Mon, Aug 21-- We did in fact go to Giordano's for deep dish pizza. We got sausage and spinach, and it was good and filling, unfortunately we're not bringing any home as I don't think it would keep. After we walked down to the river, and came back up the Magnificent Mile past the Wrigley and Tribune buildings,
many fancy shops, a water tower built like a castle, and finally made our way back to the hotel. Tues, Aug 22-- We went on an architecture boat cruise in the Chicago River put on by the Chicago Architecture Foundation. It was a 90minute tour that took us up the main branch of the river and on the two smaller branches as well. Along with seeing lots of buildings (many designed by Mies Van der Rohe), we went under more than 20 bridges, some of which were double decker.
Our guide told us all about the architects, uses, materials and construction of the buildings along with many jokes. I would highly recommend the tour, it was quite enjoyable.
After we ventured to Millennium Park, with an amphitheater designed by Frank Gehry, the same man who made EMP in Seattle. There are also other interesting sculptures there, and we had our lunch in a cafe there. We decided to try to go to the Field Museum, so we walked through Grant Park as well, past Buckingham fountains, but we were sort of late in getting there, so after ruling out Shedd Aquarium too, hopped on a Metra commuter train and out to Hyde Park. I lived there for 4 years, and we found my old apartment building (couldn't tell if it was the same one though), and walked around the University of Chicago. Back on the Metra to downtown, we went to Marshall Fields, a large department store. We wandered around a bit there, didn't buy any Frangos though :( Finally, we had dinner at a Cajun restaurant called Redfish, where i had Jumbalaya.
Wed, Aug 23--We checked out of the hotel, but kept our luggage there, and headed north to the Lincoln Park Zoo. We spent a few hours there, going about the whole park. Highlights included the large monkey house, where we got to see a gorilla baby, and chimpanzees, though it didn't smell as much as I remember as a kid.
There was also a small monkey house, with a gibbon mama and child. We saw sleeping lions up close, and those polar bears which we had missed in Churchill.
It was a hot day in Chicago, and we cooled off with milkshakes on the way back to the hotel.
We got to the train station rather early, and waited in a big group for our train, the Capitol Limited, to board and leave. We were 15-30minutes behind schedule leaving Chicago, where it started to rain hard. Just over the Indiana border we stopped for tornados which apparently crossed the tracks 10 miles down and knocked over cars on a freight train. We were waiting there for at least 6 hours, putting us behind schedule.
Thurs, Aug 24-- Continuing on the Capitol Limited, we awoke to hear that we were 9 hours behind schedule somewhere in Ohio. I took advantage of this longer train to do lots of reading. They gave us complimentary lunch of Dinty Moore-like beef stew, and as the ride wore on, gave us complimentary dinner of a "snack pack" as well, and by word of mouth we learned that in the snack car everything was free. Nothing much to report on the scenery, as I was absorbed in my book. We went through the Alleghenies and Appalachians, and there are narrow tall houses in Pennsylvania. Finally arriving in DC at 10pm (supposed to be there at noon), we were greeted by the Washington Monument out the window, and by Sean at Union Station. We got a mini tour of DC's lights, and called it a night.
Fri, Aug 25--Sean took us to breakfast at a diner, and then we tried to get internet at Starbucks, but instead had to pull over on the street to try to connect to someone's wireless. (that was 2 posts ago). We went to the Air + Space Museum and saw early flying machines, including the Wright Flyer, milestones like the Paul Allen private plane that got into space, a plane that went around the world in 9 days without refueling, the evolution of spacesuits, satellites that gather data that i used for my honours research, or at least learned about in some of my geography classes, and walked on an air craft carrier model and Skylab. You could spend days in just 1 Smithsonian museum! There is a lot to read there, though Matt and I noted that some of the computer related displays are a bit dated.

We grabbed a hot dog for lunch, and went to the National Building Museum. We just noticed it on Sean's map and decided to give it a go, it deals with architecture and urban planning! We got there rather late, so couldn't stay long til it closed. It is in a big beautiful building with huge columns inside, and nice decoration on the outside.
We saw exhibits on Frank Lloyd Wright's Price Tower in Oklahoma, and on green (sustainable) buildings, and a cool model of DC used to help plan it and locate metro stops. I wish we had more time there, but it'll have to go on my list for next time!
We then did a grand monument & memorial tour. We walked past the Washington Monument, to the World War II memorial, which I believe opened in 2004.
It has large fountains and is sort of split between the Pacific and Atlantic with panels depicting the war, with appropriate quotations throughout. Then we took the long walk around the Tidal basin to the Jefferson Monument, and continued around the opposite side. We walked through the Franklin Roosevelt memorial, which Sean hadn't been in and is new as well. It is large with lots of fountains, a few sculptures and quotes from his 4 terms, and seemed to have far less people than any of the other locations, which was nice. We crossed over to the Korean War memorial of soldiers in the field and faces on a wall. Then we made our way to the Vietnam War memorial and a monument to the nurses. Finally we climbed the steps to the Lincoln Memorial, which was by far the most popular, and got to see Honest Abe and the Washington monument and it's reflection looking out where Martin Luther King Jr delivered his I Have a Dream speech. We ended the night in Georgetown, a lovely old city, with lots of brick buildings, very busy and full of shops and restaurants.
Sat, Aug 26--We ate breakfast in Old Town Alexandria, at a quaint French restaurant where I had strawberry crepes romanoff. We walked down to the Potomac and saw catfish feeding at the surface. Then it was off to Union Station to head to New York City. DC's station is a gorgeous building.
We left a hot and dry Washington DC, and en route to NYC the weather started to change, got cloudy and rainy. We went through the upper reaches of the Chesapeake Bay, Philadelphia, Newark, and finally arrived in NYC right on time at 5:45pm. Ned was there to pick us up, and we grabbed a taxi to head to the upper east side and drop our stuff off. It was chilly in the city, a frigid 60something, cooler than we were expecting. We ended up grabbing a pint that night and watched some of the Mets game near where he lives, and then headed down around the 20s to meet up with some of Ned's friends and have supper.
Sun, Aug 27-- It was grey and rainy whence we got up, so we took our time getting ready to do anything. Ned's Mum had picked us up some NY bagels for breakfast which were nice and as chewy as ever. We walked down to the Mac store, a glass cube with an apple in it on street level and the store is underground, which was packed with people (where I made my last post).
We went to FAO Schwarz as well, it was smaller than I remembered it from years past, but apparently it's having bankruptcy issues. In any case, the Legos were impressive and we saw a $50,000 toy car. Matt thinks this guy is from Harry Potter.
We jumped on the metro down to Union Square where we went to a dive bar with great burgers called Corner Bistro. Matt and Ned thought the rainy day called for a cozy bar and a game on tv, so we proceeded onward, and when they found one I took a walk around the area, browsing the local shops. I met back up with them and we went back uptown to take a break at Ned's place. We then met up with a couple of Ned's friends for supper at Brother Jimmy's BBQ, how appropriate since Boston and Uncle Jim's will be our next stop. Matt and Ned shared a dish with an interested flame in the middle of it, and I had a decent brisket sandwich.
Mon, Aug 28--This morning we got up, readied ourselves, packed, and hailed a cab to Penn Station. Since we had our cumbersome baggage, although our train didn't leave til 1pm, we weren't able to do very much in the mean time. Our train was right on time, and still is, and we are en route for Boston, our 2nd to last stop on our North American tour.
We got views of Puget Sound and Mt Baker a little while after departing Seattle.
We also went through the Cascade mountain range, and a 7.79 mile tunnel. On this segment of the train a couple of Rails and Trails people boarded and talked about sights that we were going by. Their commentary was interesting, but monotonic and thus somewhat annoying. We both had bland steaks for supper, but at least it was included with our sleeping car accomodation. Our attendant made up our beds and I took to the 2 foot wide upper berth for the night. The ride was a little rocky, but luckily there were safety straps should i roll out.
We had breakfast and as the train continued on the scenery changed from mountainous to rolling hills sometimes with mountains in the distance. This truly is big sky country, and it seems to go on forever.
We had lunch in the dinning car again, and in the afternoon participated in a complimentary wine and cheese event with Washington wines and Minnesota cheeses. We sat with some people who had been travelling as long as us through Texas and the southwest, then up through California to Seattle, and then the Empire Builder. They said the Sunset Limited was 9 hours behind schedule because the freight trains take major precedence over Amtrak. On the Empire Builder, which is on Burlington North Santa Fe tracks they are a bit kinder, and typically our train stays on schedule. I watched Walk the Line in the afternoon as we rolled by more hill, fields, cows, and vast openness. We ate supper (seems like all we did on this train was eat!) with some New Yorkers who had come on this train to Seattle then took a cruise to Alaska and were returning home. We crossed the border into North Dakota, which looked pretty similar to Montana. We strectched our legs in Minot, ND, and back on the train watched another movie before bed. We traded berths this time, so Matt got to experience the small, wobbly top bunk, whilst I got the extra 4 inches and extra stability the bottom bunk provided.
We are now staying on the Gold Coast, can see the Sears Tower from our window, and are contemplating Giordano's deep dish pizza for supper. It feels good to be home :) heehee...
Then we walked around the Space Needle and gift shop, seeing every possible souvenir of Seattle. We got to see glimpses of Mount Rainier on the way home, and all had a nice ice cream to end the day.
life jackets, hats with goggles and headphones, and fly around West Seattle and Alki.
It was very cool. We took off and headed towards downtown and the Space Needle, and could see the Cascades to the east, and the Olympics to the west.
We could see trains and the station where we will be heading out of later today. I could see the pier where we ate lunch yesterday. We made some quick turns, without advanced warning, and were looking down into the water. We flew over Puget Sound and around Alki Point where there is a nice light house.
A few more quick and angled turns and we were headed back to the airport. Landing was fine, no need to use the life jackets, and what a fun ride! We are now just chilling back in Renton, waiting to head back to get on the train to Chicago. We think we've upgraded to sleeper class for this 2-night journey, so it should be fun and relaxing!
We had some rain, so along the way we also got to see some pretty rainbows. After exiting the National Park, we passed Mount Robson, the tallest mountain in the Canadian rockies, but it had some clouds at its peak. Later in the evening we passed Pyramid Falls, where the train slows down so people can snap pictures.
That night we dined on Mr Noodles and watched some of Brokeback Mountain, since it was filmed here in Alberta.
Continuing our way along the waterfront we walked past the marinas looking to North Van, and past Canada Place convention center. We had a pint each at the Steamworks Brewery, then made our way towards Gastown, where the city began. We walked around just down the Water St, then didn't go any further than Carral (?) as it is supposed to get pretty sketchy pretty fast. Even then we went through a park that I would not have liked at night. After a bit more walking around, we headed towards Yaletown, where we dined at Lucy Mae Browns. We had a seafood platter to start, with lobster turnovers, risotto and prawns, and salmon and halibut tartares. The halibut tartare was actually quite nice! And the platter turned out to be on the house since it was a little slow in getting to us! Sweet! Matt had a salmon entree and I had lamb shank with a cinnamon-y flavour, quite good. After a supper like that, what better way to end the night by watching some Food Network and head to bed.
I also pretended to be a dinosaur.
We got to see an life size animatronic T-Rex too, which was pretty cool. We lunched in Gastown, at an Irish pub, and walked back past the steam whistle clock once again on our way out.
We walked around the Historic district a bit, and headed all the way down Granville St, contemplating going to Granville Island and market, which would have been closed by then, so decided against it. Instead we made our way to Yaletown again, and over to the southeast waterfront, and back up to Robson to get Sushi for supper. I was only adventurous enough to have California rolls, but it was pretty good.
We got to sample chicken potstickers, bison ribs, bison burger, spolumbo's sausage, misir wot (ethiopian chick peas and lentils), fried raspberry gelato, and green tea ice cream. Wow! I wish there were Taste of's in every city we were going to. Then we headed over to the Drum & Monkey and eventually ended up at Bob the Fish and met up with some of Shamil and Nash's friends, which was fun. 
We continued on, going towards the beach, and spotted lots of white things out in Hudson Bay, they were beluga whales! Tons of them! Despite Matt's hemming and hawing and concern that I would get hypothermia, I did go swimming in Hudson Bay. I got out to my waist and splashed around a bit, then promptly got out. The water was really nice on our feet, didn't seem as cold as the Atlantic, but once your whole body was in it was pretty cold.
You might just barely be able to see a white speck to the right of my head, that's a whale. We stood in the water watching them for awhile, some eventually came probably 150m away and would stick their heads out! Then we headed over to the Eskimo museum, where there were lots of carvings done by native peoples, mostly from further north in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut. There were also some stuffed polar bears and walruses, so I guess we did get to see some bears in Churchill. Our train back to Winnipeg turned out to leave late, scheduled for 10pm instead of 8ish, so we hung out at the Parks Canada building (which coupled as the train station) and watched a couple of films on Churchill and the wildlife.
Back on the train was more rocky areas and lots of nice looking lakes, apparently popular for fishing, and a few little places to stop at. One place was basically someone's house with a man and a dog outside, a couple people got off the train with packages, and as we were leaving there was a sign with the "town" name, then pop: 13, dog catcher: Morley. Most of the other places we stopped were similar small campy areas. We kept our eyes peeled the whole time for moose, but saw none. I was already a bit tired by 8:30, and thus attempted to fall asleep. It was a bit better than the ocean, but not amazingly comfortable. I think the ear plugs are crucial.
We took the 12:30ish train to Toronto, due to get us into the city around 5pm. It was a lovely train, a 4 hour train is just perfect, not too short, not too long, not too uncomfortable. I saw lots of bogs as we got out of Ottawa, a few blue herons in said bogs which train tracks were literally going right through, and farmland in between Ottawa and Toronto. Around Oshawa, which is around 45 minutes outside of Toronto, there began manufacturing plants to add to the landscape. the big GM plant in Canada is located here, though I did not see it. I had first heard of Oshawa in Canadian City, a geography class I had in second year, it reminded me then, as it still does of Osh Gosh Begosh.
on John St. After sampling some French, Canadian, and American beers, we had supper at a Korean/Japanese place on Queen. It was darn good, then we called it a night.
displays on other hockey leagues, got to play forwards
and goalies, got to see broadcast booths, played trivia, and of course saw all of the NHL trophies. Like I said, since it is the coolest game on earth, it was an awesome place to visit, despite being in the same city as those despised Maple Leafs, ugh. We then treked over to the St. Lawrence Market, a farmer's market in downtown, which was pretty cool, we were going to get some supplies for lunch and breakfast tomorrrow, but to no avail, it was hard to find peanut butter! Then we headed back over towards the CN tower and the SkyDome thinking that we might want to catch a Blue Jays game. The Jays are stinking though, so instead we headed over towards the waterfront, and got ourselves a drink, and a much needed sitting down. Then it was back up Yonge St (pronounced Young... I know, it makes NOOOOO sense....), and over on Queen, where we eventually met up with some of Matt's law school buddies, Robin and Eric, and ended up getting supper and having a few pints. Good times, they are nice people. We're now back in res and about to head to bed to get up bright and early to catch our train over to Winnipeg in the morn.
Then we came back to get an early and good night's sleep.
We got to see the Federal Court and Supreme Court, which apparently looks bigger on TV. There is a former justice who looks very much like Peter Mansbridge (a CBC anchorman), and the first woman on the supreme court went to Dalhousie! Perhaps Matt was inspired. To round out our day in the nation's capital, we headed over to the War Museum. There was a special exhibit was on the Seven Years War. The museum was very interesting and informative, though it seemed like the exhibits never went into how the various wars were resolved. There was also a large hall with many tanks and other vehicles on display including the Panzer and a UN peacekeeping truck.