November 10, 2021

#212 Whistler-Blackcomb Ski Resort

I’m obviously not skiing, and not really doing anything except another hotel splurge in Autumns finest foliage.

“Whistler-Blackcomb boasts more slopeside lodging than any other resort in North America. It’s only ski-in/ski-out property, however, is the swank Fairmont Chateau Whistler Resort, a friendly, gabled fortress dominating the ski area at the base of Blackcomb Mountain and embodying the style of the grand old Canadian Pacific railroad hotels.”

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I thought Whistler was overrated.  It started out with what felt like all of Canada arriving for check-in at the same time. It was mayhem. It also meant that there were people everywhere, lines for valet, lines for self-park, lines to check-in, and even lines for the elevators.  It all felt very crowded and un-COVID-safe.

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To be honest, I didn’t do much the weekend I was there because of the crowds, but I did have a really good sandwich and some really unique ciders at a pub across the street.

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And while I don’t have any pictures of it (‘cause I was driving, in the rain, with the whole of Canada going back to Vancouver) the Sea to Sky Highway is just as beautiful as they say.

November 8, 2021

#211 (continued) Yoho

“…Yoho National Park – whose name derives from a Cree expression of wonder and reverence – is much smaller, covering about 507-sqaure-miles… It’s history is bound up with the Canadian Pacific, which in 1909 blasted a pair of tunnels right through the mountains. Today, you can watch trains enter and leave at the Lower Spiral Tunnels Viewpoint.”

The tunnels – they are fascinating in person.  There are several trains per day (maybe, like 30), but not on a regular schedule so you might have to wait up to an hour to see one.  I lucked out and heard a train whistle just as I arrived.  You can basically see 3-sections of tunnel and watch a single train snake along the track before re-appearing to go what looks like the opposite direction above, and then finally another direction switch below.  It was mesmerizing.

Spiral Tunnels

Also, stopped at Takkakaw Falls, which has a terrifying switchback and a view of the upper spiral tunnels along the way, Canada's second highest waterfall, with a drop of 1,250 feet.

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“Seven miles northwest of Field, glacier-fed Emerald Lake is one of Yoho’s most popular destinations. The area’s Emerald Lake Lodge offers the park’s best accommodations in twenty-four two-story chalets.”

Emerald Lake Lodge

This was another splurge accommodation and I can’t recommend it enough – especially if you are outdoorsy.  There are a ton of hiking opportunities here, and that’s good because there is no phone, no tv, no wi-fi in the cabins.  The lodge has wi-fi and a TV, but, I think, every room has a real wood-burning fireplace and most have spectacular lake views.  Originally I was scheduled for 2 nights, but while I was in Calgary (ironically at Maclin Ford – that niece of mine has her name all over my life recently) one of the techs told me about the snow tire law and encouraged me to cross the Rockies before October 1st.  He made it sound like there were checkpoints where troopers were checking tires. As far as I can tell, there aren’t – unless it’s a chains required kind of storm.

I cut my stay at Emerald Lake to one night, and after talking to a tire guy in Kamloops (and scheduling an appointment for cross-climate tires on 10/1) he reassured me that I’d be fine driving the rest of the way after the tire requirement went into effect.

What I learned at this Lodge is that I am really good at lighting paper on fire, but not so good at lighting wood on fire.  Luckily, the staff is more than happy to come help out.

I booked a rate that included a 3-course dinner and breakfast. Aside from those meals, I literally hung out in my room and looked at the lake.  I had a little balcony, and when it got a little misty, I went inside where the wall was a series of windows and looked at the lake. I wanted to sleep with the door open and a fire burning because “I don’t want to be warm. I want to be cold and made warm by a blanket. (™TikTok)” The duvet that they have on the bed does an excellent job of keeping you warm.  When I woke up in the morning I snuggled into the duvet and just looked at the lake.  My only wish was that it was a sunny day because I would’ve gotten up for that sunrise.  Alas, it was very overcast and cloudy.

So, the food. 

Dinner:

Potato Tart: Whipped goat cheese, heirloom tomatoes, arugula, herb oil, aged balsamic – Not quite what I was expecting, but super delicious.

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Free Range Chicken Breast: Roasted shallot, pancetta, potato gnocchi, zucchini, herb butter sauce – the pancetta was quickly swept to the side, and aside from the rest of the dish being a little too soupy (rather that saucy) was so good – especially the gnocchi.

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Vanilla Cheesecake: Fresh lemon curd, berry salad, toasted marshmallow.  I honestly don’t remember the lemon curd, but dessert wa *chef’s kiss.

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Breakfast was a mountain granola with Greek yogurt and berry compote.  Peppermint tea to drink.  Not gonna lie, it was a lot of granola and yogurt.  It was really good, but way too much.

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After that I checked  out, hit the road, and headed into the Rockies.  

November 5, 2021

#211 (continued) Banff Lake Louise

“Banff was Canada’s very first national park, incorporated as a tiny 10-square-mile parcel in 1885 and now grown into a 2656-square-mile giant that is Canada’s number-one destination. … [Lake] Louise has the greater name recognition due to its large ski area, its resort village, and it famous Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise, a sumptuous, turreted Edwardian dream that’s probably the greatest of the Rocky Mountain hotels.” I splurged big-time and stayed right at the Fairmont Chateau, and I’m glad I did. My room had a tiny view of the lake and the hotel opened right up onto the lake at the best possible picture site. I was so happy not to deal with crowds, and parking and everything else. Instead I spent the time relaxing, sleeping, and eating.


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The first night I was exhausted from the drive and ordered in-room dining, pizza. When I called to order I asked the guy what he recommended between a couple of things and he didn’t hesitate to say pizza. When the waiter brought my food she also commented that the pizza was the best thing on the menu and she gets it “way to often” herself.

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On my “sight-seeing” day, I literally walked outside and hung out by the lake for a couple of hours.

Lake Louise

Then, I headed inside for my afternoon tea reservation in the hotels signature restaurant. Both primary restaurants have windows along the lake and they reserve those tables for hotel guests. So, I had my tea with a truly astounding view.

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I chose Ontario Icewine as my tea. Again, I’d ask my server for his opinion and he said this was definitely the most unique tea they had. I really liked it. They also provide tea timers so it can appropriately steep – he recommended 5 minutes. 

Lake Louise Tea 1

They do a 3-tier tea tower: Scone, Savory, and Dessert tiers and you only make a couple of choices, mostly you get a little bit of everything. I notified them of my allergy so my savory tier had a couple of substitutes. 

Scone Tier. I chose the traditional scone and the Saskatoon berry and white chocolate scones, with lemon curd, clotted cream, Devon cream, orange marmalade. (Didn’t pick: jalapeno and cheddar.) Lake Louise Tea 2 
Both scones were so good and the lemon curd with Devon cream were my favorite combo. 

Savory Finger Sandwich Tier: 
  • Choux Puff – Country Ham & Cheese 
  • Petit Croissant – Duck (substituted from blackened tuna) 
  • Brioche Toast – Honey Comb w/ Double Brie 
  • Dip - Prawn (they substituted duck) & Avocado w/Rice Crackers 
  • Sandwich – Curry Chicken Finger 
Lake Louise Tea 3 

Coming in with the surprise win was the Choux Ham and Cheese. I could’ve eaten 17 of those. The honeycomb and brie and the curry chicken finger came in close behind. The duck and dip were both so-so, and I think it’s because they weren’t made as intended. I wish they would’ve substituted something from the vegan menu for those instead of just swapping out ingredients. 

Sweet Bouquet Tier: 
  • Macaroon – Salted Caramel 
  • Truffle – Passion Fruit
  • Pot de Crème – Salted Caramel
  • Cake – Olive Oil & Berry
  • Tartlet – Lemon Meringue
  • Berries – Vanilla Cream 
Lake Louise Tea 4

All were delicious, but the Pot de Crème and Truffle were easily the top. 
For dinner, I ate at the Lounge and had a delicious forno chicken sandwich.
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And the next day, I checked out and headed to Yoho (which is literally right.there). I tried to visit Moraine Lake, but the sun was out and so were the crowds. I guess I’ll just have to go back some day.

November 2, 2021

#211 (continued) Jasper/Banff Icefields Parkway

“Heading [south], the Icefields Parkway links Lake Louise with Jasper National Park, along the way passing through a northern fantasy of hanging glaciers, deep river valleys and waterfalls, subalpine forests, and the Columbia Icefield, one of the largest accumulations of ice south of the Arctic Circle, covering nearly 116-square-miles.”

The drive from Jasper to Banff was rainy and so I didn’t stop everywhere I planned, but the drive was stunning.  Glacier-fed lakes and rivers everywhere and actual glaciers.  One of the excursions I decided against was a drive onto the glacier at the Columbia Icefield.  Instead, I stopped at a viewpoint and took pictures of the Athabasca toe.  

Icefields Parkway

November 1, 2021

#211 (continuted) Jasper

“Jasper, Canada’s largest national park in the Rocky Mountains, has rugged scenery and a less touristed vibe. … Fishermen enjoy angling on Maligne Lake (the largest of the Rockies’ glacier-fed lakes), while the Miette Hot Springs offer soaks in outdoor pools, surrounded by forest and mountains.”

First up, Jasper. I actually had to rearrange a little bit – Jasper was supposed to be second – which actually worked out for the best since Jasper got snow the day I was originally supposed to be there.

One of my concessions to traveling during COVID was that I limited the number of excursions/experiences I planned and instead splurged on fancy hotels.  By the time I booked Jasper, most of the hotels in Jasper-proper were already booked.  So, I stayed up a Miette Hot Springs.  This place would be extra fabulous if you were actually visiting the hot springs, but alas they are closed this year. Don’t quote me, but I think I read it’s because they couldn’t find enough qualified lifeguards to open this season, due to COVID.

What I didn’t realize when I booked the Miette Springs Bungalows was that it’s literally next to the Hot Springs, and that also means it’s about 16km up a windy mountain road.  

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The Bungalows themselves were really cute/rustic, and the views were pretty amazing.  They warn that while they have wi-fi you should download anything you want to watch before coming up the mountain.  I did not, but I should’ve.  They were serious about that wi-fi situation.  You don’t realize how much you use your phone until it’s actually not available.  Not just wi-fi, but zero cell service.  I sent a couple of texts that read, “I’m not sure when you’ll get this, but…..”

The first night I ate at the on-property restaurant.  It was good, but nothing super special. While I was eating a couple ran in and started talking about a bear that was roaming around.  I did not run out to see it.  Although, it’s an ok time of year to bear-watch – they are all getting fat and happy for winter, but I still didn’t want to accidentally stumble on a bear with cubs.

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Day 2 was excursion day, and this was the only excursion that I had really considered doing.  I’d initially thought I’d visit Maligne (Ma-lene) Lake and take some pictures, wander around, but you can only see Spirit Island by taking a boat trip.  So, I booked a trip.  I soon found that both Alberta and British Columbia have enacted several rules to keep folks safe.  I had to show my vaccine card basically everywhere, including to be able to purchase a boat ticket.  Masks were required at all times in the cabin of the boat. Everyone complied, nobody complained, and many, many people commented on how much safer they felt because of it.  It’s not hard, folks. It’s about considering the community and not just you.

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On the trip out I met, Mika the dog.  She was a really well-behaved , and smartly dressed little pup.  We became fast friends.  After we got to Spirit Island, I discovered a human girl, Mika.  Only because dog-Mika was being asked to sit and girl-Mika was very confused and upset that a stranger was telling her what to do. 

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Maligne Lake is stunning and Spirit Island is a scared site of the Indigenous Nakoda or Stoney people. It should surprise no one that they were treated horribly, kicked off their land, driven onto reservations, and subjected to the kidnapping and genocide of their people. Recently, there have been attempts at reconciliation, Spirit Island, for example.  Visitors are no longer allowed to walk on that sacred ground, it is reserved only for the Stoney people and their ceremonies.  If fact, after discovery the mass graves at residential schools, the Stoney performed a ritual to allow the Stoney children’s spirits to rest. It should also surprise no one that the attempts at reconciliation are nice, but not nearly enough.  We stole their land, we killed their children, we tried to obliterated their way of life, their ties to the land, and we tried our best to erase their culture from this world. Until we very frankly confront the past and how we (white folks) still benefit from their destruction we cannot reconcile.

Jasper Lake Maligne

 Anyway, it’s beautiful there.

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 And I had a delicious waffle.

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October 28, 2021

#211 Banff, Jasper, and Yoho National Parks

“West of Edmonton and running north-south for more than 300 miles, Banff, Jasper, and Yoho national parks combine with several smaller parks to form the Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site, one of the largest protected areas in the world.”

When COVID closed the border in 2020, my plan to road trip through Canada was put on hold.  Instead, I hunkered down in an Airbnb and isolated trying to avoid getting sick and trying to avoid getting anyone else sick.

Once a vaccine became available, I got the jab the minute I qualified. I have a fascination with immunology, epidemiology, infectious disease, and have long-followed experts in these fields on social media.  I know RNA vaccines had been in development for a long time and I knew they were all saying the same thing… Safe. Effective. We can go back to normal.  So, of course, I got the shot. 

Quick side-note, at work I was hiring a new person on the team and one applicant was clearly not a good fit for the job, but he’d worked for USAMRIID. I was discussing the folks I wanted to interview with my director and our conversation about this candidate went something like this:

Her: He’s not a great fit for the position.

Me: I know, but he worked for USAMRIID.

Her: I don’t know what that is.

Me: Uh, the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

Her: (chuckling) Now it makes sense.  You know you can’t interview and just talk about that, right?

Me: (sighing in resignation) I know, but I really want to.

Anyhow, when Canada announced that it would reopen it’s borders to Americans who were fully vaxxed and tested negative I started thinking about how I could safely go and how much I could really get done.

I’d already paid for an Airbnb in College Station through August, and committed to dog-sitting Lady-bug, the first week of September.  I knew I wanted to be out of Canada before winter threatened, and that narrowed down my time-frame quite a bit.  But being in Utah would put me just south of Calgary and it seemed do-able to complete the Western Canada portion of my list.

During the next couple of months, I went back and forth about if I really felt comfortable travelling.  Delta had shown up, breakthrough infections were overrepresented in the media, and I felt very wary of travelling as well as overwhelmed by trying to figure out all the bureaucratic stuff that had to happen in a particular order, at the appropriate time. Once I finally made the decision to actually go, I got to planning out my schedule. I'm also am taking a lot of time off work over the next 6 weeks so I can squeeze everything in, including a week to see these beautiful parks.

May 15, 2020

#154 Revisited: SXSW

SXSW was one of the first major events to be cancelled as the COVID-19 pandemic began sweeping across the nation.  It was a shocking announcement that kicked off weeks of self-isolating that is still going on….at least in my household.

A bright side of the COVID crisis is that SXSW decided to partner with Amazon to present several of its film festival applicants for free public viewing.  So, technically, I was able to attend SXSW this year as well.  

Not only did I watch the following movies, I also perused their YouTube playlist that showcased several of their musical artists.  

One of the major downsides to the festival is the crushing, terrible, inches-not-miles per hour traffic that suffocates downtown Austin, so virtual attendance for the win!

Narrative Shorts
A Period Piece - Geetha, a control and order loving Indian-American woman, finally has sex with Vehd one afternoon but things quickly turn messy when period blood stains her pristine couch and a fight erupts mid-coitus. [Why are you having period sex on a light-colored couch with just a hand towel?]

Basic - Basic is a very, very, very short film about a dum lil’ ho doing lil’ ho things. It’s a darkish comedy exploring the insecure lil’ ho in all of us. [I followed the director on IG because of this film.]

Father of the Bride - The best man attempts to keep face and deliver his speech at his brother’s wedding, following an advance in the hotel bathroom by the father of the bride. [Not so much an advance, as an assault]

Waffle - Kerry is at a sleepover with the socially awkward, mysteriously orphaned heiress Katie. Friendship--in a society that grows ever isolating--is explored as Kerry learns the hard way that Katie always gets what she wants. [Loved this!]

Documentary Shorts
Affurmative Action - An exploration of workplace diversity through “meet the team” pages. [More dogs than people of color, funny in a really disheartening way.]

Betye Saar: Taking Care of Business - At 93, there’s no stopping when it comes to the legendary artist Betye Saar. [She's bad ass]

Hiplet: Because We Can - Created with the intention to inspire young Black women, this film brings the Hiplet [hip-lay] ballerinas to center stage. With elements of a Short Film, Music Video, and Documentary, this artistic work showcases not only the talent of the Hiplet ballerinas, it also gives them a platform to discuss the challenges they have faced with giving traditional ballet a hip new twist. [Loved!]

Mizuko - In Japan, there is a special way to grieve after having an abortion. [This seems to be true for any lost pregnancy, not just abortion, and it's really quite beautiful.]  This Buddhist ritual, called the water children memorial, allows people to metaphorically return their lost children to the sea. Told through the Japanese American filmmaker’s personal story of abortion in the US, Mizuko (Water Child) is partially animated, intimate reckoning with the impact of this cultural context.

Quilt Fever - Every year, nearly 30,000 quilters descend upon Paducah, Kentucky for its huge quilt competition, doubling the town’s population. “The Academy Awards of Quilting” is a weeklong spectacle in which quilters from all over the world convene. Beyond the competition, the film weaves through stories of individual quilters to reveal deeper motivations behind the art. [Lots of old white ladies, but charming nonetheless]

Episodic:
Motherland: Fort Salem - Set in an alternate American where witches ended their persecution by cutting a deal with the government to fight for the country, Motherland: Fort Salem follow three young women from training to deployment, as they fight terrorist threats with supernatural tactics. [You can watch this on Freeform/next day Hulu]

Tales from the Loop - Inspired by the wondrous paintings of Simon Stalenhag, Tales from the Loop explores the mind-bending adventures of the people who live above the Loop, a machine built to unlock and explore the mysteries of the universe - making things previously relegated to science fiction, possible. [Entire series in included in Amazon Prime]

Narrative Features:
Cat in the Wall - This heart-warmng tale [not acutally heart-warming] presents a pivotal moment for Britain; the housing crisis, gentrifications, Brexit and a Bulgarian migrant family fighting their incresingly xenophobic working-class neighbours in a London council estate. An apparently owner-less cat which has had enough of the heated atmosphere, barricades itself “in the wall”, requiring the residents to collaborate.

Documentary Features:
My Darling Vivian - The story of Vivian Liberto, Johnny Cash’s first wife and the mother of his four daughters. Features never-before-seen footage and photographs. [His daughters have some stuff to say about the "great love story" of Johnny and June and they way their mother was perceived.]