Revisiting familiar places

My next two trips are return visits in many ways.  Next week I’m heading to Toronto to visit my sister.  It’s a place I’ve visited almost an uncountable number of times; a place I’ve lived and worked in.  Next month, I’m heading to Quebec City.  Although not recently, it’s another place I’ve spent some time in owing to family friends, a relatively manageable 11 hour drive and my earlier-life passion for my beloved, but now extinct, Nordiques.

What to do when heading back to places this familiar?  For both it’ll be a mix of revisiting old favourites and finding a couple of new experiences.  In Toronto, I’m excited by the new: dinner reservations at Ruby Watchco, in what seems like a city with no end to dining choices.  I’ll also be tempted back to some old favourites – peameal sandwiches at the St Lawrence Market, a beer or two at the Rebel House, and perhaps some El Salvadorian food at Tacos El Asador.   In Quebec City, wandering around the old town and sitting down to a heart stopping poutine at Chez Ashton will bring back memories from many years ago.  For the new?  A host of restaurants and bars that my palette didn’t appreciate all those years ago.

My lists are made (but, as always, somewhat fluid) and my walking shoes are ready.  Here’s to the familiar and to a taste of the new.

Hockey night in Pittsburgh

I normally try to extend my business trips by a day on one side or the other to do a bit of exploring or to take in a unique event.  When the (very delayed) NHL schedule was released, I realized an extra night in Pittsburgh would give me a chance to see a Penguins game.  When tickets went on sale, I snagged a customary nosebleed seat for the Penguins – Senators game.

Having perfected the art of “sneaking down” into the good seats, I gave the slip to an usher and made my way down to the lower level to take in some of the warm-up.  Here’s my view a few minutes after getting inside the rink:

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Sights from wandering in Pittsburgh

Having spent some time in Pittsburgh before, I had already visited a number of the must see tourist sites.  That afforded the opportunity on this trip to spend some free time just wandering around.  The unseasonably mild weather (reaching 14C on my first day there, who thought traveling from Halifax to Pittsburgh would let me warm up?) made for a couple of great walks.

Here are some of my favourite sights from a stroll along the Monongahela river on my first day in town and an afternoon walk around the Oakland neighbourhood once I had finished the business part of my trip.

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Pittsburgh’s best sandwich

Most cities have developed some form of sandwich for which they are known.  I think I’ve had a great signature sandwich everywhere I’ve been.  Smoked meat in Montreal, a muffaletta in New Orleans, the cheesesteak in Philly.  Getting back to Pittsburgh last week gave me a chance to reunite with a steel city favourite of mine – the Primanti Brothers sandwich. I couldn’t imagine a trip to Pittsburgh without stopping for at least one of these.

What makes it so special?  I think the sign says it best:

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My reception in Pittsburgh? Immaculate.

I really like Pittsburgh.  It’s my kind of town.  I’m just back from my third stay in the city over the past few years, and there’s a consistent feeling from each of the trips.  Pittsburgh is a friendly city.  Really, really friendly.  Certainly you know you’re in the USA when you’re there, but it’s the kind of city that wouldn’t feel out of place if you dropped it up here in Nova Scotia or New Brunswick.

I’ll be writing about some of the things I squeezed into what was primarily a business trip.  Until then, here’s one of my favourite things about the culture of Pittsburgh.  When you arrive by air, you pass by this statue on your way out of the airport.  It’s not of a founder or of a patron.  It’s of something so much more important to the people of Pittsburgh.  I can only imagine that Franco hasn’t had to buy a drink for himself in the city since 1972.

Franco's immaculate reception

Looking back on 2012

Banff and Lake Louise.  Toronto.  Ottawa.  Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Iceland.  Denver.   Even considering plans for trips to Trinidad and Pittsburgh that didn’t work out, it wasn’t too shabby a traveling year.  It’s hard to sum up a year’s worth of seeing and doing things in different places and the trips there and back, but here are a few of my favourite travel-related memories that will stick from 2012.

Best travel days:  The day trip outside of Reykjavik to see Iceland’s “Golden Circle”.  So much natural beauty and so peaceful.  It was the day that cemented my love of Iceland and ensured a return visit in the not too distant future.  In a similar vein, seeing the Sognefjord in western Norway was the reason we included the country on our Scandinavian trip.  Jaw dropping natural beauty was the story of that day.  Last but not least was a rushed visit to Lake Louise due to a string of forecasted bad weather that forced us to change our travel plans.  Even with limited time, looking out over a frozen Lake Louise on a serene day in the Rockies made me feel more connected to my country.

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Denver, delicious

The last word on my recent trip to Denver will be all about the food.  I spent remarkably little money for some truly delicious eats.  Here are a few of the highlights…

Euclid Hall – On a recommendation from a colleague, I headed here for dinner the first night and had what was probably the most unique of the dishes I sampled on my trip – a green chile and pork cheek poutine.  It was a perfect blend of sweet, hot and salty:

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