Showing posts with label trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trip. Show all posts

8/12/2007

Notre T-shirt - 'Un piège de touristes… mais notre piège de touristes!' (Our T-shirt: A tourist trap - but our tourist trap!)

We went to Maine yesterday on the Downeaster and when we passed by Old Orchard Beach in the early evening, roughly 7:15pm or so, we saw crowds upon crowds of people lining the streets.

So when we took a glance at this story regarding OOB and French-Canadian invasion, we know exactly why they come down from Montreal and Quebec City.

1. The exchange rate about four years ago was 65 cents US to the Canadian dollar. Now, it's 95 cents US to the Canadian dollar. Also, the only taxes Quebeckers have to worry about is the Maine state sales tax of 5% for general sales tax and 7% for food and lodging.

2. Gasoline is cheap, cheap, cheap, even after they cross the border into Vermont. At the border, gas is about $2.88-$2.95 a gallon, or $0.76-$0.78 per liter - a full $0.25 per liter cheaper than what they sell in Canada. The further south you go, the better the prices are; in OOB, $2.79 ($0.73 per liter) is a huge bargain, compared to the $1.01 per liter ($3.81 per gallon) they pay in Canada.

3. Maine is not like the "big cities" of Boston and New York. It is truly a vacation land where a Quebecker can relax and indulge in the big waves in the sea and buy tacky souvenirs without the veneer of unsubstantiated stereotypes, like robbers and con artists lurking in every corner, and gangs of toughs intimidating poor souls and upping the murder count. Not every part of Maine is perfect and full of "Ayuh" salties; there are places where everything's not hunky-dory; the more unsavory of characters (bums, drug addicts) and the social fringe have filled the places where bustling businesses once were. More about that later.

4. Unlike other tourist spots in Canada, in which a leisurely drive from parts of Quebec may take over 10 hours, OOB and New England is easily accessible. Vermont and Quebec are an hour's drive away; OOB is 5-3/4 hours away; Boston is roughly 6-1/2 to 7 hours; New York City (via I-87) about 5-6; and Cape Cod is about 8-9 hours away.

6/25/2007

Pros and Cons of Providence, RI

Pro: Easily accessible from Boston by MBTA, as there is direct service. Secret: save yourself the $15.50 round trip ($18 via Amtrak) and take the Orange Line to Forest Hills, then either Route 32 or Route 50 to Hyde Park Station and pay $4.50 - savings a whopping $3.25. Going back, get off at Hyde Park and reverse route. Bonanza bus lines also offer fares for $14.95 round trip.

Con: Train often packed; sometimes trains make all stops between South Station and Providence; at night and on the weekends, you're at the mercy of
the vending machines, which feature 500ml of Poland Spring water at $2 a whack and stale packs of Doritos. (During the week, there's a nice souvenir shop selling Rhode Island-themed gifts and The Lot. More about that later.)

Pro: RIPTA is head and shoulders above the MBTA. The fare is the same ($1.50) but you can purchase an all-day ticket for the RIPTA trolley (covers the entire city, more or less) for $3.00. Buses are clean and drivers are polite and well-mannered. Passengers we met were not the ones staring us directly in the face with an invitation to fight.

Con: Kennedy Plaza. Ever want to experience what Times Square (or the South End during the Elevated era) was before Michael Eisner decided to gentrify it? Even though the entire plaza has been rebuilt - sort of like an open Harvard Square - and you can find the buses a lot more easily than the MBTA, it is an eye-opener for the dark side of Providence. Sleaze is one of the kinder words we could use, and a few years ago we went there and watched a full-blown brawl bust out, and 30-40 Providence Police vehicles arrived in less time that it takes to sneeze. The interior is...well, after three minutes of waiting for a donut while one of its "customers" described something in sickening detail, we left feeling super dirty. As long as you wait outside, Kennedy Plaza is OK. Otherwise, South Station Bus Terminal is the Taj Mahal. Kennedy Plaza is also an intercity bus stop for Greyhound and Bonanza/Peter Pan.

Pro: Thayer Street is a walker's dream. Brown University students, bohemians, punkers, and other residents are much friendlier and don't carry that "we're a famous Ivy League University" snitty tone. (No reference to a Cambridge-based university intended.) Brown University bookstore is neat and clean, and offers plenty for the voracious reader. CVS and Store 24 for the sundries and cheap eats, but many casual restaurants (and Starbucks, of course) and neat little shops.

Con: Thayer Street is located on College Hill, which has a hill than can be best described as one you don't dare trip on. Don't aggravate the Providence Fire Department, as they haven't had a contract after 1080 days (3 years, nearly). After the shops, Thayer Street becomes a plain vanilla residential area.

Pro: The Lot, Rhode Island's lottery. Games are much more fun to play and you don't feel as if you wait for an eternity while Fatso McScratchy orders up his fat little notebook of daily numbers and his daily ration of 60-70 instant tickets. (Disclosure: we played The Numbers and Powerball and didn't win a thing. However, we did win about $20 playing the instants, but put some of the money into other things...like lunch and fare home.) Unlike our Lottery, The Rhode Island Lottery has a $20 instant ticket you don't have to wait until the 4th of July to figure out if you've won.

Con: The Lot in Rhode Island isn't publicized as much, and the games could be a horror show for seasoned Mass Lottery fans who get the hives when they play Bingo or Cashword. Also, no trash pickers because there's no trash.

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