Saturday, June 20, 2015

A few slight hitches...

6 June 2015
St. Andrews, New Brunswick

Late last night, after checking what has seemed over the past week to be the most unreliable and rapidly changing weather forecast possible, we re-thought the rest of our trip.  The initial plan was to head up to Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island after Acadia.  However, it had been much colder so far than we’d hoped our “summer” vacation would be (hats and gloves on several occasions).  We toyed with the option of making our way toward Toronto and Niagara Falls instead, or just heading to Quebec City and then back down to the east coast of the US (Cape May and the Eastern Shore).  After watching the bonus features of Anne of Green Gables to see a bit of PEI, We decided to sleep on it and do a 1-2-3 vote in the morning.  I also decided to ask for opinions on Facebook.

Overwhelmingly, the social media vote was to continue onto PEI and Nova Scotia.  I was leaning that way anyway, since we’d come this far and I doubt we’d ever drive up here again with this much time on our hands.  Our 1-2-3 vote went something like this:

            Both: 1-2-3
            Me: Keep Going
            Matt: Stay Here (not one of the options)

I was upset that this was not a real mutual vote!  I didn’t want to make the decision, but I was glad of the outcome.  Cape May is do-able on a regular weekend (if it’s worth the NJ Turnpike trip, blech) and the Eastern Shore is great, but not really new scenery. 

We loaded up and headed out, only to make a 45-minute stop at a Walmart 15 minutes away to re-stock some kiddo supplies (pouches and organic milk that quickly turned into more items.  I think of Canada like Europe, and I never know what to expect on the milk-front).  Eloise passed out during that time and when I got back to the girls and Matt in the parking lot, Sis was on the potty in the Casita.  She’s only had that one sunset hike accident this whole trip.  Don’t get me wrong, it’s great, it just takes more stopping (but my bladder is about on par with hers, so I’m not always complaining ;). 

Our mini-goal was to make it to St. Andrews around lunchtime, a quaint little tourist town just across the border into New Brunswick.  At the border, we fessed up to carrying firewood.  Big mistake.  Eloise’s first steps in Canada were running around the border patrol building while they searched our vehicle outside.  Between that, the Walmart stop, another peepee/gas stop, and the actual time-zone change, we probably lost over two hours. 

St. Andrews’ weather was exactly what we’d hoped the trip would be like: a clear and sunny 65 degrees.  We went to the Kingsbrae Gardens, which is a beautiful outdoor walk through several different types of gardens, but also included two mini-playhouse villages and a mini-animal farm.  Eloise loved the baby goats and alpacas.  They both loved the mini-playhouses, one of which was built in 1909.  Before walking around, we ate lunch at the cafĂ© on site, which was very good.  Matty and I both had the special of the day – lobster grilled cheese and bisque – and the girls split the penne with chicken.

We had such a great parking spot for the Casita, and some time to kill in nice weather before dinner (we decided not to travel again until the girls’ bedtime, so we walked to the nearby Algonquin Hotel Resort.  It was a large and gorgeous tudor-style hotel with an indoor waterslide and an outdoor pool that was being set up to serve as a wedding venue.  This is one wedding I wish we were able to crash.  The feel of the outdoor patios of the Algonquin reminded me of Carmel Valley… pretty quiet and relaxed, seemingly casual, but warm and scenic.  The wedding site had two large lobster pots and several boxes of lobsters stacked and ready to be thrown in… my kind of party!

We realized it was 6:15 and headed back to the car at the Gardens with one sleeping baby, only to find that we never turned the fridge off of battery charge when we turned off the car.  Needless to say, our battery was quite dead.  Luckily the Gardens were open until 8pm and we had jumper cables.  Unluckily, the one college kid who worked the desk didn’t drive there.  While I went in to use the phone, a lady in the parking lot offered her car for a jump, but her car was dead all morning and had just been running for 45 minutes to re-charge, so it didn’t have enough juice to get ours going.  Jonah (the college kid at the desk) in the meantime supplied me with a few phone numbers, and Eloise with some markers and paper.  He also called a local cab company while I was on with USAA, and drew Eloise a few pictures.  In the time I was on hold, the cabby got there and for $25 US gave us a jump, just about 1 minute before another guy offered to help for free.  Oh well – it was dinner time for the girls (mommy included) so the sooner the better…

There were several restaurants along the waterfront in town, but only one with a flourless chocolate cake on the menu named the “Charlotte Cake.”  So the Niger Reef Tea House was where we ate.  The scenery was pretty – it was low tide and we ate outside at a picnic table over a grassy hill next to the water.  We were also able to park the Casita and leave the car running during dinner to recharge.  There was a park adjacent to the restaurant with some cannons remaining from a blockhouse fortification built against the US during the War of 1812, so Matty got some plaque-reading in on the way to the restaurant.

The food was fresh and good – Matty had the lamb shank, I had the salmon, and the girls had a fish-cake.  I told the owner I was just there for the cake anyway.  It was better than the one at the Jordan Pond House; it was dense and almost had a ganache type of outer chocolate coating.  He told me he puts a smidge of Gran Marnier in the chocolate too, and used to serve it with strawberries, but has since gotten lazy and just uses whipped cream.  He also told me he has a piece every day, (and immediately watches people look at his belly when he tells them that).  I’d probably rank it somewhere in the upper middle of all of the flourless chocolate cakes I’ve had on my quest; it probably could have earned a higher spot, but I think he’d just taken it out of the fridge, and I prefer mine slightly warmed. 

We were the last customers of the night, and Sis and I almost got locked in at closing because he didn’t know we were in the bathroom for one last potty break before hitting the road again.  We got jammies on the ladies and gave them their milks and headed for the highway.  And what a huge amount of driving it’s been.  New Brunswick is like the New Jersey of Canada: it’s just kind of in the way of getting to better places.  This drive is longer than the Turnpike in mileage, but there’s no traffic, which is a definite vantage point.  Or maybe it’s because it’s almost midnight and we’re still on the road…

Baby Gear Used Today:

Transport:
-Car Seats: Britax Advocate + Clek Fllo
-Stroller: Baby Jogger City Mini GT Double
Feeding:
- High Chair:  Fischer Price Folding Travel Chair
-Bottles: Bubba 12-hour cool no-spill mugs
-Utensils: Ikea plasticware

Funny Kiddo Quotes:

Sissy, Dada, and Eloise in a playhouse at the Kingsbrae Gardens:
            Dada: Sissy, can you let me out of the house?
            Sissy: No, you need to stay here and watch my kid because I’m going to leave.

Immediately after going peepee but before flushing at the restaurant after dinner:
Sissy: Mommy, why are you building another nest?
Me: Because I have to go peepee too. 
Sissy: We are going to have a peepee collection!

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