This was a late night flight to Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Westjet flight left Edmonton at 11:15 PM and arrived about 7 AM (time is 3 hrs ahead). We stayed two nights in downtown Halifax at the Westin on Hollis. From here we were able to walk to the harbour and pretty much the whole downtown area.
When we got to the airport in Halifax we picked up our rental car (Avis - Electra). It was a little difficult at first because we hadn't slept on the plane and this was our first time in NS. The MacDonald bridge has a toll of $1. After we crossed the bridge we managed to find the hotel. It was only 8:45 in the morning, but the hotel had a room ready. We went for breakfast and then had a sleep before heading on our first walk along the waterfront. We stopped in at the tourist information building. They told us there was a street festival going on that day and to follow Spring Garden Road to the downtown. Along the way was a Fries Wagon (Buds Spuds), so that was our lunch. Very good french fries! The downtown Public Gardens were pretty. Many older churches and an old graveyard. Craft shops, one was called Jennifer's of Nova Scotia had many nice items.
The second day in Halifax our first stop was at Pier 21 and we arrived just in time for the 10:30 guided tour, followed by a film showing a variety of present day immigrants. It was very interesting. In the afternoon we walked on the historic waterfront boardwalk visited the Maritime Marine Museum which has a titanic display and the Halifax explosion. For a treat with had a beaver tail cream cheese/chocolate bits. Very gooey! We walked the boardwalk as far as the ferry terminal and then up Duke Street hill to the old Town clock tower in Citadel National Historic Site. Then back down the hill on Prince Street to Lower Water Street. By then it was time for supper which we had at a restaurant called McKelvie's. I had Nova Scotian Clam Chowder soup with a sort of soda bread with raisins or dates. It was very good.
The third day we left Halifax about 9AM for Peggy's Cove, Mahone Bay, Lunenburg. It was Canada Day and to be patriotic, we wore our white/red shirts! :) We took highway #333 from Halifax to Peggy's Cove. There was a cool wind blowing at Peggy's Cove, but it was sunny. We had a second breakfast there because they had a Canada Day special for $5.99. Then we were off to Chester and Mahone Bay. Mahone Bay has three churches in a row and buildings are painted bright colors. At one very busy little restaurant we had milk shakes. They ran out of the usual large glasses, so we were given one large shake and one in a small glass, but the price was the same. Then onward to Lunenburg where we spent the night at the Smugglers Cove Inn. They painted their buildings with bright colors too, green, pink, blue, yellow.
The fourth day we drove to New Glasgow. The next morning we were at the ferry to take us to PEI. In PEI we stayed in Charlottetown. We drove up to Cavendish to Anne of Green Gables and also stopped in North Rustico to see lobster traps. That evening we walked the streets of downtown Charlottetown.
On our final day we drove to Borden Carleton and took the long bridge back to mainland. You only have to pay when you are leaving PEI. The toll to cross the bridge was $45. The bridge brings you in to New Brunswick for a short time before you exit back to Nova Scotia. On the way we took a side trip to small town of Springhill to the Anne Murray Centre. It has all her history and memorbelia on display. What a busy gal she was! Our final night in NS was at the Quality Inn by the Halifax airport. Hurricane 'Arthur' rain, wind and fog arrived overnight and we were fortunate our flight was able to leave in the morning, though it was a turbulent take off.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Nuevo Vallarta, Mexico May 11-18, 2014
Our airline was Sunwing and our all-inclusive was at Hotel Riu Vallarta in Nayarit. This is a five star resort and has a large selection of food. Which is great when you spend your day looking forward to eating. LOL..
This was an early flight on Mother's Day. We left Edmonton airport at 6AM. Arriving in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico about 5 hours later. Oh and we had an empty seat in our row, that doesn't happen very often, like almost never. Sunwing still serves food on their flights, so we had breakfast at 7:30AM, a double cheese or egg, bacon, cheese on English muffin. Plus a slice of banana loaf.
The airport in P. Vallarta has been updated since we were here (2 yrs ago). The plane now goes to the building instead of dropping passengers on the tarmac. On our return flight we noticed a lot more shops inside too.
Another thing that was different and maybe it's the resort that does it this way. We received our wrist bands before boarding the shuttle bus, and we filled out our hotel registration forms on the bus. This is usually done at the hotel. We were on the bus at 12:30 local time (1 hr ahead). We couldn't check into our rooms until 3 PM, but since we had our wrist bands already, we could go for lunch. The Flamingo restaurant on the beach was open at 12:30. The main dining room opens at 1PM for lunch. Supper is at 6:30 PM. Something that seemed strange to us at this resort was that the birds flew in and out of the dining room. At the Flamingo it was worse than in the main dining room. If you left your plate of food unattended for a minute, the birds were at your table to eat it for you.
The Sunwing representatives were in the lobby everyday 9-4 if you had any questions or wanted to book a tour. In some resorts they were only there a few hours. This resort had a fridge with water and pop, restocked every other day.
We found this area (Nayarit State) to be further from shopping. We took a taxi to Paradise Plaza Shopping Centre. A nice smaller mall. It cost 90 pesos one way. We took the bus back to the resort. The bus was 8 pesos each. Another day we walked to the nearby Riu Jalisco and Riu Palace resorts and then on to Mega Mall. This mall was only a large store with groceries, clothes, hardware similar to Wal-Mart. We had an oreo ice cream at McDonalds 10 pesos each. From this street it was difficult to get back to our resort by bus. We should have taken a taxi because it was quite warm out. The weather in May is too humid and uncomfortably hot, so I would not recommend going that late in the year, November to March is better.
The bus went towards downtown which was the opposite direction of our hotel. And with the language problem, the bus driver didn't speak English and we don't speak Spanish. We decided to get on the bus instead of standing outside in the sun. We paid 14 pesos each to go to downtown Puerto Vallarta and assumed we could get a bus back from there. Another passenger on the bus understood English and told us where we needed to get off to catch the bus back to our Riu resort. We paid another 15 pesos each. On the bus was a man who was going to his job at the Riu and told us it was the right bus to take to our hotel. Each state has their own bus system. We were in the town of Nuevo Vallarta, Nayarit State and downtown Puerto Vallarta is in Jalisco State.
On Thursday morning we went on a city bus tour of Puerto Vallarta, to the Malecon boardwalk, an old church, the downtown flea market, a silver store, a drive along coast to southern area, a restaurant for lunch of grilled chicken fillet, or grilled fish fillet, the restaurant was located in a rocky area. Then on to a tequila distillary, and back to hotel by 6:15 PM. It was a long day.
On Friday we took a taxi to the town of Bucerias. It cost 85 pesos for taxi. Some people can walk to this town by way of the beach. For us that thought was to tiring and hot. I think all that is in this town is a very large flea market. It is easy to get lost too because the market is on several streets and after walking for some time we no longer knew which direction to find the taxi's. We asked a lady who did not speak English, but a man overheard and told us which direction to walk. After walking another block, we still did not see the taxi's but when we turned the man had followed us and said we had to walk another two blocks. It turned out he was right.
Another thing about this resort, there were no Mexican shops in the hotel, only on the beach there was one. We were not bugged by time share presentations or vendors. If you didn't want that, this is the perfect place. Just relax, eat, swim and suntan.
This was an early flight on Mother's Day. We left Edmonton airport at 6AM. Arriving in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico about 5 hours later. Oh and we had an empty seat in our row, that doesn't happen very often, like almost never. Sunwing still serves food on their flights, so we had breakfast at 7:30AM, a double cheese or egg, bacon, cheese on English muffin. Plus a slice of banana loaf.
The airport in P. Vallarta has been updated since we were here (2 yrs ago). The plane now goes to the building instead of dropping passengers on the tarmac. On our return flight we noticed a lot more shops inside too.
Another thing that was different and maybe it's the resort that does it this way. We received our wrist bands before boarding the shuttle bus, and we filled out our hotel registration forms on the bus. This is usually done at the hotel. We were on the bus at 12:30 local time (1 hr ahead). We couldn't check into our rooms until 3 PM, but since we had our wrist bands already, we could go for lunch. The Flamingo restaurant on the beach was open at 12:30. The main dining room opens at 1PM for lunch. Supper is at 6:30 PM. Something that seemed strange to us at this resort was that the birds flew in and out of the dining room. At the Flamingo it was worse than in the main dining room. If you left your plate of food unattended for a minute, the birds were at your table to eat it for you.
The Sunwing representatives were in the lobby everyday 9-4 if you had any questions or wanted to book a tour. In some resorts they were only there a few hours. This resort had a fridge with water and pop, restocked every other day.
We found this area (Nayarit State) to be further from shopping. We took a taxi to Paradise Plaza Shopping Centre. A nice smaller mall. It cost 90 pesos one way. We took the bus back to the resort. The bus was 8 pesos each. Another day we walked to the nearby Riu Jalisco and Riu Palace resorts and then on to Mega Mall. This mall was only a large store with groceries, clothes, hardware similar to Wal-Mart. We had an oreo ice cream at McDonalds 10 pesos each. From this street it was difficult to get back to our resort by bus. We should have taken a taxi because it was quite warm out. The weather in May is too humid and uncomfortably hot, so I would not recommend going that late in the year, November to March is better.
The bus went towards downtown which was the opposite direction of our hotel. And with the language problem, the bus driver didn't speak English and we don't speak Spanish. We decided to get on the bus instead of standing outside in the sun. We paid 14 pesos each to go to downtown Puerto Vallarta and assumed we could get a bus back from there. Another passenger on the bus understood English and told us where we needed to get off to catch the bus back to our Riu resort. We paid another 15 pesos each. On the bus was a man who was going to his job at the Riu and told us it was the right bus to take to our hotel. Each state has their own bus system. We were in the town of Nuevo Vallarta, Nayarit State and downtown Puerto Vallarta is in Jalisco State.
On Thursday morning we went on a city bus tour of Puerto Vallarta, to the Malecon boardwalk, an old church, the downtown flea market, a silver store, a drive along coast to southern area, a restaurant for lunch of grilled chicken fillet, or grilled fish fillet, the restaurant was located in a rocky area. Then on to a tequila distillary, and back to hotel by 6:15 PM. It was a long day.
On Friday we took a taxi to the town of Bucerias. It cost 85 pesos for taxi. Some people can walk to this town by way of the beach. For us that thought was to tiring and hot. I think all that is in this town is a very large flea market. It is easy to get lost too because the market is on several streets and after walking for some time we no longer knew which direction to find the taxi's. We asked a lady who did not speak English, but a man overheard and told us which direction to walk. After walking another block, we still did not see the taxi's but when we turned the man had followed us and said we had to walk another two blocks. It turned out he was right.
Another thing about this resort, there were no Mexican shops in the hotel, only on the beach there was one. We were not bugged by time share presentations or vendors. If you didn't want that, this is the perfect place. Just relax, eat, swim and suntan.
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