Favorite Vacation Rentals by Owner
              
       

Articles

"Revolutionary" Tour of Boston
10 Tips for a Family Vacation
5 Great Places To Visit In Southern California
A Discount Alternative to Hotels
A Guide to Low Cost Flights
Activities in California
Adventures At Sea
Alaska Shore
Alpena Vacation
Amazing Variety of Marine Life
Appetiser of Taos
Attractions in Arkansas
Attractions in California
Best Educational Experiences
Boston for Shoppers
California Beaches
California Bridges
California Vacation
Cape Coral
Car Rental Info
Charlotte, North Carolina
Christmas In Hawaii?
Cities in USA
Civil War's USS Monitor in Museum
Clifton Hill
Colorado Vacation Rentals are the Best!
Daylesford
Daylesford Getaways
Discovering Phoenix
Disney Vacation Homes
Disney World
Disney World
Disney World Baby
Disney World Vacation
Disneyland Fastpass Tips
Duck, North Carolina Vacation Rentals
Enjoyable Budget Travel
Eureka Springs
Exercise While Vacationing
Facts About Hawaii
Fall Foliage In Maine
Family Holidays
Family Vacation in Colorado
Finding Unique and Exotic Travel Deals
Fishing Lodge
Florida - Mediterranean Style
Folly Beach
Fort Lauderdale
Free Stuff in Daylesford
Free Things To Do In Pigeon Forge & Gatlinburg
Frugal Travel Tips for Dining
Get Free Las Vegas Shows
Grand Canyon Backpacking Checklist
Grand Canyon Skybridge
Grand Hotel Marriott Resort
Great Family Vacation Tips
Grosvenor Resort
Guam
Gulf Shores Vacation Rentals
Hawaii - Top Ten Things To Do!
Hawaii Guide
Hawaii Honeymoons
Hawaii Tour Tips
Hawaii Travel Tips
Hawaii’s Valley Isle
Heart of Texas
Hello from Montreal
Hello from Montreal Part 2
Hello from Montreal Part 3
Hello from Montreal Part 4
Hello from Montreal Part 5
Hello from Montreal Part 6
Hello From Nova Scotia
Hello From Nova Scotia Part 2
Hello From Nova Scotia Part 3
Hello From Nova Scotia Part 5
Hoover Dam
Hopping Canada
Houston Texas
How to Pick a Vacation Rental
I Love Richmond
In Dallas Texas
Is Life Is A Little Dull?
Isle Of Palms Vacations
Jamestown 2007 Events
Jupiter Vacation Rentals
Kauai Car Rental Information
Keeping Your Kids Happy During a Keystone Colorado Ski Vacation
Keystone Resort Colorado Villages
Kiahuna Plantation
Kiawah Island Golf
Kid Vacation
Kids and Disney World
Lake Arrowhead Rentals
Lake Hubbard
Lake of the Ozarks
Lake Tahoe Facts
Las Vegas
Las Vegas Hotels
Las Vegas Myths
Las Vegas Tips
Los Angeles
Los Angeles Caifornia
Luxury Cruises
Missouri Spas
Music City
Myrtle Beach
Nashville, Live Music
Nevada's Ristorante Hospitality
New Smyrna Beach Vacation Rentals
New York
New York City
New York Vacation
New York's Cobblestone Country
Northeast Michigan Activities
Northern Arizona
Oceanside Vacation Rentals
Online search for vacation rental property
Orlando
Orlando, Florida
Presenting - Vivetha Bistro
Provincetown Vacation Rentals
Reasons to Visit Nashville
Redding, CA
Retirement Info
Ride Free in the Outer Banks
Romance Tours
Romantic Texas
San Diego
San Francisco
Shenandoah Valley
Shop Till You Drop
Siesta Key Rentals
Six Flags Magic Mountain
Ski Tips for Families
Small Group Adventure
South Shore Maui - Best beaches - No Ka Oi
Staff Incentive Travel
Stradbroke Island
Successful Vacations
Summer Vacation
Sun in Florida
Surfside Beach, Texas Defies Hurricane Ike
Surprises In Charlotte
Tampa Bay Florida
The Best of Orlando
The Biltmore House in Asheville, North Carolina
The Cowboy at Heart
The Jersey Shore
The Smoky Mountains
The U.S. Virgin Islands
Theme Parks - the Not-So-Usual Suspects
Things to do in Chicago
Things to Do in Florida
Tips For Las Vegas Attractions
Tips on Buying a Vacation Home
Top 10 Attractions in San Diego
Tour Las Vegas And Discover More Than Just a Casino
Travel Tip Hawaii
Trip to Hawaii
Trip To The Universal Studios
Univeral Orlando
Utah Vacation Info
Vacation Home in Orlando Florida
Vacation Ideas
Vacation In Dallas
Vacation Rental Things to Check
Vacation Rentals vs. resorts
Vacation To California
Vacationing In Hawaii
Virginia Beach
Virginias Northern Neck
Visit Boston
Visit Nashville
Visiting Arizona
Volcanoes In Alaska
Walt Disney World Dining
Wedding Resorts
Weekend Getaway
Why a San Diego Vacation Rental is a Hot Favorite with Tourists
Wild Disney World
Wild Encounters
Wildwood New Jersey
Williamsburg Hotels
Your Summer Home in the Mountains
Discover Keystone, Colorado in the Winter or Summer
Florida Spa Vacation Resorts to Try

Tower at the Olympic Stadium

Appropriately rested from my action packed day yesterday I had a leisurely breakfast and headed out on the subway at 9:30 am. I love the subway system in Montreal since it’s safe, efficient and all the major sights are accessible via underground transportation. And the interesting thing is the trains run on rubber wheels - none of that metallic clanking that I am so used to from places like Toronto, New York City or Chicago...

My first destination for this morning was Montreal’s Olympic complex, located in the Hochelaga-Maissoneuve area, originally a city founded in 1883 by local farmers. Hochelaga-Maissoneuve was integrated into Montreal in 1918 and today is one of Montreal’s main working class neighbourhoods whose residents are 90% French-speakers.

Montreal’s Olympic Stadium is best accessed from the Pie IX subway station and upon leaving the station I walked across the vast concrete expanses surrounding this historic stadium, built for the 1976 Summer Olympics. One of it’s nicknames is the “Big O” and it was supposed to be one of the most advanced structures of its time, holding just over 56,000 people. It featured a retractable roof that was held in place by cables suspended from a 556 foot tall tower, incidentally the highest inclined tower in the world.

The stadium was extremely expensive and its final cost came to more than C$1 billion, the debt on which was only paid off by the city in 2006. Interestingly, Jean Drapeau, Montreal’s mayor at the time, announced that “The Olympics can no more have a deficit than a man can have a baby”, now a popular quote among Montreal residents. Due to various strikes, construction delays and complications, the retractable roof did not open until 1988, but that option was abandoned in 1992 in favour of a new stationary roof which continued to have various structural problems and a new replacement roof is being considered for installation once again. Despite these issues, Montreal's Olympic Park is a sight to behold and an interesting place to explore.

Between 1977 and 2004 the Montreal Olympic Stadium was the home of the Montreal Expos Major League Baseball team which was transferred to Washington, D.C., in the 2005 season. It also used to be the home of the Montreal Alouttes, Montreal’s team in the Canadian Football League. Today the stadium is used for a variety of purposes including trade fairs, sporting matches, motorized sports, live shows, exhibitions, film shoots, balls, social activities and more. Since its opening, Montreal's Olympic Stadium has been one of the busiest covered stadiums in the world.

Montreal’s Olympic Stadium is a fascinating, unusual yet aesthetic building and I decided to explore it in more detail by taking the funicular which in about 5 minutes takes you to an observation deck that provides a 360 degree of Montreal. Going up you have an unobstructed view eastwards towards the pyramid-shaped buildings of the former Olympic Village and at the top I enjoyed a perfect view of downtown and the skyscrapers, Montreal Royal and the various bridges spanning the St. Lawrence River.

The former Olympic cycling track, called the Biodome, has been converted into an artificial habitat that features four different ecosystems: a Tropical Forest, a Laurentian Forest, a St. Lawrence Marine Ecosystem and the Polar Worlds of the Arctic and the Antarctic. For me, my next item on the agenda was the Montreal Botanical Garden. I left the Olympic Stadium and walked under the Sherbrooke Street bridge and found myself right next to the entrance gates of Montreal’s Botanical Garden. The C$12.75 entrance fee gives you access to both the gardens as well as the Insectarium, so I started off with an indepth introduction to the world of insects.

Open since 1990, the Montreal Insectarium holds hundreds of species of butterflies, moths, bugs and spiders. Its scientific collections hold 140,000 specimens and its exhibition collection consists of about 20,000, about 4000 of which are on public display. There is also a live collection of arthropods with about 100 species. Not only does the Insectarium focus on the science of insects, but it also explores insects in an artistic, cultural and even gastronomical context. In 2005 it even held an insect tasting event!

Well, this scientific introduction had warmed me up enough to continue my explorations outside in the Botanical Garden. Right across from the Insectarium is a marsh and bog garden garden that features a variety of gorgeous water lily specimens.

Moving on from there is a sizeable rose garden with about 10,000 roses from many different varieties. The roses were a bit past their bloom, but I would imagine that this garden must look just magnificent when everything is in full bloom.

A bit further to the north is the Japanese Garden, designed as a contemporary garden by renowned Japanese garden designer Ken Nakajima. All the elements, stones, water features and plants have been chosen carefully and are imbued with a unique symbolism. The Chinese Garden next to it is a result of a bond between the Montreal Botanical Garden and the Parks Department of the City of Shanghai. More than 120 containers were shipped from Shanghai in 1990 and 50 Chinese craftsmen were needed to assemble the components to build the garden.

I then strolled through the First Nations garden which reflects a natural environment and is the first facility of its kind in Montreal. After walking through some serene ponds and woodlands I reached the Shade Garden which hosts a large collection of primroses, astilbes, hostas and ferns and proves that even shady areas can feature brilliant colours and a variety of foliage and blossoms. Now it was serious time for an ice cream and I sat down one of the tables outside the Fuji Pavilion which is a 66-seat restaurant providing cold beverages, ice cream and frozen yogurt and light meals.

After my little rest there was another part of the city that I wanted to explore and that was Little Italy. So I decided to take the free shuttle bus that connects the Olympic Stadium, the Biodome, the Insectarium and the Botanical Garden and was comfortably whisked to the nearby Vieau subway station. From there I took the subway to the Jean Talon station, along one of the major east-west thoroughfares of Montreal.

Like many cities in North America, Montreal has a large Italian community. Actually, Italians represent Montreal’s largest ethnic group. Many immigrants came over from Italy as early as the beginning of the 19th century and many of them went into the hotel and restaurant business. The majority of them arrived after the Second World War, and most of those immigrants came from the poorer regions of the Italian south. One of the key ingredients of Italian culture of course is its cuisine, made from fresh ingredients. The Marché Jean Talon is an anchor point in this community where local residents can purchase fresh produce, cheese, meat, pastries and other products. This market is different from others since its layout is mostly outdoors. More than 100 producers display their products here in the summer, and the market has a distinct southern ambience to it. You almost feel like you are somewhere close to the Mediterranean or even a Moroccan souk.

I wanted to grab a seat in a little local restaurant beside the market, but most of them were so packed that I decided I was going to hop on the subway again (easy to do with my convenient 3-day visitor pass) and check out the St-Denis area a little. Definitely time for a late lunch!

Susanne Pacher is the publisher of a website called Travel and Transitions(http://www.travelandtransitions.com). Travel and Transitions deals with unconventional travel and is chock full of advice, tips, real life travel experiences & interesting life journeys, interviews with travellers and travel experts, cross-cultural issues, and many other features.

Susanne has recently published a series of FREE travel ebooks about destinations such as Spain, Cuba, Mexico, Sicily, New York City, Chicago, Montreal, Toronto, Nova Scotia and many more. Visit Travel and Transitions - FREE ebooks( http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html )"Life is a Journey – Explore New Horizons".


Featured Vacation Rental  Listings..



Nassau Garden Estate

4 bedroom & 2.5 bath



Private Beachfront Estate in the Bahamas/Long Island

2 bedroom & 1 bath


Home | About Us | Contact Us | Disclaimer | Site Map

105 Weatherstone Drive, Suite 610
Woodstock, GA 30188
FAX: (770) 592-1801 email: info@vacation-rentals-byowner.com

copyright © 2004 – 2010. Favorite Vacation Rentals by Owner