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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural
awareness throughout the world.
Special Treat – By Hartson Dowd
June
22, 2006
Beautiful
British
Columbia
Just beyond Banff and Lake Louise your glass-domed train glides passed
the sign, The Continental Divide. Look around. You're surrounded by some of the
most spectacular scenery on the planet.
These are the wilds of the Canadian Rockies, with its
rugged snow covered peaks and deep canyons, moose, elk and bear, lakes both
green as emeralds and blue as sapphire, waterfalls and rivers carrying glacier
water cold and clear as the most perfect diamond. Crown jewels all, fit for
these most majestic mountains on the continent.
This, for me, is the most glorious place on earth.
It was near that same continental divide that we saw three sleek trains
emerging from tunnels, each headed a different direction.
Boarding in Calgary, I realized at once that we were on a world-class coach,
the traveling equivalent of a five-star hotel.
I've experienced many trains, even the original Orient Express. For sheer
luxury, excellent service and cuisine, and the most dramatic scenery you'll
ever see from a coach, The Rocky Mountaineer gets my vote as the best ever.
Attendants cater to your every
whim. Starting the first day with champagne and orange juice in the dining car
on the coach's first level, you know you're in for relaxation, romance, and
perhaps the finest movable feast ever.
For breakfast there's lightly scrambled eggs wrapped in wild British Columbia smoked salmon. Drizzled with a dill
cr?me fra?che and topped with a touch of caviar.
Or savor the Sir Sanford Fleming Benedict. A poached egg nestled on lobsters
and fresh spinach atop a toasted English muffin, napped with a citrus
Hollandaise sauce.
And there's more, so much more
to come. Later you'll be offered baked wild British Columbia salmon glazed with maple and ginseng
or slow-roasted Alberta bison.
Remember to leave room for scrumptious desserts. And chocolate, chocolate,
chocolate, each sweet unique in taste and form (even an oh-so-edible chocolate
toy train).
Meanwhile, upstairs in the vista cruiser, our Rocky Mountaineer guide and
raconteur extraordinaire, Thaddy, provides fascinating and informative
commentary all along this 667 mile, two-day journey.
The Rocky Mountaineer's GoldLeaf Service is akin to the best offered by cruise
ships. A steward and his or her assistants are at your beck and call for
drinks, hors d'oeuvres, anything your heart desires. You sit comfortably in a
true observation car, windows curving up and across the car top. Bathrooms are
clean and bodacious, especially compared with air or sea transport.
Best of all, I think, I'm not
driving! I'm seeing everything. No need for one eye on the glacier, one eye on
the road.
On the first afternoon I wondered what happened when we left this Rocky Mountain heaven? Turns out there are four more
glorious mountain ranges and hundreds of streams and river to see before
pulling into Vancouver the following afternoon.
“The train's a bit late,” said Thaddy that first evening. “So the chef has
baked these big-as-your-hand oatmeal and chocolate chip cookies to hold you
till your dinner theater in Kamloops.”
Yes, dinner theater. And then a fine hotel for the night, your luggage awaiting
you in your room.
The second day, traveling from
Kamloops to Vancouver is as beautiful and interesting as the
first, the ride so smooth and quiet, the loudest noise you hear is the clicking
of cameras.
Yes everyone is a big winner on this journey. As we and our co-travelers -
most about our age - emerged from the train in Vancouver, we were all the richer for our new
knowledge and gratitude for having experienced one of the great rail journeys
of our age.
DETAILS…
From mid-April to mid-October (with select December departures) the Rocky
Mountaineer's two-day, all-daylight rail spectacular travels either direction
between the coastal city of Vancouver and the Rocky Mountain destinations of Jasper, Banff and Calgary with an overnight stop in Kamloops, B.C. In May 2006, Rocky Mountaineer
Vacations will introduce a third trip, the Fraser Discovery Route. This two-day, all-daylight rail
journey will travel between Whistler, B.C. and Jasper, Alberta, with an overnight in Quesnel, B.C.
Prices including meals and overnight accommodation, start from $969 per person
for GoldLeaf Service, and $469 for RedLeaf Service.
Go to http://www.rockymountaineer.com/
or call 1-800.665.7245 for complete information and free brochure. Check out
their new three-hour Whistler Mountaineer train experience between the two
world-class destinations of Vancouver and Whistler, B.C., premiering In May
2006 for from $85 to $145.
Consider staying a few days in Vancouver, recently named both
the "Most Livable City" in the world,
and "Best City in the Americas."
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