Tag Archive | "The Ocean"

Tags: , ,

VIA Rail’s Ocean: A Maritime Learning Experience to Treasure


peggys_coveNow in its fifth season, VIA Rail’s Maritime Learning Experience is poised to augment the journey east and make it both enriching and memorable for travellers never too young or too old to enjoy the train. Between June 14th and October 12th, 2009, the Ocean that carries passengers from Montréal to Halifax, will once again feature the acclaimed Maritime Learning Experience, an invitation to combine the comfort of Sleeper Touring class with the joy of train travel through Canada’s Maritime Provinces.

While on board, the journey east is enhanced by a Learning Coordinator who complements the Maritimes’ seascapes rolling by with informative and entertaining presentations - a backdrop that reveals the history, the folklore and even a recipe or two from the region.

Imagine breakfast in New Brunswick, then lunch in Nova Scotia just as a view of the iconic Bay of Fundy rolls by. Over the 21-hour journey, Sleeper Touring class passengers enjoy brief presentations along with fine, regionally-inspired menus that include such succulent options as a tender filet of beef served with an aromatic garlic and herb shrimp brochette, or a flavorsome serving of grilled halibut. Choose from a menu that may include crispy crab cakes, a savoury foccacia stuffed with grilled vegetables, or perhaps a succulent beef and black bean stir-fry.

“More and more, it’s become clear that, for today’s traveller, it’s not only about the destination but about making the journey,” says Lynn Pellerin, Product Manager, Longhaul Services. “The Maritime Learning Experience answers that need. Through demonstrations and interactive presentations, our Learning

Coordinators share the rich folklore and history, food and culture of one of Canada’s most beloved regions. Best of all, the Maritime Learning Experience ensures a unique opportunity for young and old to share in the fun, making it the ideal family adventure.”

The Maritime Learning Experience is a seasonal upgrade to the Ocean’s already existing Sleeper class. The Ocean operates year-round, six times per week in each direction between Montréal and Halifax while the learning component upgrade was designed to offer a seamless and relaxed learning experience in harmony with the laid back warmth of the Maritimes, featured throughout the summer and fall seasons.

Three meals in total are served between Montréal to Halifax and are included in the ticket price for Ocean Sleeper Touring class passengers. The Ocean’s cozy sleeping accommodations include amenities such as comfortable duvet bedding, plump pillows, towels and a shower kit, bottled water, and VIA’s signature chocolates.

Family travel is made more comfortable at an additional charge for those wishing to book a cabin for three or four. These come complete with the distinctive ambience of the Park car and large picture windows.

For more information on train schedules or to book a trip anywhere in the VIA system, customers can visit VIA’s Web site at viarail.ca. Passengers also can book their tickets at self-ticketing kiosks in most Québec City-Windsor Corridor stations, by calling 1 888 VIA-RAIL (1 888 842-7245), TTY 1 800 268-9503 (hearing impaired), or through their travel agent.

As Canada’s national passenger rail service, VIA Rail Canada’s mandate is to provide efficient, environmentally sustainable and cost effective passenger transportation services, both in Canada’s busiest corridor and in remote and rural regions of the country. VIA serves more than 450 communities with a
network of inter-city, transcontinental and regional trains. Increasingly travellers are turning to train travel as a hassle-free and cost-efficient alternative to congested roads and airports as well as a more environmentally responsible way to travel.

Posted in VIA RailComments (1)

Tags: , , ,

VIA Rail Canada Makes Tracks with a 50% Off Promotion on Major Tourism Services


Book by March 31 for Discounted Travel Aboard VIA’s Western and Eastern Routes

VIA Rail Canada is offering all the fun for half the price this season on three of its most popular tourism services: the Toronto-Jasper-Vancouver Canadian, Montréal-Halifax Ocean and Montréal-Gaspé Chaleur. The discount is valid in both Comfort (Economy) and Sleeper Class services.

Voted by the International Society of Railway Travelers as one of the top 25 trains to experience, VIA’s flagship Canadian is a four-night journey that provides travelers with a glimpse into history itself. From the majestic Rocky Mountains, through the vast expanses of the Canadian Prairies to the Canadian Shield and lake lands of Northern Ontario, travellers can experience all this and more at a savings of 50% off the regular peak fare when you travel no later than May 31, 2009. Tickets must be purchased at least three days prior to departure or by March 31 whichever comes first.

Passengers can experience the entire cross country odyssey or opt for an overnight trip from Vancouver to the town of Jasper, Alberta in the heart of the Rockies. Choose from VIA’s economical Comfort class or let yourself be pampered with Silver & Blue sleeper class. Regional cuisine prepared freshly by an on-board chef and accommodation are included in the price of Silver & Blue class along with access to the train’s 360 degrees panorama dome car.

Prices for a one-way trip on the Canadian between Toronto and Vancouver start at CAD $662 for an upper berth. An overnight journey in a double bedroom from Vancouver to Jasper is available for CAD $447 plus tax, per person for double occupancy.

For travellers looking to experience the charm of Eastern Canada, VIA’s Ocean service between Montreal and Halifax, Nova Scotia and the Chaleur between Montreal and the beautiful Gaspe region of Quebec are just the ticket. And with savings of 50% on trips for travel until June 13, 2009, these are sites worth seeing. Tickets must be purchased at least three days prior to departure or by March 31 whichever comes first.

On VIA Rail’s eastern services, passengers wander through the beautiful towns along the south shore of the St. Lawrence River before descending through the Notre Dame Mountains in the Matapédia Valley. From there, the Chaleur continues to Gaspé while the Ocean travels through New Brunswick en route to Nova Scotia. Passengers can choose from VIA’s Comfort Sleeper or the economical Comfort Class.

Prices for this overnight journey in Comfort Sleeper Class on the Ocean in a standard double bedroom between Montréal and Halifax start at CAD $187 plus tax, per person for double occupancy. One-way travel in Comfort Sleeper Class on the Chaleur between Montréal and Gaspé in a double bedroom is available from CAD $164.50 plus tax, per person. Meals are extra on these two services.

To take advantage of this offer, for more information, or to book a trip on any VIA service customers can visit viarail.ca or call (888) VIA-RAIL. (1 888 842-7245), or TTY 1 800 268-9503 (hearing impaired), or through theirtravel agent.

Only VIA Rail, Canada’s national passenger rail service, offers an original and unique rail experience across Canada’s wondrous landscape for travelers who value the journey as much as the destination.

All VIA Rail Canada rates quoted are per person, not including applicable taxes. Fares (and fare conditions) are subject to change without notice. Some fare plans require advance purchase and are subject to limited-availability. Other conditions may apply.

For further information: Media Contacts: Catherine Kaloutsky, (647) 228-1127, Catherine_kaloutsky@viarail.ca; Malcolm Andrews, (514) 871-6604,
Malcolm_andrews@viarail.ca

Posted in VIA RailComments (0)

Tags: , , , ,

5 best train trips in Canada


Source Link: By Daniel Drolet, The Ottawa Citizen

Gordon Lightfoot sang about the Canadian railroads for a reason: rail travel is somehow quintessentially Canadian, in many ways a link to the early days of the country.

1. Across Canada by train

The ultimate long-haul journey? Across Canada by train, Toronto to Vancouver on VIA Rail. The trip lasts nearly four days and there are several departures each week; if you want to save money, travel in winter, when prices are discounted. VIA Rail recently changed the schedule to improve dailight viewing in the Rockies. www.viarail.ca/trains/en

2. Through the Rockies

Half the excitement of a cross-Canada train trip is going through the Rockies. No time for the whole thing? Rocky Mountaineer Vacations runs train trips through the mountains, Vancouver to Calgary or vice-versa. Travel by day when you can see the sights, and stay in a hotel overnight. www.rockymountaineer.com

3. The far north

The best train trips take you to places without roads or cars. Like the VIA train from Winnipeg to Churchill, Manitoba, on the shore of Hudson Bay. It’s a 1,700-kilometre, two-night trip that costs as little as $157 (one way) if you go coach. See www.viarail.ca/trains/en

4. The nearer north

The Polar Bear Express is a classic excursion train, travelling between Cochrane, Ont., and Moosonee on James Bay during the summer. The one-day, return-trip excursion is a quick way to experience the north — especially if you’re taking children along. www.ontarionorthland.ca/en

5. Overnight

If you’ve got the time and bit of extra cash, it’s worth it to take a berth or a room on an overnight train and let yourself be rocked to sleep by the soothing clickety-click of the wheels on the track. The trip from Montreal to Halifax on VIA Rail’s The Ocean lasts about 21 hours — just enough time to kick back and relax. www.viarail.ca/trains/en

Posted in VIA RailComments (0)

Tags: , , , , , , ,

On Rail Canada, with rumors and a moose


Source Link: by Scott Vogel, Washington Post

As in most cases where people sit cooped up for long periods with little to do, rumors travel quickly on a train.

In my experience, they generally start at the back, in, say, the glassed-in sightseeing car that serves as VIA Rail Canada’s caboose. From there they quickly work their way forward, through the fancy sleeper cars and then the less-fancy sleeper cars, to the dining car, to the cafe car, and then to the comfort-class car, where, despite the name, passengers are given a pillow and a footrest and little else.

When a rumor at last arrives at the conductor, 18 cars and iterations later, it might go something like this: Our train, the Ocean, is stopped here in the middle of nowhere at 7 a.m. because a moose wandered onto an adjacent track and was struck by a fast-moving freight train. Dying, the moose staggered a bit, and then, in a kind of death lunge, threw itself onto the Ocean’s track, coming to rest antlers-up.

If true, this was significant. Antlers-up is one of the few ways a moose can damage a passenger train, it turns out. Usually such encounters end with the doomed animal’s being obliterated without anyone noticing; or, as one man in the glass caboose put it, “You hear a bump and somebody says, ‘What was that?’ and you think maybe it was a bump, but maybe it was a moose.”

But antlers-up is something else. If the Ocean rolls over antlers, “they could break air lines and electrical lines under the train,” said a man named Freddy, a Rail Canada engineer who happened to be on vacation with his wife.

Around this time, Bob wandered into the conversation - a barefoot American in a bathrobe seeking coffee in the caboose. This was his second trip on the Ocean from Montreal to Halifax. He deposited himself next to Freddy, and soon the car was filled with bleary-eyed passengers in various states of dress, all of them wondering why the train hadn’t moved in more than an hour: the pair of retiree couples from Michigan, the smartly dressed man from Miramichi, the German guys who apparently do nothing but travel the world in search of the best train rides they can find.

Among the other rumors we’d heard was that passenger train service was experiencing something of a renaissance in North America, thanks to the triple threat of high gasoline prices, epic dissatisfaction with the airline industry, and a world situation that almost demands a retreat into nostalgia. Indeed, more than 28 million people have ridden Amtrak trains in the last year, the most in the line’s history, and VIA Rail Canada, its north-of-the-border counterpart, is experiencing its own ridership increase. This renaissance is no rumor.

“People take a plane to get someplace as fast as they can,” Ron Doiron told me. “People who take trains aren’t interested in that.”

Doiron’s declaration sounded innocuous enough, but to inveterate train people - namely, the caboose crowd - they were full of code. Plane people “are the ones who created the mess the world’s in now,” a woman confided in French, drawing some sort of connection between the headiness of Wall Street and the speed of air travel. The upshot: If Wall Street had been run by train people, they’d know that life is about the journey and not the destination, that life isn’t about only the heedless pursuit of goals but also the avoidance of collateral damage.

And so we sat, waiting for them to clear the moose.

I liked Doiron, especially his job. Unbelievable as it may sound, Rail Canada employs a “learning coordinator” on some of its trains - a plaid-vested chap who is something of a cross between a pedant and a concierge.

For those passengers with the means to afford Rail Canada’s Easterly class, the trip includes sleeping accommodations, meals and, best of all, access to that caboose, where stairs lead to a second-floor observation dome, a thrilling conservatory on wheels. There, Doiron would serve champagne and hold court, regaling us with stories of the struggles between the British and the Acadian French, while the Ocean wound its way through forests of sumac and sugar maple, their leaves a hundred brilliant colors on this equally brilliant October afternoon.

Our journey had begun the night before, the Ocean having left Montreal’s Gare Centrale at precisely 6:45 for its northeastern trek across Quebec. Dinner was served immediately in the dining car, a handsome beige room where there was a tablecloth and lamp for each of the 16 tables, and where I got my taste of both whiskey-infused salmon and the Ocean rumor mill.

The Canadian stock market was in danger of imminent collapse, maybe, and all because “70 percent of our exports go to America,” said one man between forkfuls of braised short ribs. Somebody else had heard that 401(k) accounts would soon be “frozen,” but that was OK because there was hardly anything left to freeze.

Eventually, however, as the lights of Montreal receded and the landscape became dotted with fewer and fewer porch lights, thoughts slowly turned from journey’s end to just plain journey.

“You do not want to miss the Baie des Chaleurs,” Doiron told me as he passed through the dining car. “We get there at sunrise. Make sure you don’t sleep through it.”

I passed a fitful night in my sleeping cabin, though I could hardly blame the cabin. In one fluid motion, Claude, my steward, had turned a bench seat into a cot draped with an inviting comforter, showed me how to use the ingenious shower facilities in the cabin’s tiny bathroom, handed me a Maclean’s magazine devoted to the world economy (headline: “Really Bad News”), and offered a glass of champagne for a nightcap. Then, as happened so often on this trip, the conversation turned to the subject of moose.

“I really fear those things,” said the gray-haired man in his French-accented English. “That’s my worst fear about driving at night.”

A deer will bounce right off a car, he told me, but a moose is so big and its legs are so long that “the animal can come right through the windshield.”

My dreams that night were like a drinking game. People would come up to me, we’d talk a while, and then they’d say, “Really Bad News,” at which point a dead moose would fall into my lap. On the plus side, I was the first person in the observation car the next morning, and no one had a better view of Chaleur Bay at sunrise.

Overnight near the town of Rimouski (which means “land of the moose” in the language of the native Micmac Indians), the Ocean had headed southeast to New Brunswick, then hugged the Chaleur coast just as Doiron had said. The bay was unearthly still at sunrise, placid and pink, its coves thickly lined with evergreens. None of the passengers who had gathered for this morning spectacle dared say a word; all you could hear was the rhythmic chugging of a train winding its way south to Nova Scotia.

It was afternoon when we arrived at the endless expanse of bogginess known as Tantramar Marsh, a muddy goodbye to New Brunswick. While lunching on shrimp Caesar salad and fish chowder, we passed through the tiny town that, we were told, gave the world singer Anne Murray, and then the slightly larger town that gave the world Charles E. Stanfield, also known as the inventor of shrink-proof long underwear for gold miners.

At 5 o’clock, we began to see the cranes and container ships of bustling Halifax, the train rounding the harbor under a beautiful, cloudless sky. It had taken us almost a full day to travel the 836 miles from Montreal to Halifax, but thanks to the scenery and the food and the sleeping quarters and the convivial atmosphere, my religious conversion to trainism was complete. Henceforth I would profess the life-is-not-about-the-destination credo to anyone who would listen. I would completely ignore the snickers.

Accordingly, the next morning, less than 18 hours after journey’s end, I boarded the Ocean again and did the trip in reverse, enjoying the instant replay of the Halifax harbor and Anne Murray’s town and the muddy marshes and the tranquillity of Chaleur.

And then the moose fell on our track.

Thanks to quick action by engineers on the train that had hit the moose, the Ocean’s chief engineer had enough warning to begin the lengthy braking process. When our train finally rolled to a stop a few hours east of Montreal, a light rain was falling in the predawn twilight. There were lots of silences.

“Like the saying goes, ‘Nature is neither cruel nor compassionate,’ ” Freddy said, wearily glancing at his watch.

The caboose-crowd faithful nodded silently as one.

“But here’s the thing: I don’t ever hit a moose if I don’t have to.”

The crowd shook its collective head - not if we don’t have to.

“In fact, I once followed a moose for 22 miles. For 22 miles he just walked in front of the train. Finally he darts off. Goes right through this guy’s front yard. Guy’s on the porch holding his coffee cup. You should have seen the look on his face.”

Seeing Canada by Train

The Ocean, VIA Rail Canada’s train from Montreal to Halifax, leaves six days a week in each direction, and sleeper cars, comfort class, and multiple dining options are available year-round (1-888-842-7245, www.viarail.ca).

Prices vary; the round-trip fare for the one-bedroom class next month is $412 per person; comfort-class seats (which partially recline and have head- and footrests) go for $163 year-round.

Dining

A continental breakfast with yogurt and cereal in the Ocean’s dining car will cost about $5. Lunch might be a grilled cheese and bacon sandwich ($11). Dinners are three-course affairs with such entrees as coq au vin ($15).

Montreal and Halifax have reasonable dining options within a stone’s throw of their train stations.

Just two blocks from Montreal’s Gare Centrale is Bofinger (1250 University St., 514-750-9095), which serves surprisingly good barbecue at great prices. A bountiful brisket sandwich with a side and drink goes for $6.95, and a generous helping of poutine - that old Montreal standby of french fries, gravy and cheese curds - is $3.85.

Everyone’s favorite breakfast spot in Halifax is the Bluenose II Restaurant and Grill (1824 Hollis St., 902-425-5092), where the pancakes and bacon ($5.40) will leave you full for hours. At lunchtime, the place goes Greek, boasting a pork souvlaki that’s a terrific bargain at less than $9.

Places to stay

Montreal and Halifax have a wealth of hotel options.

In Montreal, there’s the Four Points by Sheraton Montreal Centre-Ville (475 Sherbrooke St. W., 1-800-842-3961, www.fourpointsmontreal.com), and the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth (900 Rene-Levesque Blvd. W., 1-800-441-1414, www.fairmont.com).

In Halifax, I stayed at the Westin Nova Scotian, a handsome four-star property that’s just steps from the Halifax train station and boasts a wonderfully warm indoor pool (1181 Hollis St., 1-877-993-7846, www.westin.ns.ca). Prices for a double typically start at about $108 a night plus taxes, although I paid $85 by bidding on Priceline. Down the street, there’s the Radisson Suite Hotel Halifax (1649 Hollis St., 1-800-333-3333, www.radissonhalifax.com), where doubles start at $99 plus tax. Both properties are convenient to the city’s bustling harborfront area.

More information

Tourisme Montreal/Quebec
1-877-266-5687
www.tourisme-montreal.org

Nova Scotia Department of Tourism
1-800-565-0000
www.novascotia.com

Posted in VIA RailComments (1)

Tags: , , ,

Canada by rail


Rail in Canada is experiencing something of a renaissance.

There are good reasons for this.

VIA Rail Canada employs a “learning co-ordinator” on some of its trains, a plaid-vested chap who is something of a cross between a pedant and a concierge.

For those passengers with the means to afford Rail Canada’s Easterly class, the trip includes sleeping accommodation, meals and, best of all, access to the caboose, where stairs lead to a second-floor observation dome, a thrilling conservatory on wheels.

There the concierge serves Champagne and holds court, regaling travellers with stories of the struggles between the British and Acadian French, while the train, the Ocean, winds its way through forests of sumac and sugar maple, their leaves a hundred brilliant colours on autumn afternoons.

The Ocean, VIA Rail Canada’s train from Montreal to Halifax, leaves six days a week in each direction, and sleeper cars, comfort class and multiple dining options are available year-round (www.viarail.ca).

Posted in VIA RailComments (0)

Advertise Here
Advertise Here