Canadian Roadstories

Stories & Pictures about Canadian People, Places and Things

Social

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Home
  • Canadian People
  • Canadian Places
  • Canadian Things
  • Canada’s First Peoples
  • About

Back road to Mont Tremblant

October 9, 2013 by Judy 2 Comments

We love discovering back road routes to famous Canadian destinations. We found a good one for Mont Tremblant, Quebec’s popular four-season resort. Fun to drive in any season, we chose it for a late fall drive.

Mont Tremblant back roads 019

The town of Saint-Jovite is the gateway to Mont Tremblant and is a good place to stop for lunch if you don’t want to pay Mont Tremblant prices. Besides Mont Tremblant’s reputation as a great ski destination, this part of the Laurentian Mountains is worth hiking or biking. Bike rentals are available in Saint-Jovite. Le Petit Train du Nord is the best known trail in the area. It winds 232 km through the Laurentian Mountains with lots of places to stay along its route.

Mont Tremblant back roads 018

We took the TransCanada (Highway 40) west out of Montreal to save a bit of time and started exploring the back roads to Tremblant from the Pointe Fortune exit off the TransCanada, one of the last before the Ontario border.

Mont Tremblant back roads 009

The little town of Pointe Fortune has a seasonal ferry that crosses the Ottawa River to Carillon, another little Quebec community. The ferry crossing will cost you about $8 a car but you’re going to spend that in gas if you continue on to Hawkesbury on the Ontario side and cross by bridge. If you do go the Hawkesbury route, follow this map to Tremblant.

Mont Tremblant back roads 007

This winter post will give you an idea of Mont Tremblant’s skiing and après-ski scene.

Mont Tremblant back roads 031

Filed Under: Canadian Places

Trackbacks

  1. Quebec’s Hotdog Steamé says:
    July 5, 2016 at 10:51 am

    […] slathered in butter to make it golden brown). She likes Bingo’s version which you’ll find on the back road to Mont Tremblant. But steamé this is not. There’s also the hotdog Michigan, borrowed from the US state. But […]

    Reply
  2. What makes an Olympian? Roadstories asks Nancy Greene says:
    January 30, 2018 at 2:19 pm

    […] at the Grenoble Olympics. I watched it all unfold on TV when I was a kid and I was so inspired I learned to ski. Nancy won the World Cup too that year, for the second time in a row! She had a fearless ‘get […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to What makes an Olympian? Roadstories asks Nancy Greene Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RANDOM ROADstories

Darcy Harmacy and his caboose in Brooks, Alberta

Siksika Nation

the main house at Dalvay-by-the-Sea

Dalvay-by-the-Sea

Cecropia moth

Cecropia Moth at Long Point Provincial Park

CCGS Alexander Henry drydock at Marine Museum of the Great Lakes in Kingston - by Pat Brennan for roadstories.ca

S.S. Keewatin Older than Titanic

Waterton Lakes National Park

Waterton Lakes National Park after the Fire

toboggan between trees

Luge or Tobogganing?

Kim's Convenience

Kim’s Convenience

Big Lonely Doug

Cabot Trail Motel cabins Baddeck Nova Scotia

Cabot Seafood Chowder recipe

Inuit fisherman's face

Project Naming – Every Picture Tells A Story

Niagara Falls rescue

Dramatic Niagara Falls rescue

Louie Kamookak - Inuit oral historian and finder of Sir John Franklin’s lost ships

Louie Kamookak – Inuit oral historian and finder of Sir John Franklin’s lost ships

SS Bigwin at the dock in Dorset

SS Bigwin Muskoka Steamboat

Bonnechere Caves

The Caveman of Bonnechere

Canada's First Peoples
Previous
Shucking Oysters
Next
In Flanders Fields
  • Home
  • Canadian People
  • Canadian Places
  • Canadian Things
  • Canada’s First Peoples
  • About