Showing posts with label Quebec City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quebec City. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

A year-end look at eastern skylines


The Manhattan skyline from the Empire State Building in August
2014 has been a year of discovering cities in eastern Canada and the U.S. 

From Halifax to Detroit and from Ottawa to Washington, D.C., I had the opportunity to visit nine cities in the region this year. 

For this blogpost, a visit means at least one overnight stay. My excursions in Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New York, District of Columbia and Michigan totaled 23 hotel room nights this year – 26 if I include a January trip to Las Vegas, but that’s another story.


I described all my trips in detail in various blogposts this year. So for a recap, I chose to take another look at those adventures by focusing on my photos of skylines of the east.

U.S. Capitol with the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
Toronto skyline from the Beaches - first warm day in May

Quebec City with the St. Lawrence River in June
July in Niagara Falls, without a view of the falls
A July cruise along the Ottawa River provides a view of the Chateau Laurier Hotel and Parliament Hill
Fine late September weather in Montreal
Thanksgiving weekend in Windsor


GM headquarters dominates the Detroit skyline in this Thanksgiving weekend view from Windsor


On the ferry in Halifax Harbour on chilly November Sunday afternoon
A November visit to Detroit revealed an empty Woodward Ave. waiting for revitalization




Tuesday, July 1, 2014

A Visit to Quebec City: Discovering 400 years of history and a Distinct Society/la société distincte

Vieux Quebec with the Chateau Frontenac
Back in grade nine, our social studies course, called Canadiana 9, focused on the history of the nation. New France, Upper Canada, Lower Canada, the Plains of Abraham, Wolfe and Montcalm are historic topics and words that have stuck in my mind over the decades. 

As a reporter in the 1980s and 1990s, the seemingly endless constitutional debates between Canada and Quebec were mainstays of the daily news. As a westerner, I don’t think I fully appreciated all the points of view in Quebec.  

The National Assembly

Proposed amendments to the Constitution would have inserted the phrase “distinct society” to recognize the difference of Quebec from the rest of Canada. But since the 1990s, the distinct society phrase appears to have faded and with this year’s Quebec provincial election, Quebec separation  also seems to be on the backburner.

 
In any event, my four days in Quebec City in June prompted me to take another look at my views and come to the conclusion that Quebec is in fact a distinct place – within Canada.   
St. Roch Church


Putting aside the political discussions, Quebec City is a great visual, cultural, historic and architectural destination with all of its churches, cobblestone streets, terraces, staircases, pointed copper roofs and expansive vistas of the St. Lawrence River. 

Place Royale

400 years of history   
Quebec City fast food - avec poutine
Quebec's newest member of the National Assembly?