Ivan & Karen chilling out
from their balcony at La Pinsonniere in La Malbaie, Canada.
Actually, it was all my fault. I
was in a very heated argument with my business partner and we were so hot
on the phone that I think we caused the whole electricity grid to burn
out. All’s I know is that we were on the phone, my whole office was watching,
and then all of a sudden the line goes dead and we are all standing there
like “duh?”
The difference between this and 9/11
is that when you looked outside the window, people were standing around
Macy’s (where my office is) lining up for transportation and public telephones.
On 9/11 they were running down the street looking for cover. One fellow
had a guitar and a battery-operated amplifier and kept playing music –
I said to the policeman at the corner, “Is this a great city – the music
never stops.” Very few people today think to have battery operated radios
and it was about 10 blocks walking before I got to one playing on the street.
People first wanted to know that it was not a local incident and that it
was not terrorism. It was a long walk home that night, a bit over an hour,
and by the time I got close to my home it was so dark outside on the street
running alongside Central Park that you could not see if someone was right
in front of you. It was also a good time to have a cheap telephone that
doesn’t need electricity to work. Cellphones didn’t work and all these
people kept staring at their cellphones hoping they would work, hopelessly
deprived and lost in their own space.
The next morning the lights came
on at about 6am. I was supposed to leave with Karen the night before for
a stop and smell the roses weekend in Canada to have some quiet time before
turning to wedding preparations (something I would recommend to other engaged
couples). The Thursday night flight of course was cancelled. That morning
she managed to win the fight with ten others over the first car service
cab that came into the neighborhood that was willing to take us to New
Jersey to the Newark airport (no electricity means no gas because no pumps
working) and of course he attempted to charge us triple the normal price
(and we settled for double). She managed to reach me by phone and within
5 minutes I was downstairs on the go and my super let me back into the
building to get my bag out of the office on the way to the airport (this
is a good time to remind people to tip their supers very well because this
is when you get the flashlight and escort in a 45 story office building).
We reached Newark hoping to go standby and managed to get a confirmed seat
out (evidently there had been cancellations overnight) and by early afternoon
we were happy campers lunching in air conditioning at a table by the window
with a flutist on the cobblestone street background in Quebec City.
There are previous articles on the
site about Quebec. I have been many places over the past 12 years since
my first visit here and I still rate this as one of my favorite places.
Just over an hour’s flying time from New York, Quebec remains a great little
secret. It has charm, great food, quaint historical walking areas and it
is surrounded by beautiful country.
The two hour drive to the La Malbaie
area is one of the nicest 2 hour drives you will find anywhere within an
international airport. Route 362 offers a bit of scenic detour off the
main road 138 and it pays to take the detour. Our weekend is at La Pinsonniere,
a 26 room hotel which is part of the Relais & Chateaux chain of properties,
offering true personalized service and a private and luxurious experience
in a naturally wonderful setting that sets the table for a very romantic
weekend, even if it winds raining for half the weekend. We had a suite
facing the sea with a large deck. For an extra $100 (all prices USD), two
people can have breakfast and dinner. It is worth the money and the dining
room on the property is excellent and intrinsic to the experience. Things
you can do there include having a picnic on the grounds (they will prepare
a basket), taking a tour of the impressive wine cellar, getting treatments
in the spa (very reasonably priced), and taking a nature walk down to the
sea. Within 15 minutes drive there are other scenic areas along the sea
to walk around and picnic and enjoy fields of rocks, inlets with sailboats
and little bed and breakfasts that offer the scenery at less cost. There
is a very pretty golf course nearby as well as a casino. Day trips in this
Charlevoix region include going on a boat to see whales and fjords or going
down a boat on a gorge with calm waters (allow 6 hours for each of these
two daytrips). Last year I was in this region and stayed in the Manoir
de Richelieu, a Fairmont hotel property, and found it a bit boring and
impersonal. This was much better and I had high expectations that were
not disappointed in the least. Standing on the deck watching the dusk,
you could not tell where the clouds began and the water ended. It was just
stunning and unforgettable and I hope that the Italian coast looks as good
when we intend to go there next April.
Back in Quebec City, the Chateau
Frontenac, the leading hotel in the city and part of the Fairmont chain,
has a great restaurant called La Champlain. It is one of the best in Canada
and the food and presentation were as good as its reputation. Actually,
we didn’t find any bad food anywhere on this trip. A good idea is to book
the table via the hotel’s concierge. We got a coupon for free drinks as
well as the best table in the restaurant and even wound up watching the
fireworks from our seat. Afterward, a horse and carriage ride is a great
evening activity ($40 USD for 40 minutes). On Sunday night and Monday,
the town is much less crowded than on Friday or Saturday and it is not
a bad idea to consider making Quebec a Sunday night stopover after a weekend
in the Charlevoix region. Our hotel of choice here was the Clarendon, a
grand dame hotel a few blocks from the Chateau Frontenac right across from
city hall but half the price and much more convenient. The Frontenac is
a bit busy and the rooms can be small. At least at the Clarendon you won’t
feel you are overpaying.
Take the funicular from the Frontenac
entrance to the lower part of the city by the port. I had tended to ignore
this part in previous trips and that is a mistake. Here is the Museum of
Civilization and it is worth an hour with a good assortment of temporary
and permanent exhibits. It is a lovely area to walk around and on St. Paul
Street a few blocks left from the train station if you were exiting the
station there are some attractive restaurants that would be worth going
to next time around. By the way, the train station is very pretty and has
a nice park in front of it. A good lunch activity is the revolving rooftop
restaurant at the Loews Concorde Hotel; allow 75 minutes to make a full
revolution and the buffet lunch is less than $20. Near the hotel are parks,
homes and streets with nightlife. Actually, anywhere you walk in Quebec
City it is charming; it is the only city in North America still surrounded
by a wall and it is a UNESCO protected site.
Remember to save your boarding passes
and original receipts and to get a VAT refund brochure. You can get back
taxes on your hotel room and various goods and services related to short
term accommodation.
It is a 20 minute fixed price taxi
ride to the airport (about $20) and we arrived almost an hour before departure
to find the checkout counter locked. Turns out the flight was scheduled
to leave half an hour earlier than my e-ticket printout. We ran up the
escalator to passport control and demanded to be let aboard; we were running
with our bags on the tarmac to the waiting plane. Among this region’s pleasures
are a small airport and very good attitude toward tourists by just about
everyone we met. People will walk you to your destination and go the extra
length for you and we felt that warmth (which we didn’t feel in other places
we’ve visited, so that counts for something in deciding where to spend
one’s weekends). Also to be considered is that the dollar provides excellent
value in Canada; prices are reasonable and you can get a real discount
on world-class food, services and accommodations that would cost a great
deal more in the US or in Europe.
Flights from Quebec clear customs
in the US. We arrived back in New York to find things back to normal and
were exceedingly happy to be chilling out in cool and serene Canada while
the City spent its weekend sorting things out. |