Hotellerie Du Voyage Quebec
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Travel Blogs from Quebec
Backpacking - The Phenomenon
... you with the comforting luxuries of a clean bathroom consisting of a clean porcelain toilet or a well-piped shower to make you feel fresh and new again. In order to get to the next stage of backpacker-mode the guys will have to accept that there is no fresh and new, there is just now. After Marty experienced his first irregular, painful bowel movement mixed with the previously ...
Quebec
... under one of the main highway like roads up to the hill with some amazing art murals painted below it. Ours beers arrived on a revolver-like lazy susan, and there were quite a few, some fantastic. We then swung by a pizza shop recommended and headed home. The next day Joe and I headed out and did some further exploring of historical city, starting with a pumpkin latte. We walked in to the massive castle like hotel on to of the hill. ...
Day 11 in the world's most beautiful city
... places that I've come to love in the past, and I even had some new experiences.
Not wanting to repeat traffic hell, we took the ferry across the St. Lawrence (10 minutes) and it drops you off just off of "Place Royal"... the first permanent settlement in Canada dating back to 1608. The ferry was great and was so easy to return home at the end of the day.
We started ...
Quebec's Walled City
... historic preservation laws governing the old buildings and thus have done a beautiful job maintaining the original appearance of exteriors.
After a day of wandering we return to the promenade looking over the St Lawrence Seaway to little villages across the river and below the stone wall that encompasses the old town. I find the rooftops and chimney pots quite delightful.
Exhausted after walking all day we arrive back in camp to loud ...
Entry 7: Riviere-du-Loup/Quebec
... had to walk up lots of steps to get to the main streets. The river is basically lined with cliffs on either side, so Quebec is the same but you have the option of taking the funicular (a sort of lift thing on a railway track). The line is always massive at the bottom though so I’ve only taken it down. I’m getting fit with all these steps!
The town of Levis, I found, is mostly a lot of cafes and restaurants and no touristy sort of shops like in Quebec. So ...