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More contrails here (and a heartbeat)—
Was recently in a lovely hotel. One I’ve been in before, lucky me. On that previous occasion there was a folder that contained stationery, i.e. a few sheets of hotel letterhead, a couple of envelopes, a comment card, a pen, a Things to Do in the Area brochure. I like that welcomey sort of touch. Immediately after unpacking I like nothing better than plonking myself down in an armchair, feet on the coffee table and reading a letter from hotel management that says things along the lines of we’re so glad you’re here, and give us a dingle if you need anything, anything at all and please take your feet off the coffee table.
Makes me feel at home.
Plus, I love free pens.
And I adore hotel stationery.
I have a small collection of pages that goes back years and years, a decade or more some of it. Every now and then I’ll send a letter to someone on one of those precious sheets, sometimes recalling a moment from way back then, or making no reference at all to the place but merely using it as my personal stationery.
I think it’s damn funky.
However, it seems, at this hotel anyway, stationery has been done away with for reasons of “everyone uses email now”. And the ‘welcome’ letter is now a video, because no one watches enough TV already or is in any way tired of looking at screens. That is, after all, why we go on holiday, is it not? To look at different screens or, at the very least, our own screens in a different light, against mountain backdrops, to text in sultry salted air…
Well then, I thought, what to do in that hour before dinner, about three days into the holiday, when the sun is just thinking of lowering itself behind the lake and the patio is still all warm with it and I have a glass of cool sauvignon blanc and a bag of chips in front of me… Seems like the perfect time to write a letter and comment on morning rambles collecting walnuts and stones and finding an owl with its leg stuck in the net of a volleyball court and contacting the local and very wonderful SPCA who contacted one of their staff in the area who was at home and who was only too happy to trade slippers for shoes and come right over to help said owl.
Stationery would have been nice, but we’ve gone over that. Instead, I tore pages from a notebook and that worked well enough, even better because of the lines—saves the recipient having to turn the paper at an angle to read. And when I asked the front desk for an envelope, they had one, a hotel one even. The young woman apologized for the logo and I said, no, that was great, that was perfect! I don’t think she quite understood my euphoria given how she was not yet born when the art of familiar letter writing was in its heyday. It occurred to me only much later that they probably also had sheets of paper with the hotel logo, although not offered because no one knew what they were for.
Sigh.
So I’m writing this lovely hotel, where I spent a lovely few days. I’m writing them on my own stationery. With a pen. A stamp will be involved. Feet will take me to a nearby mailbox. I will breathe en route. I will ask if they foresee a time when the art of letter writing, if only from hotel stationery, might be revived. I will mention a very exquisite spot in Newfoundland where I had the privilege of staying a few years ago and where I was mightily impressed with many things, not the least of which was a postcard (or two), pre-stamped and featuring a nice shot of the inn and environs. Smart marketing, that. And they’ll mail it for you too.
I’ll update this post with said hotel’s response. Which, with a bit of luck, will come on hotel stationery.

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More handwritten thoughts:
Oh Niagara. How I do love thee. Let me count the bottles of wine and bushels of fruit.
—If you can, begin your Niagara love-in on a Thursday. Less traffic but close enough to the weekend to feel celebratory.
Begin with lunch en route, in Ancaster, at the Mill. Don’t worry if it’s raining, the room is all windows and made for watching rain fall while you eat. Have the pickerel and chips and Soiled Reputation salad greens with shaved black radish, carrot, fennel and Dijon dressing. Just have it. Order a glass of Tawes Echo chardonnay. And don’t forget the rain.
On the way to Hamilton—where you will spend a few happy hours strolling through the Art Gallery—stop at a roadside nursery and buy seeds: arugula, mesclun, radishes, beets, carrots, chicory. And one asparagus plant for the cats to eat until the goldenrod in the garden is big enough to pick for them. [Cat grass just sticks in their throat and makes them gag.]
If you’ve missed the William Kurelek exhibit… poor you.
Later, stop at Bryan Prince Books. Listen as the amazing and cheerful staff chat with customers by phone, in person, with each other, with the elderly man who toddles in, a paperback in his hand, and says it turns out he already read this book, can he return it and choose something else, and the amazing and cheerful staff say of course you can, Henry, and within two minutes Henry has chosen a hardcover, the title of which I can’t see, and happily pays the difference, and then toddles back outside, smiling, all flat cap and walking stick.
Consider stopping for something just because a place looks like fun and you can see cupcakes through the window not to mention that you’re anxious to read what you bought at Bryan Prince. But, really, you have to admit you’re still full from the pickerel. Press on instead.
Take a picture of a fountain made for both mid-range and ground level thirsts, and smile at the woman who shakes her head as she passes and tells you that’s a silly thing to take a picture of…

Drive to your hotel in Niagara-on-the-Lake, which is one of your favourite places in all of the world and is privately owned and run by family that seems to enjoy what they do—and it shows. Go off season for good rates and fewer tourists. No one likes tourists… blech blech. You of course are not one.
Change and go for a swim.
Immediately.
Have a late dinner in the sports bar. Have a sublime thin crust pizza. Or quinoa salad.
And then… at last… climb into a most comfy bed and read that book you bought at Bryan Prince.
In the morning, swim. You will have the pool to yourself if you go at the right time. I’d like to tell you precisely what that time is, but I don’t know. Try to work it so you’re done your swim just before the aerobics class comes in, although, according to one of the women, you’re welcome to join them.

Have breakfast at Liv. Complimentary smoothies start things off. Might even be chocolate banana…
Have the eggs benny.
Begin the wine tour with Niagara College Winery, a teaching facility as well as winery and where they’ve built a whole new beautiful building—one of the loveliest features being a wall of wines, a bottle from each of the wineries in the area.
Visit the College greenhouses where you would love to be a student, and buy a small pot of oregano and a large potted snake plant. One to eat with eggs, the other because it’s happy minding its own business in the shade and has no appeal for cats.
Visit Staff Winery and be met by Brix, the happy giant puppy. Buy some Toute Sweet chocolate to go with the Baco Noir.
Visit Tawse Winery because they are bio and love talking about life without pesticides. And so do you. Buy some Riesling.
Drive to Beamsville via the back roads and pull over to walk or stretch or breathe fresh air whenever the mood strikes. Do not be tempted by the chocolate in the back seat.
Stop for lunch at August Restaurant, where even though the last customers are leaving because it’s twenty to three and they close at three for a couple of hours, the staff says don’t be silly, come on in. And the music is wonderful and no one will rush you and the waitress—who is charming and pleasant in exactly the right way—will tell you she started off as a customer and she loved the food so much she begged them to let her work there for free. Or meals. Or something. I think she gets paid now. She is a gem. And she’s not kidding about the food.
Think to yourself: at this moment I am completely and utterly happy.
Say it out loud if you’re with someone.
Drive slowly back to the outskirts of NOTL, where your comfy bed awaits for a short nap.
Stretch.
Shower.
Walk from your hotel through the gardens of Niagara College, to the College’s beautiful restaurant, Benchmark, where you will be surrounded by windows and wonderful views, culinary students eager to ply their newly learned skills, and food that has never failed to satisfy. Afterwards, you will be grateful you’re walking back to the hotel, but sorry it’s only less than ten minutes.
The final day [which may well be Saturday] wake and swim and have breakfast at Liv and walk through the grounds, then say your goodbyes to this delightful home away from home and promise to come back soon.
Discover a new winery. Make it a small one, off the beaten path–one that looks like nothing much from the outside, yet on the inside awaits a brilliant chat with owners and some excellent Riesling to add to your ever-growing Riesling cache.
Drive to St. Catharines and go directly to the Farmers’ Market. Buy arugula and blue iris, freshly caught trout, and whatever else demands to go home in your carrier bag. Then walk over to Hannelore’s Book Shop where, if you know the place well, you can navigate through the stacks and find just what you’re looking for. If you’re a newbie, give yourself time and enjoy the adventure. [Note: Hannelore has no website. She’s too cool for that. But anyone will be able to tell you where to find her.]

You could of course have lunch at the market or at any number of places downtown, but on this day you have a hankering for a lakeside table, so take yourself off to Port Dalhousie [where only the locals know how to pronounce it] and treat yourself to the joy at Treadwell, where the food is local and, I swear—it doesn’t matter what you have—out of this world delicious, where the staff is welcoming and smart and so happy to see you and you wonder if the house across the road might come up for sale so you can eat here every day.
Eat slowly. Sip your wine. Make this last. You won’t want to leave.

In fact what you’ll want to do is order the appetizer again for dessert. [And don’t think you haven’t done this before…]
If you’re so inclined, walk over to the beach, take a ride on the carousel if you dare. Be careful. Some of those critters move.

Eventually the QEW will beckon and it’ll be time to head home but not without first stopping at Foreign Affair to sample their unusual amarone wines and walk about the grounds of Vineland Research Centre, which used to be the Experimental Farm your parents took you to on Sundays when outings on Sundays meant suits and ties, hats, gloves, patent leather shoes and that horrible pink plaid pleated skirt that made climbing trees very difficult.
Have I mentioned it’s still raining?
Have I mentioned it matters not at all?

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More Travel:
Montreal
Stratford
Prince Edward Island
Miami
Peterborough
Chile
Vancouver
If the day is Saturday…
…start with the market.
Buy potaotes from the Potato Guy who has a dozen different varieties at least and can tell you the history and origins of every single one. He will also tell you which ones make the best potato salad, the best for mashed, scalloped, boiled, baked, fried, potato-pancaked, you name it, he will tell you. He is the Potato Guy.
Buy mushrooms from the [you know what’s coming…] Mushroom Guy. Only in this case it’s the Mushroom Gal. But she’s not there in person in winter [though her ‘shrooms are]; in winter she’s in her lab figuring out how to cultivate morels. I think she’s doing a PhD in mushroomology. Seriously. The Shiitake are always spectacular. And the Portobello are fresh and don’t need their insides scraped out before you eat/grill/sautee them the way they do when you get the ones from Outer Mongolia at the grocery store.
Buy chocolate from two lads who call themselves ChocoSol and whose [better than fair trade] endeavours are worth supporting. Not to mention the chocolate. Which is worth eating. Expensive, but that’s because it’s ethical and real. And that is the price of ethical and real food. The recipe is simple: buy smarter, eat less.
Buy clean, fresh greenhouse greens from the guy right near the entrance at a tiny table where you never know what he’ll have from week to week, but you know it will be excellent.
Buy apples from the St. Catharines guy, also apple cider; and for god’s sake, don’t forget the pulled pork pastry from The Pastry Peddler or a jar of freshly jarred honey—or cheese, or perogies, farm fresh eggs, homemade pies and cookies, sausages and a few samosas.
Buy flowers to feed the soul.
Remember to thank the buskers for their delightful ambience.
And be absolutley stunned that you spent all your money but applaud yourself for spending it so wisely and in a way that will directly help others, rather than helping already-doing-just-fine-thanks grocery store gazillionaires who bully farmers.
Make a mental note to get cat food on the way home.
Visit a 94 year-old uncle who has a fractured femur but that doesn’t stop him lighting up at the bag of mudpie chocolate cookies you bring him from the market. [p.s. bring him reading material also; Harlan Coban is a good choice.]
Have lunch at Elements. Have the wild boar pate. Have the mussel and fish stew. Have the vino verde. Smile. Sit back. Breathe. Be thankful.

Pop into Titles Bookstore. Buy a copy of something local.
Decide against visiting the many second hand bookshops on George Street [you can’t do it all] and walk west, along the river instead. If you see litter, pick it up. If you fancy a sit down, well then, for pete’s sake, sit down. [Make a note to try the patio at the Holiday Inn once the weather heats up; lovely view.]

Walk all the way to the art gallery, one of the best you’ll see anywhere, where you might find an exhibit by the students at PCVS, a local, downtown high school under threat of closure—and then wonder at the madness of the powers that be.
Choose as your favourite, an installation comprised of one large pink velveteen sofa with dark and ornately carved trim, above which are four standard paint-by-number style formal landscape paintings in gilt frames, each of which has been over-painted in Norville Morriseau style interpretations of ‘landscape’.
Second favourite installation: a text written on the wall, denouncing art. Heart-breaking in one way, given that the artist feels there’s no point in art because no one really gets it and it changes nothing. Oh dear. I want to find this person and say: it doesn’t matter. Do it anyway.
Walk back along the river to your car and make a mental note to wear better shoes next time.
Stop to take pictures of a dilapidated building that was once a place to eat and drink and be merry.

Go home. Eat, drink and be merry.
[But not before picking up some cat food, otherwise there will be hell to pay.]

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More Travel:
Prince Edward Island
Miami
Montreal
Niagara Region
Chile
Stratford
Vancouver
The bay window of a friend’s Muskoka kitchen.
Giant black Newfoundland pup snoring by the back door. Green tea.
No one else around. I sit on pillows, watch blue herons flaap flaap by; a black squirrel travels down a long path, jumps onto the deck of the boathouse, peeks around the corner, realizes it’s a dead end, not to mention a poor place to hide nuts. He comes back up, disappears. I have some tea, open the book I’ve brought. I have two hours to read before I need to be anywhere. I close the book. Reach for a stack of typed pages—the chapter I’ve been working on for a month and which somewhere along the line has turned into cement, an ugly confusion that just stares back at me, obstinate, exactly what you’d expect from cement. I should throw it out but I have optimistic moments when I think there’s something in there—I just don’t know where, or how, to make the crack to let it out.
I reach for the book again.
The squirrel, the herons, are gone. The view remains. My tea is cold but still good. I put the book down and my hand reaches for the typed pages even as part of me shouts You fool… you’re about to waste two perfectly good hours in Shangri-la on GD cement…
I make notes, draw arrows. I jot “Insert A” then write a scene and call it A. I find B within the existing mess. Then C. I mark it, move it to a better place. The dog is still snoring as I re-write what becomes D, and find E. I print “Insert E”. More arrows. And then, checking the clock, I jot a final scene and christen it F and I know—despite the tangle of lines and notes, inserts and cross outs—that a bouncing baby chapter has been born.
I’m stunned at first, that I could do in two hours what I hadn’t been able to crack in weeks. I’m inclined to put it down to the view, the solitude, the drowsy dog—all of which is great, all of which has set a mood—but it occurs to me that what is really powerful is the way my friend’s house makes no demands of me—how my thoughts are allowed the freedom to just ‘be’.
Because, truthfully, I have peace and solitude at home also. But laundry winks. Floors scowl. And the squirrels don’t mind their own business on long paths, they knock on windows and complain that they’re out of bird food. I can work at home of course—it’s where I’m happiest—but sometimes what’s necessary—for clarity, for permission to colour outside the lines, the courage to smash the cement… not merely find a ‘crack’—isn’t the familiar, but the bountiful disentanglements of ‘away’.
The ferry from Victoria can hardly dock for wind and rain and other wonders. It’s been eleven days of damp, but we’re not complaining. Not in god’s country. Not in the land of the lotus. We’re from Ontario. Mountains make us not care about rain.
Our latest B&B headquarters—O Canada House—is in downtown Vancouver where we notice a distinct lack of mountains, but we do have a private patio and the happy vibe continues, so despite the dripping ivy, we pour ourselves a glass of wine and sit outside in boots and rain hats under the eaves where, appropriately, I decide to make a small watercolour painting.
We do laundry on Davie Street and I write poetry at breakfast while looking out at a neighbouring window propped open with books. I find myself in a discussion about the use of zip code versus postal code and what I see as a rampant disregard for the letter ‘u’ in words such as favourite and colour and am told, in merry laughing tones: does it really matter, seeing as how at the heart of things we’re all Americans anyway… at which point my ears become hot and many impolite words cross my mind. Some of them containing the letter ‘u’.
We duck into a restaurant out of the rain and are served a cup of hot chai without even asking for it. We stay for dinner.
At the art gallery there is a Chagall exhibit. My favourite piece is from the illustrations for Dead Souls, ‘The Table Loaded with Food’, which shows whole animals on platters.
One morning, while Peter is doing something else, I join a bus tour with several hundred other people more intent on chatting to one another than listening to the guide. I make notes on what I catch through the din. Vancouver City Hall was purposely built on a hill so that the mayor could look ‘down’ on citizens…
It is in a bookshop at the Bloedel Conservatory that I discover Douglas Coupland’s City of Glass, and then lunch in the tea room under a glass roof in the rain.
On Granville Island we recognize a busker from the Distillery District in Toronto. He cannot say the same for us.
Also on Granville Island, we fall in love with a coffee table, recycled from an old wheel mold from the 1940’s, and in a mad moment, buy it, and arrange for shipment to Ontario. [One of our best purchases ever.]
More than once: calamari at The Sandbar, on the roof patio, by the fireplace, overlooking the water. Then home via paddle boat cab and a short walk.
Toward the end of our Vancouver stay, laryngitis strikes; I’m convinced this is due to not eating enough garlic during our travels. The weather never occurs to me (mountain ‘happy’ effect is very strong). I walk to the Chinese market and buy chicken soup. A day or so later, I’m fine. But Peter, ever considerate, and after two solid weeks together, much of it spent driving, suggests I not take any chances, that resting my voice a little longer wouldn’t hurt…
And that, as they say, is that.
[C’est fini. See ya, BC, it’s been a super yummy slice…]
Victoria: dry. For the moment.
Not that it matters a lot as we’re on Malahat Drive, north of Goldstream Park, stuck in traffic. An accident has made the two lane road impassable. For several hours, the ignition is off. I alternate between reading and painting my toenails loganberry.
Later, at dinner, we’re zonked and amuse ourselves by guessing what’s up with the people next to us, who we’re pretty sure are divorced but get together and play nice occasionally for the kids—a mixture of hers, his, theirs. It’s the dad’s birthday and the woman has got him a sheepskin jacket and a belt which makes quite a large parcel to open at a small table full of place settings and other dining debris. The man is very cool to everyone and the woman cuddles and kisses only a young girl, ignoring the other two children, one of whom is most certainly only his because later on he and that child leave and then he, the man, returns alone as if having returned the child to its rightful mother. Soon the whole gang leaves. Frankly, whatever the deal is with these people, I don’t think it’s going to last.
Our B&B is named after a small white dog; it has the most comfortable bed I’ve ever slept in [I make note of the mattress but find that it’s been discontinued], a lovely shower and is in a great neighbourhood with good book shops. The only oddity is the owners who, each morning, deliver our breakfast trays to the room, a nice but unusual touch given that they linger just a little too long as if having a look around to see what we’ve been up to in the past 24 hours. I find myself tidying the place before they arrive.
There seem to be no roads that run at right angles in Victoria, nothing east, west, north or south. This plays havoc with my almost non-existent sense of direction. We’re told that when the city was planned by the British, it was considered lower class to have streets running on a grid. So it’s all upper class circles and lanes and things turning into other things without warning or signage. Apparently it doesn’t get better when you live there—they say you can tell the tourists: they’re the ones without the maps.
At the gallery are Paul Drury etchings, my favourite of which is the Old Man Reading in which the man remains exactly the same but the background changes, which completely changes the mood, what we assume he’s doing, everything. Here is the picture: old man sitting at table, head in hand. In the first frame the background is that of a cafe, a newspaper is on the table in front of him. In the next, the walls are blank and on the table is a book, not a newspaper. He has a pipe in his mouth. In the first picture he seems poor, working class, perhaps even out of work, distraught, head in hand as if to say woe is me, I’m rotting away in this grotty cafe, reading yesterday’s paper. In the second, although neither his expression nor his clothing is different, he seems privileged and content, possibly sitting in a library reading Homer, head in hand because he’s so intent, absorbed in its brilliance.
Also at the gallery, a samurai exhibit. Quite a poetic lot, it seems, between bouts of slaughter. The epitome of this class was Miyamoto Musashi, who wrote The Book of Five Rings in the 17th century—it’s still used today to teach business strategies.
Lunch at the Wharfside Restaurant, a little commercial but right on the water, plus we get a window seat. Peter has a wild mushroom pizza and I have the salmon trilogy, which is how I learn I don’t like candied or pickled salmon. The remaining third of the trilogy—smoked—is lovely. Two very small people at the next table order The Dim Sum Experience, The Seafood Platter for Two, which is enormous and on top of which they have a whole lobster each and then share a pizza. They drink beer with gusto and laugh non-stop. Peter leaves to make some phone calls and I linger, watching yet another table… an elderly man and what I assume is his granddaughter, a girl of maybe seven. He tells her stories and she smiles, listens intently, then when he’s finished they chat up a storm and she asks mile a minute questions that seem unconnected. At one point she says: “Are you farsighted?” Eventually I settle down with notebook and pen and for some reason remember a dead elk we passed in the back of a pickup on the way to Tofino. I connect this to baked spaghetti and pickles and somehow manage a short story before Peter returns.
We don’t want to but feel we must visit the Empress Hotel. The whole waterfront area is a bit too touristy if you ask me. Glass bottom boats and Madame Tussaud’s, double-decker buses and Beefeaters in cheap uniforms fit only for photos. A teenager curses us for not giving him bus fare to Port Hardy. Inside the hotel, there’s a great memorabilia collection—photos and menus with food items I’ve never heard of, old registry books [most guests were from the States even then], and my favourite: dance cards listing waltzes, foxtrots, etc., with a space beside each to check ‘taken’. The architecture and the history are worth absorbing, but then there’s something called the The Bengal Room, which strikes me as everything that was wrong about the Raj. All those dead animal heads on the walls, skins, whirring fans, dark panelled walls, serving boys… So dark inside it hurts my eyes to come back into the light of the real world.
Dinner is at Sooke Harbour House where the waiter explains that the menu is ‘nature driven’. By which he means they have a garden. When serving the wine [Sandhill ‘One’ from Phantom Creek Vineyard] he warns that it’s ‘inherently schizophrenic’ and checks back later to see if it [the wine] is becoming ‘unified’ on our palate. For some reason he, or the owner, or someone, takes a shine to us [because we have put up with phrases like ‘inherently schizophrenic’?] and at the end of the meal we’re treated to a couple of glasses of ‘Cobble Hill’—a truly exquisite nectar made by accident in the process of making vinegar. It is sweet and rich and creamy and perfect with the blue cheese and walnuts that are served along with it.
We’ve been on the island eleven days. Most of which have been rainy. It’s raining still on the morning we’re set to cross by ferry to Vancouver and while I’m expecting a rough sail, it’s completely smooth and strangely pleasant; there are very few passengers and so we move through heavy fog in silence, like a chilly meditation.