Sunday, July 13, 2014

At the Adams Motel, Gaspe Village

I think we had the best roads today. Mostly following the coast, not much traffic, plenty of scenic picnic areas, a few curves just for fun. Some steep hills. I don't have many pictures of the road, I was having too much fun driving to stop and take a picture. And I was not speeding either! The posted speed of 90 kph seemed more than enough for us.

I at least have a picture of the beginning of the day.


Saturday, July 12, 2014

Camping at Cap Chat

We didn't stop for sight seeing today, but the road was scenic enough. Rt 132 follows the coast. Just after Rimouski, we turned onto a beach road, and because it's Saturday, and sunny, the traffic was stop and go until we reached 132 again. Rt 132 is usually a 90 kph limit and we were doing 100, but still all the traffic was passing us. Good thing there were frequent passing zones.

Now we're camped on the beach at Camping au Bord de la Mer, which means by the sea, and we are right at the edge. We went into town by scooter for a meal at Valmont restaurant. We're camped next to a couple from Switzerland, driving a pickup camper conversion that they shipped from Europe to Argentina, then drove it up to Canada, so they can ship it back to Europe from Halifax next week. We're meeting a lot of interesting people.




Friday, July 11, 2014

Riviere du Loup

We are camping tonight near the ferry dock at RdL. Across the road is some kind of Santa's castle. (Pic)
On the way here we lunched at Levis, across from Quebec city. Then followed 132, instead of the Trans Canada highway.




Thursday, July 10, 2014

Camping at St Georges de Beauce

We started the morning with a walk in Sherbrooke. Then drove to Lac Megantic where there is still a gaping hole from the train derailment last year. We walked along the new boardwalk that was built to let people view the site.
Later, we continued to Beauceville, and found a tent site at Domaine de la Riviere, beside the Chaudiere river. At night we went to St Georges de Beauce, and had a local beer and salmon and capers pizza.

Everyone we encountered has been friendly and super helpful. Scenery is beautiful. Weather perfect.

If I had to pick a favourite, it was the girl at the campground desk, who drove us around in a golf cart to show us the available tent sites.




Wednesday, July 9, 2014

End of Day Two: Sherbrooke

Our first day ended in Kingston Ontario. We had rain most of yesterday  afternoon and found a motel instead of camping. This  morning was sunny. We sat in comfy chairs on the lawn and ate cereal for breakfast. For the rest of today we travelled on surface roads (ie not freeways), due to popular request. As soon as we reached Quebec, we exited the freeway at Beaudette, then went through Valleyfield, Ormstown, Venise-en-Quebec, Waterloo, Magog, and here we are at the motel La Marquise between Sherbrooke and Lennoxville.

So we are in a motel again. We didn't get here until 8:30, and we are both too tired to set up a tent. Some of you may think we are wimping out (i.e. you, Marion W.)   According to popular demand, we don't need any excuses to get a motel. And I agree with her.


Sunday, July 6, 2014

Lost and Burgie Go East

On Tuesday July 8, 2014, our trip will continue.  In 2012 Mary Ann and I went from Kitchener, Ontario to Victoria BC, and returned in 6 weeks.  This summer we are taking the same two bikes ("Lost", the Kawasaki Vulcan 900, and "Burgie", the Suzuki Burgman 400) from Kitchener to St. John's Newfoundland and back.

On the way we hope to visit the Gaspe peninsula, the  province of Prince Edward Island, the Magdalene Islands, and the island of Newfoundland.  This trip will be "Lost and Burgie Go West Part 2" or "This time it's East".  It is a good finish to the "Go West" trip, because in 2012 we turned back at Victoria, BC, and this time we turn back at St John's Newfoundland, the other end of the Trans Canada Highway..

What is the Trans Canada Highway?

The Trans Canada Highway, completed in 1971, is a confusing bit of road.   It is mostly numbered highway 1, but Quebec and Ontario give it other number designations.  There are branches off the Trans-Canada, and alternate routes that may or may not call themselves the Trans Canada Highway.  Looking at Wikipedia, I see a map showing a northern Trans-Canada through British Columbia that ends on the Queen Charlotte Islands (Which apparently now are named Haida Gwaiai)  I also see a loop that runs up to Baie Comeau (my home town) and back.  I have no idea why that loop was included, except to confuse people.  Or maybe one day they plan to extend that road to Newfoundland or Labrador.  Kitchener, Ontario is not on the Trans Canada.  And neither is Toronto, Canada's largest city.

Another surprising fact from Wikipedia is that the main Trans-Canada has Tesla charging stations along it's length, allowing an electric car like the Tesla to drive from Victoria to St John's.

On the subject of  Victoria and St. John's,  these two cities represent the original western and eastern ends of the Trans Canada Highway.  So even though we are not following the Trans Canada, and actually we are mostly trying to avoid it, they still make good end points for the trip.  Better than Kitchener, anyway.

Monday, December 31, 2012

Still Using a Pencil in 21st Century


Last summer on our two-bike travel out to the west coast, we took along two new electronic "toys": the Android phone and a bike-to-bike bluetooth communicator. So basically I went from the eighties into the 21st century on this trip.  And it was actually fun and probably safer too.

The main reason I took the Android phone and helmet communicator along was to enhance the safety of the trip. But each of these devices offered a huge variety of functions, many more than I would want to use while riding. I did some experimenting before the trip, and settled on a safe way to enjoy the motorcycling experience, while getting some valuable use out of the devices.

The Scala Rider communications headset was actually capable of interacting with the Android phone, doing such tasks as answering phone calls, dialing the phone through voice commands, playing music from the Android device, and piping the Navigator commands through the earphones.  I decided that none of those functions were important enough to me to risk fiddling with on the road.  It's not that they weren't easy to use - just not easy enough to be safe.  And in my opinion these capabilities did not contribute enough extra safety to the ride to compensate for the extra fiddling that would be required.

All I wanted from the Scala Rider was simply to be able to speak with Mary Ann while we were riding, so that we didn't get lost or separated, and so that we could warn each other of situations.  The Scala headset was capable of doing this job with a minimum of fiddling. Mostly it involved turning the devices on or off, adjusting the volume, putting the headset in standby mode to save the batteries, or putting it back to ready mode to communicate.  We also needed to adjust the microphone position as it was very critical and sometimes got bumped while riding.  Once I set the volume to hear through my earplugs, the device could adjust the volume itself to compensate for background noise at speed. But a few times I put on the helmet without earplugs, and I just about jumped off the bike when Mary Ann said something to me with the volume set on max.

I would put the communicator device on standby when we didn't need to talk. But even out in the middle of nowhere, we would occasionally see something that we wanted to talk about, for example the dust devils in Washington state.  Either one of us could put both devices on standby or reactivate them at the touch of a button on the helmet pod.  It was quite simple, although there was a few seconds time delay.  Ironically the buttons were much easier than the hands-free "voice activation" system that required major amounts of yodelling or funny noises to finally get it to work.  Anyway, Mary Ann left that job mostly to me once she discovered how tricky the voice activation was.  The batteries were good enough that we could ride for a day always in active mode, and a couple of days if we using the battery saving standby mode.

There are many motorcycle handlebar mounts available for Android phones.  Apparently riders use these things while riding, which I think is a bit dangerous.  I have seen many of the arguments on rider forums, and usually it comes down to the fact that some people think it's as safe as talking on the phone.  Simply put, I disagree with with using phones while riding, and surfing the internet is no better.  So I would only feel safe if these things truly provided minimal distraction, while providing maximum safety.

Safety, in my mind, partly depends on navigation.  When you get lost, and are driving around looking for the correct road, you are not as safe as you could be if you simply knew where you needed to go.  So a good navigation aid that does not distract while riding is a safety feature. If I needed some navigation, I used the Android phone and Google maps before getting on the bike.  Usually in the motel or campsite, I would check out the route and write down large step by step turns on notepaper, which I then put in the tank bag's clear map pocket. I don't even like looking at paper maps while riding.  But step by step instructions, can be seen clearly in less than one second, are helpful.  Usually I write the route number or road name and L,S, or R. (left straight  or right). I don't often get lost that way, and when I do, I pull over and check Google maps on the Android phone.

Google maps was really impressive a few times, for example coming out of the Norwood Hotel in Winnipeg, which was on a one-way street going the wrong direction.  It routed me down a back alley out of the parking pot and back to a street going the right direction to get on the Trans-Canada going west.  I would never have seen that even on a detailed city map (which I didn't have anyway).  I didn't even see the alley while standing in the parking lot (at first).

I also wanted the Android phone for weather radar and weather forecasts.  I usually checked the weather in the morning before setting out.  But while on the road, I would pull over onto a side street and stop if I saw some unexpected dark clouds.  The phone was always carried next to my wallet and passport, and I only let the phone out of my sight when I was recharging it.  The neatest thing about the Android phone weather apps (I used "The Weather Network" app mostly) was that they would show your position on a map with both the roads and the current precipitation.   A few times I or Mary Ann would be tempted to just scroll the weather map around to see where we were and where we were headed.  But the weather map is not an ideal replacement for good old Google maps, because the scrolling speed is very slow due to the precipitation download (I guess).

The weather radar did not prevent us from getting wet once.  It only rained three times on our trip, because of a record setting drought.  But one of those times, it was a sudden thunderstorm that hit at rush hour while we were on the Malahat highway coming into Victoria.  It's a narrow mountain pass type of road with no safe places to pull over, and so I just kept going until we reached the first traffic light.  Then I tried a left turn into a gas station, but the left turn traffic light refused to work, so we got soaked before deciding to continue on to the next intersection.  Altogether, I guess it was not a brilliant test of the radar weather app, but I am still looking forward to using it again if we go east, where I'm sure it will get a proper test.  It is very useful to help judge when to put on a rainsuit, and when to take it off.

It was also handy to have a cell phone a few times, and I've never even used one of those while motorcycling.  It's also a good emergency device.  And the Android cell phone's camera was also very handy, as it was almost always with us.  If I could have seen all this electronic stuff in action twenty years ago, I would have been very impressed.

Picture: Mary Ann in BC using a pencil despite the modern technology available.