Feb 3, 2020

Cuba! Cayo Coco

walk to the beach
24-hour bar
It's been years since we took a real vacation.  I've never been on a plane, or even outside of Canada, let alone both at once so this was exciting for me.

I couldn't sleep the night before because I kept checking our luggage to make sure we had everything.

Our vacation was at one of those 7-day all-inclusive resorts in Cuba where the flight, hotel and your meals and drinks were included.  Initially my husband was a little worried I'd go back my old habit of having one too many but much to his surprise and mine I happily limited my alcoholic intake to no more than 6 pina~coladas for the entire week!


late at night at the front lobby
huts where lounge chairs normally are
The all-day all-you-can-eat  buffets were great, despite the many warnings that the food was going to be bland and that we should bring our own condiments!

I'm not sure what other resorts are like yet in Cuba, but the food in Cayo Coco ("flamingo island") was pretty amazing.  Sure they had some hit-and-misses on some days like their "Asian-station" for variety but hey, at least they tried. At least it was all safe, which isn't the case at all resorts.

windy afternoon by the pool
bubble play
Their strawberry and mango yogurt smoothies, bacon, scrambled eggs, cheese and fruit trays, the make-your-own-burrito stations, pizza and lasagna trays and of course the ice cream were all consistently good!

A la carte menu
Also included in our package was the 'a la carte' menus at the 3 different gourmet restaurants on the resort.  This was especially nice since we normally would never go to a 5-course restaurant.  Like everywhere else, the wine and beer is all included (again, I opted out).

Cayo beach
giant chess game
One thing I did agree to was to leave our cell phones at home.  We didn't want to bring any techy gadgets with the exception of my aging camera.

This I thought was going to be a somewhat of a challenge for me since I am one of those people who wake up looking at my phone to check out the latest on Twitter, Instagram and the occasional Facebook postings.  For starters, I bought a cheap watch to help us keep track of time (which I am still wearing) and after a few days by the ocean, it turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to me in a long time.

kayaks, hobie cats
The weather in Cuba during the week we were there was a little unseasonably cool and very windy, with the exception of two very beautiful days, so we couldn't get out on to the kayaks because they worried for the winds.  There was still plenty of exploring to do on the island.

wading pelican
royal terns

The ocean would be the best thing for me spending long hours a day walking along the 3km sandy beach, listening to the soothing crashes of the waves, feeling the salt-water splash on my face, seeing different kinds of birds like the pelican that taking  a nose dive into the water at full speed to gulp that fish that no one else sees, the royal terns gossiping (which resemble little old men with swooping bald spots) and the northern mocking birds,  which would carry on little conversations with my husband on some mornings repeating the same whistling patterns back to him.


views from the extinct restaurant
Island of Aa
extinct restaurant
Our resort was next to an abandoned restaurant, which I wanted to check out on my own for a little while.  It sat on a mesa of 'aa' rock, (a Hawaiian word derived from the sound made by someone walking over it in bare feet... even through my thickly rubber-soled sandals I was terrified the spikes would puncture through.)


Strange sort of jungle gym?
Our view from our place towards the main hotel
 The highlights of the vacation were centered around all things natural despite the many activities the resort had planned for their guests.

They really go out of their way to entertain their guests with days filled with different activities like bubble play where the swimming pool is doused with bubbles, daily yoga and kickboxing classes, Spanish classes, dance lessons, and off the resort excursions to the Moron (pronounced Mo-RONE) where you can check out the sugar plantations and meet the locals, as well as day trips to an off-resort town where you can share the same water tank as the dolphins while the poor things are trained to kiss you and do other tricks.  We opted out.


locals
 No... for me, my memories will always be the first time I set eyes on a palm tree swaying in the breeze off the ocean at night, the moon which shines directly above you because you are so close to the equator, the brilliant and rare queen conch shells (which we left because there was still life inside), whelks, sea urchins and brain corals (which I so wanted to take back, but were too heavy to bring so I left where found for someone else to enjoy) and little sand crabs that come out of hiding when the tide was out (this is also caused by the moon) and the little sandpipers as they scurry out to the ocean sand bed to pick at some grub just before the waves come back in to scoot them along.

Mercedes taxi
Chevy Belair
 Cuba is a small island country filled with big-hearted people, who are poor but live with dignity.  They are hard-working and unspoiled by modern technology so they're very creative and talented.  'Hidden Cuba' which is a book you should pick up, is a real look at life of the Cuban people who live far away from the life on the resorts.  Their average income is about $3,000/yr.  Cuba is a socialist country just like China, but they treat their people a little better giving them a good education and health care, and no constant surveillance.  Despite that, most of them live on the poverty line and barely get enough to eat every day.  I was saddened by the fact that the food on the resort was so abundant for the tourists while the native Cubans didn't have access to it.  Maybe that's why I didn't want to over-indulge? 


Our gardener
My final thoughts about being there, was that it was the first time in my life (since I was a kid) that I had no worries.  I didn't worry about my kids, my job, my parents, my self-consciousness.  I was completely and utterly at peace with myself and the world around me.  It was amazing.  My husband wasn't affected as deeply as I was as I think for him he had traveled so much as a child to many countries and much of what he experienced he had something to compare it to I imagine, but not me.


Gardener weaved this pretty bird for me
I was an unspoiled child as my family had next to nothing except each other, so in a strange way this made me feel sorry for the Cuban people (who were not lucky enough to work on the resort.)  I want to come back again but will try and take more time to to explore the rest of the country. 

 

Oct 4, 2019

Rockwood Conservation Area

My hubby and I went to the Rockwood Conservation area because of an Instagram photo I saw of how amazing this place was.  I wasn't really disappointed, although the sky wasn't what I would call ideal.  It had rained a few times but I managed to take some photos.


The park charges $7/each person.  They are friendly and had pointed us in the right direction to the waterfall I thought would be the main feature, but wasn't.  The real feature here are the caves.

There are over 194-acres of great hiking trails, boardwalks and idyllic sandy beaches.  It also houses an interesting array of castle-like ruins which are the remains of a woolen mill that once existed here.

Rockwood is just an hour outside Toronto. Its accessibility and proximity to major highways like the 401 make it an easy city escape.  What makes Rockwood Conservation Area unique from most parks is the sheer amount of activities it boasts and its rich geological aspects.   A few environmental features it’s known for are the glacier bluffs, extensive cave systems (12 in total) and some of the oldest dated trees in Ontario. 


Even with Rockwood being a nature lovers paradise, it seems over the years the biggest tourist draw has been the stunning Harris Woolen Mill ruins, the remnants of an ancient textile mill.

Built in the mid 1880s, the mill was forced to shut down during the Depression and has remained vacant since.


Over the past decade, the mill had gone through almost a million-dollar renovation to preserve its history and make it safe for visitors to walk through and appreciate.The site is part of the Grand River Conservation Authority, and is an extremely popular spot for picnics, hikes, photography shoots and weddings.

If you want to spend more than a day inside the park, there are over 120 campsites on four main campgrounds.

Fill your entire weekend up with swimming, fishing, canoeing, hiking, and even paddle boarding — which you can rent in the summer.  The conservation area is open year-round and camping is available from May to October.

I loved it here so much that at the end of the day I almost wished I brought a tent.

Sep 30, 2019

Silver Creek Conservation Area (Scotsdale Farm)


Within the Silvercreek Conversation Area near the lovely and quaint town of Georgetown is a hidden treasure called Scotsdale Farm. It's a working farm, but there is so much more to this place.  For one thing, there is over 530 acres of gorgeous trails in and around the Niagara Escarpment.  

One of the most popular and largest trail here is the Bennett-heritage Trail.  Fall is the best time of the year.  For the simple abundance of colour, the crisp and cool air and the many photo opportunities you can capture if you are so inclined. 
             
We met up with a fellow photographer who had won a Canon contest while shooting here.  The sunsets here just rock through the trees.  Perfect setting - perfect lighting.  In fact this is a fave spot for many photographers and film producers.  Parking is free and ample as long as you are out of there by 8 p.m. at night when the park closes.
There are a few waterfall features here as well! 

Not in comparison to our friends out west in Hamilton or Niagara, but enough to keep your interest up.  Since it's part of the Bruce Trail network, you are bound to find plenty of rolling hills and woodlands and glacial rocky remnants to exercise your legs making it a great work out.

Halton Hills region has been a favourite for a few years now with so many conservation areas and things to do here all year long - set in a pastoral countryside.  

The main house of Scotsdale was built in 1836 by Christopher Cook. The farm was bequeathed to the Ontario Heritage Trust by Stewart and Violet Bennett in 1982.  Bennett had developed Scotsdale into an internationally renowned breeding farm for his Arabian horses and shorthorn beef cattle.

To learn more about the Bennetts and to the historical beginnings of this beautiful landscape which has  has been, click on the link below



Sep 29, 2019

Electric Radial Museum in Guelph

One of my favourite places to go is to visit historical sites.   I don't really have a particular interest in historical transportation - though you would know that considering the fact that this blog began a decade ago while traveling through Toronto on the TTC and blogging every station!  Still I do have a particular love for nostalgia and anything that reminds me of my childhood and in the advancement of modern civilization.

It's nice that there are museums like this that give new generations the opportunity to see how buses and rail trains once looked so that they too can have a glimpse into the past.

It was on a rainy Sunday early evening when we passed through the County of Halton when I first saw this working museum of electric streetcars, buses and trolleybuses.  It was too late in the day to make it a decent visit, so we didn’t buy tickets.  Though we did show up when one of the trolleys went by along the radial tracks that once provided the right of way in Guelph. 

The museum is open to the public – the focus is primarily on the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC), with rides on many of its now retired vehicles. It is located in the town of Guelph in Ontario, Canada.  If you happen to pass through it might be fun for you to step in to a little piece of history and take a trip yourself.