Category: Quebec

  • Forillon National Park to Kamouraska

    The Forillon south campground has a service building that has great shower facilities and washrooms and it was only a short walk from our nicely wooded camping site. After a nice long hot shower we packed up and left with a target destination of Matane.

    We didn’t get all that far before we stopped to photograph another lighthouse at Cap des Rosiers.

    Soon afterwards we found ourselves in a rain and thunderstorm so we decided to drive as far as we could before stopping for the evening.

    For lunch we stopped at Cantine des Pecheurs for fish and chips but were disappointed.

    At the Fromagerie des Basques in Trois Pistoles and stocked up on more than enough cheese, bread and a pie.

    Dinner was at St-Hubert in Riviere-du-Loup or Riviere-du-Lop as our GPS calls it.

    We made it to Kamouraska but not before stopping to watch and photograph a stunning sunset vista.

    We’re staying at the Vistor Center parking lot, along with a number of other RVs and hope to get up before sunrise tomorrow at 5:17AM in order to photograph some more.  This area is very picturesque.

  • New Richmond to Forillon National Park

    After breakfast and cleanup we emptied and filled tanks and then headed out towards Gaspe. Our first stop was at a garage sale that had new pants for $5, new sweaters for $10 and silver plated candle holders for $1 each. $48 dollars later, I had three pairs of pants, three new sweaters and Ruth had three new candle holders.

    A little further up the road was a GM dealer and we dropped in to have the tire pressure monitoring system looked at.  The tool required to reset the monitors turned out to be a pretty expensive looking piece of kit and the spare tire wheel turns out not to have one of these sensors in it so we had to swap out the spare with the now fixed original wheel.  $57 later, the Roadtrek was happy once again too, not to mention freshly washed.  Great service!

    One of the next towns has painted all their fire hydrants as cartoon characters.

     

    By this time we were hungry and stopped at one of the many municipal rest areas along the way.  This one had a swimming pool and ocean view and we had our sandwiches enjoying the sunshine at one of their picnic tables. Ruth got caught in a lobster trap.

    After lunch we drove to Perce which has a nearby island that is home to many, many seabirds and a unique rock formation with an arch in it. There was a helicopter operation nearby and for $300 Ruth and I had a 20 minute aerial tour of the area. Spectacular!

      

    Hwy 132 in this area is very curvy and scenic and goes through many small towns. There are lots of motels and campgrounds and there are a lot of tourists. Definitely a place to return to.

    Our home for the night was Forillon National Park. This park was created in 1970 when land was expropriated. Some of the buildings, such as a general store, have historic significance and have been preserved as they would have been at the time they were in use.

    There is a 4km hiking trail that leads to Cap de Gaspe, the site of a lighthouse. All three of us hiked the trail (and back for a total of 8km) and enjoyed the view at the lighthouse and the two porcupines that were having dinner on the grass there.  They were incredibly tame and we got within about 3 feet of them.

     

  • Saint Peters Bay to New Richmond

    The visitor center opened at 8AM and I enquired where we could get our flat tire plugged. The local repair shop was just down the street and for $10 Johnny plugged the tire.  He didn’t have the tire pressure monitoring system tool either, so we’re still driving with the warning light on.

    After the repair job we headed to the second Prince Edward Island National Park and went for a swim.  A bit cold and Ruth had a crab climb onto her foot.

    After the swim was a trip to Green Gables, the location on which Anne of Green Gables is based. We watched two short movies about the site and L. M. Montgomery’s life and then toured barn, house and gift shop in the rain. Once safely back in our RV we had lunch and then departed on the long drive towards Gaspe.

    We crossed the Confederation Bridge into New Brunswick. The view from the highway is mostly uninteresting and we stopped only to switch drivers, coffee and ice cream and again later for gas. Once into Quebec the scenery is spectacular and we found a nice campground by the river for the night.

  • Manic 5 to Labrador City

    Slept until 8:00 and had a nice breakfast and then set out on our way to Labrador on the gravel highway. Big trucks racing, clouds of dust, and winding and washboarded road.

    The first stop was at Relais Gabriel for gas and lunch.  Gas was $1.699 (vs $1.334) per litre but lunch was $15 for soup, macaroni with meat sauce, bread pudding dessert and coffee. At km 355-367 brand new asphalt.

    Next stop was the mining ghost town of Gagnon which shut down in 1985. All buildings were removed and only the streets and sidewalks and sewers remain.

    The road is paved until Fire Lake and then the gravel returns with a very winding road which crosses the same railway line 9 or 10 times. Here it starts to rain and gets a little slicker. We also see a guy on a bicycle who is doing the trip to Baie-Comeau on his bike.

    Along the way we saw the train that takes iron ore from Fermont south. Shortly before Fermont we see the mine – they are systematically disassembling a mountain to remove its iron and building a new hill from the tailings. This has been going on for 30 years already and there is no end in sight.

    At Fermont we visit the big mining truck and visited the 1km long building that houses some of the residents, shops, hotel and services.

    Shortly after crossing the Labrador border we stop at Duley Lake Family Campground where we will spend the night.

     

  • Baie-Comeau to Manic 5

    Today we start the trip up to Labrador. We started the morning by emptying the tanks and filling up with fresh water. Ruth got her first black fly bite of the trip. We left the campground at around 9:30 and stopped for gas and some groceries. Next was a stop in Baie-Comeau itself. It is a beautiful little town with a paper mill, aluminum plant and a port where wheat is loaded onto ships for transport across the Atlantic. The town has number of nice shops and Ruth got a new pair of Keen shoes. As we were about to leave we stopped to talk to Pierre Philippe, a retired schoolteacher who now lives in Baie-Comeau.

    At around noon we started our trip up Hwy 138 towards Labrador. At km 2 on the highway our fridge door popped open and some of the fridge contents temporarily escaped although fortunately the blueberries stayed in their container. We stopped to shut it but it opened again as we started rolling again. We finally stuffed one of the cushions between the fridge and the bathroom door and it stayed shut for the remainder of the trip. At km 30 we saw a trailer that looked like it had rolled over while going around a curve. The road is paved but parts of it are pretty bumpy. That doesn’t stop the trucks from racing and Ruth had one chase her for several kms. Fortunately we were faster up the hills. At km 100 there is a large transformer station where the voltage is increased to 735 kV for transmission to minimize power loss over large distances. From here for about 50 kms the road is very smooth.

    We made it to the huge Manic 5 Hydro electric dam and generating station (km 212) at 3:30, just in time for the last tour.  The tour was wonderful and included visiting the powerhouse where the turbines are. The dam is 214 meters high. The tour guide told us about a road leading to Lake Louise from where one can get a great view of the dam and can camp over night. We spent the evening photographing the dam and talking to several of the other people that will be spending the night here.

  • Quebec City to Baie-Comeau

    Walmart in Beauport

    We started the morning talking to the couple with the Swiss RV. They brought their camper over from Switzerland and are going to be travelling across Canada and the United States for the next several months. We left the Walmart parking lot at 9:00AM and drove Hwy 138 passing through Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupre where there is a huge shrine that attracts a million pilgrims each year. The first chapel was built in 1658. Right next to it is the Cyclorama of Jerusalem, which has nothing to do with bicycles, but which houses a panoramic painting 14 meters high and 110 meters in circumference. We continued on Hwy 138 to Baie-Saint-Paul where we turned onto Hwy 362 which follows the St. Lawrence river. The area is quite hilly and the Roadtrek had to downshift a lot, both up and down the hills. Some of the grades were 11% and extended for several kilometers. This area is stunningly beautiful and has lots of artist galleries.

    Lunch was at La Malbaie at a small picnic area overlooking the town and the St. Lawrence river. There was a couple with a white tablecloth each enjoying a glass of red wine – truly La Joie de Vivre.

    La Malbaie

    Very shortly after our healthy lunch we came across Fromagerie St-Fidele and stopped in for some of their cheese, a maple cranberry dressing for future healthy salads and a generous 2 scoop maple-walnut ice cream.

    Fromagerie St-Fidele

    The highway continues to Tadoussac where a ferry takes you across a river. This ferry is free and runs continuously.

    Waiting for the ferry
    On the Ferry

    We sweat and walked off all the ice cream calories when we visited Longue-Rive, the site of a former wood mill. The mill was in operation from 1860 to 1962 and there are still a few remains of the foundations of the large chutes where the logs were loaded onto ships. There is a waterfall at the site now and the St. Lawrence and the granite offered many great photographic opportunities.

    The highway from there to Baie-Comeau isn’t as spectacular and is much more even which allowed us to make good time to our campground for the evening at Pointe-Lebel, a peninsula just outside of Baie-Comeau. On the way we saw a huge hydroelectric plant and we expect to be touring one tomorrow.

  • Markham to Quebec City

    Departed Markham around 9:30AM stopping for gas and some last minute groceries. Followed Hwy 401 to Belleville for a stop at Walmart to get an inverter for the RV so we can charge laptops and batteries while driving. Had lunch at McDonalds while we where there and then headed off towards Montreal and Trois-Rivieres. I had programmed the GPS to take us to the intersection of Hwy 40/55 to keep us on the North Shore of the St. Lawrence and it ended up thinking it needed to have us do a U-Turn to get to that intersection. During that detour we discovered a Parks Canada site called des Forges-du-St-Maurice, the site of Canada’s first industrial community. It had unfortunately already closed for the day but it looked interesting so we might come back to it on the way back. Walmart has a policy of allowing one night camping at many of their stores, so once we once we got back on Hwy 40 we phoned the Walmart in Beauport to ask whether we could spend the night in their parking lot. No problem. We finally arrived at 8:40PM and had dinner. By 10:30PM, there were a total of 9 RVs in the parking lot, including one with Swiss license plates.