Ground zero for the time was the itty bitty community of Ingleside, Ontario, home of the lovely and hospitable Cheryl and Corey.
Interesting fact about Ingleside:
Also, of note, Ingleside is bordered by the Saint Lawrence River...
... which, on this particular day, at least, was home to an absolutely ridiculous number of birds. That whole black line of specks you see out there in the water is composed of fat and noisy canada geese...
and that's only about ten percent of them. There were thousands!
Speaking of the Saint Lawrence, in this particular area, the river serves as the border between Canada and America. Nearby Cornwall, Ontario serves as the closest crossing. This is actually the 'old' bridge, which is being torn down, but is much more exciting to photograph than the 'new' bridge just below it.
I spent a good part of the day driving around southern Ontario with my camera on the passenger seat just in case. I drove the 401, saw a bit of Cornwall, and explored the Long Sault Parkway where I had to slow down for some wild turkeys crossing the road and, as the sun was going down, I found all of this:
That evening we had a modern version of something called 'raclette' for supper, which I had never had. It was aweseome!
I ate. So. MUCH.
I spent the next day with my gracious hostess. Our first stop was the Upper Canada Migratory Bird Sanctuary (Birds again? I see a pattern here) This was super-cool in that we just walked into a wooded area a few feet from the car, and the black-capped chickadees and blue jays were all, "Yay! Delivery!"
Once we and the birds had had our fill, Cheryl and I piled back into the car for a road trip to Kingston, Ontario. First, we had lunch at Five Guys Burgers and Fries, which I love, but we did not have on the east coast. (Are you listening, Five Guys????) They make fantastic burgers, and I enjoy that they keep corkboards and doodling paper are available for customers' reviews... or whatever.
We did a bit of shopping, and (get this) ran into someone I used to work with about 15 years before, who happened to also be in the same shop, in the same town, in the same province as I was visiting, thousands of miles from home.
Insert "Do you know so-and-so from Canada?" stereotype here.
Also in Kingston were a biting wind and these...
On my last full day in Ontario, we left Ontario. In fact, we left Canada altogether and headed across the border to the state of New York, specifically, the home of the 1932 and the 1980 Olympic Games: Lake Placid. The weather was not the most ideal for picture-taking, but the town itself was absolutely adorable, and when we managed to get lost outside of town, it wasn't without merit either.
It was a lot to fit in. Four days, three towns in two countries, one helpful guy at a gas station with an amazing accent, willing to help me with my "cah", board games, hot chocolate, maybe a bottle or two of wine, a couple hundred photos, and two gracious hosts who I definitely do not get to spend enough time with.
A million small adventures all rolled into one.
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