry about nuclear
fallout over the July Fourth weekend. An $8 (USD) bus ride or a $28 taxi;
the bus leaves every 45 minutes. First meal at The 5 Fishermen, a good
restaurant right on the Grand Parade which is at the center of town. Another
good restaurant is Ryan Duffy’s on Spring Garden Road (the main shopping
street). This is a steak house with good fish and deserts; they weigh and
cut the steak at the tables here. Halibut and salmon are the fish here,
no cod as cod-fishing is banned due to lack of cod after years of overfishing.
Four Points Sheraton good value and excellent location; I paid $120 a night
on the concierge floor. Breakfast a weak point in this hotel and you can
forget it if you are looking for a bagel and Nova Scotia lox (nobody here
goes for that). The Westin Hotel is nice but out of the way location. Very
foggy the first 24 hours. Harbour Hopper Tours is a good one hour orientation;
an amphibious transport vehicle takes you on the streets and on the water
in the harbor. Casino is located on the water; skip the lunch buffet.
Maritime Museum of the Atlantic tells you history of ships and Halifax
from a sea perspective. The explosion of Halifax in the 1910's was the
largest explosion outside of the nuclear blasts in Japan. Food court in
the Historic Properties development by the harbor is excellent. All of
Halifax downtown is within 10 minutes walk of anything and it is all neatly
gridded and signage is excellent.
This weekend there is a Jazz Festival, Scottish
Festival and International Tattoo. I thought I wouldn’t find anything to
do for 3 days; I wound up keeping quite busy till the very end. Consider
starting these weekend getaways on Thursday evening so you can scout out
the town and get tickets before everybody else arrives Friday afternoon
(which
is what I did). I attended the opening gala of the Jazz Festival,
simulcast live on Radio Canada, and surprisingly it is not difficult to
get tickets here to things and prices are quite reasonable. Tatoo is a
military jamboree with participants from several countries doing a stage
show in the city’s convention center. 2,000 performers in a 3 hour spectacle
filled with bands, athletics and family fun. I missed the fireworks over
the Harbor but certainly didn’t feel cheated. They saluted 9/11 New York;
many pipes and drums to give it a Scottish feel (Nova Scotia means New
Scotland); people here reacted strongly when the American flag was marched
in and they are proud of their militaries. You don’t see much of this in
a place like New York.
Pedestrian walkways link many buildings which is
good in the winter. For a view atop the city, ride the elevator to the
top of MTT Tower just behind the Four Points Sheraton hotel. Few tall buildings
in center city to preserve the view from the Citadel. The Citadel and the
Clock Tower are just beyond downtown and overlook the city. Citadel is
an interesting tourist site (old English fort) and there is a 50 minute
film there about city history. The city is very much a military and naval-minded
place and has a strong place in history as a port city along the North
Atlantic; Halifax is the closest mainland airport west of Heathrow on this
side of the Atlantic. The Coast Guard had a ship in the Harbour for people
to board, the Japanese navy just sent in a destroyer with crews for training
and their sailors were everywhere. Never mind that the Citadel was never
attacked. It’s a small town; you know that when you keep seeing the same
Japanese sailors. I met a few on a tour and kept seeing them everywhere.
Halifax has many students and at least 5 universities. More immigrants
coming in from Europe; the Germans are buying properties.
Day trip to Peggy’s Cove, about 45 minutes from
the city and to Lunenberg, about 45 minutes further. Lots of interesting
rock formations and a lighthouse on the shores with pretty fishing village
all carefully historically preserved. Area as a whole looks similar to
Jersey and Ireland coast or even New England. Not surprising; all this
area was the same land mass 350 million years ago before the Teutonic plates
split up. Lunenberg is a UNESCO listed historical site and has a good Fisheries
Museum. If you walk around town, be sure to see the Academy at the top
of the hill. Look at the day trip as a day to be laid back and not worry
about rushing anywhere. Sunset is after 9pm and the first few hours of
the day tend to be cloudy with fog.
Good infrastructure (ie: roads and water). Some
street people but harmless. Canada is fairly tolerant and polite; I saw
some Muslims with veils walking around several places and nobody notices
it. Some of the street scenes and performances are innovative with a Canadian
attitude: Some guy made a homemade percussion set and was drumming away
with a dog at his side who, on cue, would bark when he rapped: “Who Let
the Dog Out?” New York Times is sold at 2pm (gone by 3pm) at Perks right
at the center of the Harbourfront area. No matter; Canadian newspapers
are excellent; more literate people supporting more quality
newspapers per capita here than in the US. Visited Pier 21 Museum dedicated
to immigration to Canada at the place where people landed from their ships.
A very good film there gives a realistic account of how immigrants felt
when they arrived. Pier 21 is behind the Westin and near the railroad station
(where most immigrants went after they arrived). There is no Sunday shopping
in Halifax but restaurants are open and a cruise ship had docked. In the
Public Gardens (very pretty) there is a 2pm band concert on Sundays on
a 100 year old bandstand. Museum of Art also worthwhile with a local flavor;
visited a naval warship and the only thing I missed out on was some local
ice cream cause there were too many people on line and I had to leave.
Airport had only one security checkpoint for the
entire place; although this is probably a temporary problem due to construction.
I flew 5pm to Ottawa and then to Newark because I saved $300 by taking
the stopover and had a full day in town; the nonstop left at 2pm. And you
pick up an hour on the way back because Halifax is an hour ahead of East
Coast US time. Ottawa is an excellent transfer airport; very small and
it’s only 55 minute flight from there to Newark. The CRJ (Canadian Regional
Jet) is a great quiet smallish plane you hardly feel. Canada is friendly
to tourists; airport cashier didn’t care that I was $1 short on my dinner
bill when I was trying to get rid of the rest of my money. In other airports,
I’d be stuck with $5 being returned because I was short a penny. Canada
has excellent exchange rate against the dollar but it doesn’t really matter;
the prices are about the same by the time you pay the 15% sales tax in
Canada. I applied for a refund of the sales tax on my hotel bill; you can
do this. To do this, get an application from your hotel, save your original
receipt and boarding pass. In about 3-4 weeks, you get a check made out
to you in US funds that refunds the tax.
For Halifax photos,
click here. |