Showing posts with label moose mcguire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moose mcguire. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 August 2019

Gramma Camp Day 4



Thursday, August 1st

Happily, the store phoned and my recalled computer battery was replaced. Grampa offered to go and pick it up in Kingston for me.
We were looking for another activity.
Grampa wrote a poem, and the girls found out where two IDENTICAL puzzles were hidden!!!

Isabelle's clue
Not a door but by a door
Not very high but off the floor
Near your room if zoom
A desk you'll see; there it be.

Josee's clue
Not the laundry
But near that boundary
No animal there
but caged it's there

I ordered a new microwave oven from a local store. I sussed it out online, phoned and ordered it. It was $300 for the replacement part, $400 for a new microwave. I've had a microwave oven since my first marriage in 1976. My in-laws gave us one as a wedding present.

 Our guy was picking it up for us and installing it on Thursday morning. Otherwise, we all would have gone to Kingston. The girls had breakfast.


Grampa arrived home nearly three hours later, having had a nice walk in Kingston (he went to Queen's University there back in the day). We had  pit stops, then we took off to pick up my auction items in North Augusta.


From there, we went to Brockville for lunch. The parking lots were nearly full. The restaurant was PACKED. We sat at an inside booth.  I'd asked for a bun or something, as the service was understandably slow.  The girls were really hungry, and another server brought them crackers.

It's iteration #3, as far as we know, for the restaurant. Perhaps the kitchen is too small for the number of seats. They run the outside of the second floor deck, as well as inside, where we were (where the outside walls are yellow).


I've been fun trying to take photos, as I'm not sure if they are actually focused with my cataracts. (No appointment for surgery, yet.) The girls like taking photos, too.

They did really well, considering the wait. Thank goodness for crayons and menus on which to draw.


We watched the two TVs, baseball and darts!


It was a long wait, 40+ minutes. We sent them up to the kindly bartender to refill their glasses!

The aquatarium


We've been before, they feature all Ontario species.


We like the aquatarium, it has a wide variety of mechanical, technological, and physical features.



There is part of a ship reproduction, which lends itself to the day camp kids, and family entertainment!


Josee's finger in his eye!




Time to go outdoors. I realized we had a train theme going. Yesterday, for Gramma Camp Day 3, we went to the railway museum. Grampa loves trains!

The Brockville Tunnel 1860


Construction of Canada's first railway tunney, which runs from this point for 1730' in a northerly direction, began in Sept., 1854. Designed to give the Brockville and Ottawa Railway access to the riverfront, it was opened on Dec. 31, 1860. This railway, incorporated in 1853, ran from Brockville to Sand Point, near Arnprior, with  a branch line from SMiths Falls to Perth. Its first train left Brockville's Grand Trunk station on Jan., 25, 1859, almost two years before finances permitted completion of the tunnel. The Brockville and Ottawa amalgamated in 1878 with the Canada Central Railway, which was absorbed by the CPR in 1881. 
Of course, a lot of those train tracks have since been lifted, and the cleared land is used for recreation.


Josee counted her steps: 764!


Off we went home to cool off. It's been wickedly hot. You can hear the house wrens singing!



It was a very full day. I popped the girls into bed, asked Jos to set her alarm for 20 minutes of quiet reading time, and then they would turn the lights out. We were baffed!

Gramma Camp Day 1 & 2!
Gramma Camp Day 3

Friday, 14 June 2019

Brockville here we come!

It was to be a beautiful summer's day. We knew a storm was on its way for Thursday, likely Firday, as well. Why don't we go to Brockville for lunch, and then on the way home buy some more goldfish for the pond? WHY NOT??!!! Enjoy each day, is our motto.

On the bridge, the flag, and a cyclist going the wrong way!


Our destination, but we passed it to go to lunch. They have a large pond with goldfish for sale.


The bridal wreath spirea was at its peak.


This is where we ate last time.


In we went. Up the elevator. It looks like one of those fake holiday photos! I could have zoomed in!


We'll just have lunch at the newly renovated Moose McGuire. It's an amazing view. We were there awhile ago. The restaurant was closed due to a gas issue last time, it didn't open until 5 p.m that visit. 

Things were good on Wednesday. We snagged a prime corner spot, right in the second floor corner (centre of photo below). The glass means you can see everything. It is open to the air just above eye level. Brilliant day! 



This is the building with condos above, and the restaurant and store, below.


The condos can be rented for ~$250 a night. If you want to buy one (2 bedrooms, 3 baths), $1.3 MILLION!

The tall ships were being freshly painted for summer.


This was the spot to stop.




I love the matching caps.



We've taken the girls to the Aquatarium, I guess this is where the school kids went, too. June is typically field trip season!


The harbour is great for walkabouts!


The store is well above our price point, but lovely to look at. The guy talking about his cancer was a bit gruesome.


Back to the ships.


From here, we walked the board walk.


We went into the train tunnel. The music seems incongruous, as well as the LEDs, but I'm an old fart!
The city notably features the Brockville Tunnel, Canada's first railway tunnel, finished in December 1860, and closed in 1970.[5] It was acquired by the City of Brockville in 1982, and the tunnel reopened in August 2017 as an LED illuminated pedestrian tunnel with music. 

The trains ran between Brockville and Ottawa, giving access to the waterfront by 1860. It ran from Brockville to Sand Point, near Arnprior, with a branch line from Smiths Falls to Perth. It was amalgamated with the CCR in 1878, and absorbed into the CPR in 1881.

Lake Ontario still has high water.


It's an old town, settled in 1785, incorporated in 1832. Formerly known as Elizabethtown, it's a lovely town


Ritchies had hibiscus. I've lost all 12 of mine over the years. Several last year. We were here for fish, though.


A drive-by shooting through the window. This house interested me. A HUGE wrap around deck.


I saw someone land a fish!
Fishing from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.

Goldfish from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.