Showing posts with label Alberta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alberta. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Vulcan, Canada, MT & ND: Crashing a National Park, Chasing Trains, THE Big Cow, & Fargo Fine Food!

And now back, again to our road trip back from British Columbia, Canada to West Virginia! 
When I wrote the blogpost on Alberta, Canada, I neglected one short but Very Important stop: Vulcan, the Official Star Trek City of Canada!  While not named for Mr. Spock's home planet (the town was named by a surveyor for the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1915 after the Roman God of Fire- Vulcan- and originally all the streets were named after gods and goddesses of the classical world such as JunoMars, and Jupiter), the town had the great, good sense to capitalize on Star Trek, and is now known primarily for that! Vulcan has a Star Trek themed Tourism and Trek Station, a replica of the Starship Enterprise, and hosts "Spock Days", drawing visitors from around the world! We made a bit of a detour to get there, and unfortunately the museum was closed by the time we arrived, but at least we got to see a bit of Vulcan, and hopefully we will Live Long and Prosper! 
Elisse sez: "Live Long & Prosper!"




Sunset on Vulcan...




Driving south and east, we stopped in Glasgow, Montana at Sam's Supper Club, for a nice dinner; Sam's was packed with happy regulars and very obviously THE place to eat in Glasgow!



Happy Dan at Sam's!





We began our short time in Glendive, Montana being checked into the Comfort Inn by a super-nice gal...  And being checked out by a total psycho with attitude. Pregnant one, with a pierced eye and lip to go along with her bad attitude, apparently a Choice Hotel Staff Tradition. We had our door banged on at 8:23a.m. by cleaning staff. Then our wake-up call at 8:30a.m. Then Another banging on the door at 9a.m., followed by a call from the front desk at 9:30a.m., reminding us that check out was at 11a.m., at which point I said “We got the message- you want us out! We got it!” Checking out we got an earful of ugliness from Ms. Piercings, along with someone else’s bill. When I got to the truck and realized I had the wrong bill, I returned to the desk; finding no one there, I went looking in the back offices, only to be greeted by a screaming Ms. Piercings, now yelling how the Manager was in Florida (“I already told her about you!” she screeched. What, pray tell, did she say? That we paid money to be abused by her?) when I demanded to see her. This loveliness culminated in her actually threatening to call the police (“Please do!” was my response), if I didn't give her back the other guest's bill she had mistakenly given me, and was followed by even MORE nastiness! What a lovely send-off... (This bit of delightfulness was included in our letter to the Choice Hotel CEO. We were told we'd be getting a call from the hotel and an apology. We're still waiting).


At Sleeping Buffalo Rock, Malta, Montana

















We stopped at the Great Plains Dinosaur Museum & Field Station in Malta, Montana, where we got to see and touch fossils and dino bones dug up right in Malta's backyard! We spent quite a while at the museum, and interested the lady who showed us the exhibits in Homer Hickam's book The Dinosaur Hunter...
We then perused all the exhibits at the excellent Phillips County Museum next door, which shows how pioneers, cowboys, and Indians worked and played through tools, toys, instruments, clothing, furniture, and historic photographs, as well as life-size replicas of a cowboy bunkhouse, a one-room schoolhouse, church, and mercantile. They have special exhibit on their native outlaw celebrity, Kid Curry, who began his "outlaw career" in 1894 by shooting 'Pike' Landusky, and then going on, with his gang, The Wild Bunch, to commit more crimes in Phillips County, including a train robbery west of Malta in 1901.
We also stopped at Sleeping Buffalo Rock in Malta, Montana, which reposes in its corral under a shed at the junction of US 2 and MT 243. It is an old rock indigenous to the area, part of a group of boulders that the local Indians held sacred. People often leave coins or tobacco as offerings. Roadside America which is what the link goes to) has some interesting info about it:  "Sleeping Buffalo Rock was found by my grandfather when he was a young boy while out riding the plains. Kenneth Arnold Ball was born in Saco, MT Jan. 24, 1908 to Nora Jane and George McLearn Ball, whom herded sheep and raised wheat and grasses. Kenneth went to school with Chet Huntley; they were good friends (Chet even states this in his book Boyhood Memories). The rock was actually carved by the Plains Indians and it was a symbol for the buffalo hunt. They would dance around it the night before the hunt as spiritual hope for a good hunt like football players huddle together for a good game.The Rock was placed near the school in representation of both of the boys, Kenneth and Chet". - Nora Mae, 09/20/2010 
Railfans that we are, we chased trains across the plains... and found lots of other cool things, too!
Ha!






Harlem, Montana, Pop 808



One of the things that made us stop and turn around...
And with the owner's permission, Dan, who is US Army Ret. Aviation, and I, got to take a close-up look at her!





Pretty... and good eatin', too! :-)


The Sweet Grass Hills, Browning, Montana


Yes, there are dinos here!









Our next stop was for a nice lunch at Boots Bar & Grill, in the (then closed-due-to-the- idiot-sequester) Theodore Roosevelt National Park in Medora, North Dakota: elk burgers w/sweet potato fires, and a Beaver Beer sampler!

Beaver Beer at Boots Bar!


Dan bought us some local, ND wine in one of the little stores in the Park that was open despite the "sequester", and then Dan and I Broke Obama Law, throwing our lot in with our WWII Vets, and entered the closed-due-to-sequester Painted Canyon Overlook in the National Park, me climbing under a chain and dancing over a RR grating, with Dan following in hot pursuit! We photographed the scenic rocks, and on the way back to the car we saw someone apparently examining our car- we thought we were being ticketed for trespassing, but it was just 2 nice Park employees letting themselves in; the lady even held the gate for me! :-)


Elisse, ballsy as usual...




Driving due east across North Dakota on I95, I'm thumbing though "attractions" on our Garmin, and come up the bright idea of stopping to see Salem Sue, the World's Largest Holstein Cow. As we hit Salem, we also hit Snow, and as we climb the winding hill, on top of which stands Salem Sue, it becomes increasingly apparent that this was Not one of my brighter notions... We make it all the way up there, crawling our truck round and around the steep, snow-slick hill, see Sue, and then Dan oh-so-carefully turns the truck around and down we go...

Snow in Salem, ND...

Salem Sue


Salem Sue, in all her glory...
















We drove through Bismark, ND, and had a bit of a rest at Keelboat Park...
Keelboat Park, Bismark, ND


Bismark, ND
Night falls over North Dakota...











and then, as night fell, we
 made for Fargo, knowing a wonderful dinner would await us at HoDo, where we'd had such a fine meal 3 weeks previously. Tonight we were treated to live '60s music on top of a great meal: a bon bouche of pureed iceberg lettuce soup with sturgeon, followed by nori-wrapped yellowtail with a sate sauce, and then short ribs for Dan, and milk-poached scallops and lemon-seared butter tender octopus with a wine sabayon for me! And then a lush chocolate cake with a gently-zingy chipotle pepper sauce. And wine. And scotch. And Dan got to schmooze the chef! And now our freezer of moose meat is hooked up and we're ensconced in a Jacuzzi suite at the Comfort Inn in Fergus Falls, Minnesota.
I know- we're gluttons for punishment. LOL



Another great dinner at HoDos!
Next: Wisconsin Dells: Ducks!

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Oh, Canada! FINE dining in Edmonton, trains, geese, the Icefields Parkway, & Jasper!

Our first stop in Alberta was Edmonton,  where we stayed at the Holiday Inn Express Downtown (on our hotel points :-), and thanks again to our GREAT AAA book, had a truly excellent "foodie" dinner of New Canadian Cuisine just a block away at the elegant Wildflower Restaurant: Peppercorn-Herb-Crusted Bison Tenderloin, with a fig and chanterelle bread pudding, butternut squash puree, and a blackberry sage reduction... Canadian Prime Beef Carpaccio and truffle parmesan frites, with shallot chipotle jam, arugula and BBQ aioli... Smokey Alberta Venison Loin w/Saskatoon Berry Reduction Sauce, Prairie Succotash, and Chipotle Polenta... and all beautifully matched with excellent BC wines! It was SO good I shot "Instagram" photos with my Nexus7:





A WONDERFUL dinner of New Canadian
cuisine at the Wildflower Restaurant in Edmonton
 
Our breakfast stop the next morning was at a sweet little café in Wildwood, which Wikepedia describes as a "hamlet"on the Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16). I think this is the first time I've ever been to a hamlet! The owners were charming, and helped me get online (hence the FourSquare photos from my Nexus7), and while I was getting coffee and FourSquaring, crafty Dan managed to snag us a bottle of Canadian wine!

 
Our road trip across Canada took us through some truly beautiful places, and we stopped to enjoy a field of white Canadian Geese:

 
 
We took the time to chase trains, and to stop and enjoy the beautiful landscapes and the quirky and interesting things along the way...
 




The Mounties! (I can't help it- I always think of Dudley Do-Right!)

 
We headed for Jasper, Alberta, which is within Jasper National Park, and our first stop was for a yummy lunch of Canadian Beef Carpaccio and Duck salad with a local beer sampler (and buying some local beer jelly!) at the Jasper Brewing Company!
 
 
 


 
The Jasper Brewing  Company is right across from the
Jasper Train Station, which is a working depot, as well as an historic one:
 







 
We stayed at the Sunwapta Falls Rocky Mountain Lodge, a truly lovely place to stay, where we had a cute cabins, great service, and excellent food at their Restaurant (elk and bison tenderloin!) 
 
 
 
 
 
That evening at the bar, we were drinking some more great BC wine and talking with the owner, the chef, and the staff, and when the owner found out that I was an Official Artist for the US Coast Guard and had been a military illustrator in the Israeli Defense Forces, he gave me the book "A Terrible Beauty- the Art of Canada at War" by Heather Robertson-  a most extraordinary gift!
 
The Sunwapta Falls Rocky Mountain Lodge is 30 minutes from Jasper on the "Icefields Parkway", which is so incredibly gorgeous that you truly have to see it to believe it! I found the Lodge on TripAdvisor, called and learned they had a special that included a bottle of bubbly and a credit at their restaurant, and decided that this was The place for us to enjoy our one night on the Icefields Parkway!
  



 
 After we checked in, we drove a few minutes up the road to Sunwapta Falls and hiked both to the Upper and Lower Falls- me in heels, of course! LOL We did about 5 kms total, which is more walking than we've done since our last vacation ages ago LOL, but we were really surprised to find out how good it felt! :-)
  
At one point I looked down and spotted a twig so unusual that I had to pick it up- I thought it was a carving of a bird that someone had made and accidentally dropped on the path! I took my pinecone "bird stick" with us as a lucky charm for our trip and a wonderful natural souvenir of a beautiful, romantic place...
 



 
 
 


 I love this man!

 
Elisse and her "bird stick"!





 
  

 
Frisbee: A traffic jam on the Icefields Parkway. LOL

 Chasing trains down the Icefields Parkway...



 
 Next: British Columbia!