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

Quebec City in summer and winter

September 21, 2009 by Judy 3 Comments

Quebec City street
View from our room high up in the Fairmont Château Laurier

View from our room high up in the Fairmont Le Château Frontenac
…….

Our summer trip was during Quebec City’s 400th anniversary celebration in 2008. Lucky for us, we got to stay in the Fairmont Le Château Frontenac thanks to a big travel media/industry event taking place at the same time. Our room high up in the hotel had walls four feet thick and deep set windows overlooking the St. Lawrence River. Glenn figured a celebrity would have loved the place. Even a long range camera lens wouldn’t have stood a chance snapping a pic of our room’s interior.

Quebec is the only walled city in North America. Blink and you’ll swear the old town, with its four hundred year old churches, cobbled streets and colourful shops and cafes, is in France. But no, this is New France as it was called in the days of Samuel de Champlain. He was a French explorer and the celebrated founder of Quebec City.

Aftermath of a big winter storm in Quebec City

Aftermath of a big winter storm in Quebec City
…….

Quebec City knows how to party whether its a 400th anniversary or its February Bonhomme Carnaval. During my second trip last January, the city was setting up for it after a huge snowstorm. I am not the best flyer so, I commend the Air Canada pilot for landing us that day in a full blown blizzard.

Born and raised a Quebecker in Montreal, I love this part of Canada. My dad was in the lumber industry and worked his entire life en francais. He was always keen for us kids to learn french and I remember traveling to Quebec City in the summer of 1969 to stay with a french family. It was the week that Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the moon and I watched it all on french TV at a big outdoor party at nearby Lac Beauport. That trip was one of several Quebec forays my dad sent me on to learn french. Every one of them gave me a great appreciation for French Canadian culture and I am indebted to my dad for giving me the opportunity. Not many English Canadians are as lucky.

ROADstories logo slug

Filed Under: Canadian Places Tagged With: 400th anniversary, Bonhomme, Château Laurier, Quebec City

Comments

  1. Ronald Houde says

    February 28, 2010 at 11:13 am

    Hello Judy,
    Very nice blog entry on such a fascinating city. I think you made one small mistake, however. I believe the hotel you stayed at is the Fairmont Chateau Frontenac. The Chateau Laurier, also operated by Fairmont, is located in what some call the “other” National Capital, Ottawa.
    Warmest Regards,
    Ronald

    Reply
  2. boomergirl says

    February 28, 2010 at 8:32 pm

    Ronald,
    Thank you so much for your kind comments. I cannot believe my faux pas. We’ve put in Chateau Frontenac rather than Chateau Laurier. Funny, I was in Ottawa on that same trip and stayed at the Chateau Laurier too.
    Both extraordinary hotels in two great cities.
    Thanks again.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-05-16 « Roadstories says:
    May 16, 2010 at 10:17 pm

    […] America's walled city: https://roadstories.ca/quebec-c…..nd-winter/ #TT […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to boomergirl Cancel reply

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

RANDOM ROADstories

Inn at Laurel Point, Victoria B.C.

Inn at Laurel Point, Victoria B.C.

A Century of Remembrance

A Canadian hockey road story

NK’MIP Cellars Native owned winery - Spirit Ridge Resort and vineyards

NK’MIP – a Top Indigenous Attraction

crosses in front of the St. Eugene Mission Red Brick Schoolhouse

St. Eugene Resort and its Sad History

Quebec apples and Oka cheese

Lindsay Delaronde, Katsitsakaste, Indigenous Artist

Katsitsakaste, Indigenous Artist in Residence

Sinking of the HMS Eclipse

Blackwater Junction, Ontario

Northern Cape Breton Island roadstories.ca - Angie's Family Restaurant Cape Breton

Northern Cape Breton Island

Pile of orange buoys in a fishing shed at Seal Cove on Grand Manan Island, New Brunswick, Canada

Seal Cove

Bull Moose in Algonquin Park

Winter wildlife in Algonquin Provincial Park

A Cooper's Hawk hides in bushes as it watches for small prey - Watching Winter Waterfowl in BC by Carol Patterson

Watching Winter Waterfowl in British Columbia’s Lower Mainland

T-Rex dinosaur mascot in Drumheller, Alberta

Canada’s BIG mascots

110 Nature Hotspots in Manitoba and Saskatchewan

110 Nature Hotspots in Manitoba and Saskatchewan

Canada's First Peoples
Previous
Toronto likes our Niagara grapes
Next
Kensington Market in Toronto
  • Home
  • Canadian People
  • Canadian Places
  • Canadian Things
  • Canada’s First Peoples
  • About