I dunno... How about Toronto?

8th June 2025



I sleep pretty well and feel a lot better than I did yesterday :-)

I'm heading for Ottawa today - It's a Sunday and I don't expect there will be too much traffic

[Morgan Freeman] - clears throat - [/Morgan Freeman]

First - breakfast...


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I don't fancy much of the complimentary breakfast, so just fill up my travel mug and head for the lifts.

It's a bit of a hike to Ottawa, where I'm once again booked into a Hampton Inn, so I'll need to stop for fuel. I intend to combine this with a stop for a good breakfast...


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Traffic is light, as I carefully negotiate the narrow confines of the underground garage, and start heading towards the main highway (called Express, for some reason). Perhaps because it's a good clear route?

[Morgan Freeman] Why do I bother? [/Morgan Freeman]

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I'm on the highway quite quickly - along with the entire population of Ontario...

It's currently 19C and very humid, so I'm keeping the roof up for now*

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Does no-one in Canada use cruise control? I'm forever being overtaken, then re-overtake vehicles where they vary their speed by 20-25kph. It doesn't make for a restful drive...

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Never mind - here's our first bridge... :-)

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I pull off the highway just before 1100 to refuel. I work out the Mustang's consumption - 43.6 mpg (UK Gal)
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Just up the road there's a promising looking stirp mall...

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...where I find Eggstatic, which is absolutely packed...

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Merz, the maitre'd, tells me it'll be five minutes before a table comes free - is that OK? Of course...

In about three minutes I'm sat - the only white European in the place as far as I can see, and perusing their extensive menu (link above)...

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On recommendation of the lovely Fari, with Merz...

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I order the Spicy Nashville Benedict - one of their more popular orders. Fari fills my water bottle up with blackberry lemonade and brings me a good, strong cup of coffee. There's definitely a North African Mediterranean theme to the place. If I had one near me (they are a small chain), then I'd slowly work my way through the menu, I think...

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My meal arrives and it is vast - and delicious...
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It's basically a couple of pieces of spicy fried chicken atop an English muffin, with poached eggs on top etc - you can read the menu. Good choice...

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I get back onto my route - much to Waze's relief - he's been concerned, and start burning kilometres towards Ottawa. I seem to be just about free of the urban sprawl of Toronto and traffic has thinned somewhat.

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There's a major prang on the opposite carriageway, and the police have it closed whilst they use a crane to remove the residue...

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Traffic has clearly been diverted off at the junction before the scene. I measured at least 13 kilometres of tailback...
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A couple of hours later, I stop at a service area to ease springs (my bladder dictates my range as I grow older :D) and buy some ice-cold tea, with strawberries and lemons - delicious.

The standard speed limits on these highways seems to be 100kph (62mph), with occasional areas where this is increased to 110kph (68mph). I tend to set my cruise at the limit plus 10% - ie about 109kph in a 100; 119kph in a 110.

I'm one of the slowest vehicles on the road...
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Mind you, they can get a bit annoyed if you don't obey a limit...
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(Not my pic)

I arrive at my hotel and am efficiently checked in to my beautiful room...

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I park the car (for free!) in the underground car park, then buy some laundry detergent and stuff from Jamil at the desk.

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Canadian dollar coins are called "Loonies", because they have a picture of a Loon on them. Two-dollar coins are called Twonees, but no-one knows why...

Saw this parked in the garage...

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Have you bought yourself a bike yet Catherine?
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I go up to the fourth floor and get my laundry going, then come back downstairs to upload today's pics and start my journal.


*No, a convertible might not have been the wisest choice - but here we are...
 
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9th June 2025

I sleep well and wake to a dull, drizzly morning... :(

No matter - I get abluted, suited and booted, and I'm filling my coffee mug from the complimentary breakfast spread at 0900 or so, meeting Sacha, a lovely Bouvier...

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I get the car out of the underground car park...

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...and drive 10 minutes or so, before arriving at...

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As I arrive, the heavens open, so I sit in the car, paying for my parking online, whilst I wait the 10 or so minutes for the rain to stop...

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It stops right on time, and I walk to the doors - inside the entrance hall is an arresting display...

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...a Canadair Tutor, as used by the Snowbirds RCAF Aerobatic Team...

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I pay my (Senior!) entrance fee of $17 and wander into the museum...

Yep, this is going to be all about aeroplanes - non-aviation fans might want to have a cup of tea or something...

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First exhibit is this Silver Dart - the first powered aircraft to fly in Canada - in February 1909...

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Exhibits are grouped by era - the Great War being the first. In keeping with mankind's primal drives, great leaps in technology are invariably made when we are trying to kill one another...

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This Maurice Farman S.11 Shorthorn looks like you could pick it up with one hand - the idea of flying this and doing battle in the air is terrifying...


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Anyone who was brought up on W E Johns "Biggles" stories will recognise this as a Sopwith Camel...

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It has a rotary engine. That means that the prop and the cylinders all rotate around a stationary crankshaft. This had a few drawbacks - there is no throttle - the power is "on" whenever the engine is turning. To slow down on approach, pilots blipped the magnetos, essentially turning the engine on and off, until switching them off when on the ground. The other snag was lubrication. It was oiled using castor oil, which was, after working its way around the engine, was lost to the slipstream. Pilots had to wear goggles and a scarf over their nose and mouth, but frequently suffered from terrible diarrhoea as a result of ingesting the oil...

This particular Camel is interesting, in that it's a Ship Camel - used by the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) from 1917. It has a shorter span, different armament and a detachable rear fuselage...

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Next up - another Sopwith - this time the Snipe. Another single seat fighter, which entered service just a few weeks before the end of the Great War...

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This is a Fokker D.VII - one of the finest fighters of WWI - painted in the odd lozenge shaped disruptive paint colours preferred by the German army...

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Hermann Göring - later famous as a Nazi war criminal (and huge bloater) - became an ace flying D.VIIs during WWI.

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Junkers J.1
- this (largely unrestored) veteran of WW1 is notable as being the first aircraft ever produced with a metal skin, to help avoid damage from small arms fire. It is the only surviving example of the 227 built.

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Still sausage-side, this is an AEG G.IV - the only surviving example of a WWI German multi-engined fighting aircraft...

OK, moving forward to WWII...

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No prizes for identifying the Avro Lancaster...

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Hidden away under its wing is this Messerschmitt Me163 Komet - a rocket powered interceptor, designed to gain height very quickly (39,000ft in three minutes) after take-off (it would ditch the two wheels), then, after engaging bomber formations, to glide home and land on its central skid. The fuel was so volatile it would literally dissolve the pilot if there was a leak...
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Beautiful Westland Lysander. This airframe is actually a composite of three different aircraft. The Imperial War Museum at Duxford in the UK have one that is airworthy - and they are getting it certified to take paying passengers.

The pilots of these were - even amongst wartime aircrew - courageous. Used by the Special Operations Executive (SOE), they regularly flew into fields in France, only lit by a single torch on the ground, to drop off and pick up agents. The navigation skills, airmanship and sheer balls it took to do this is beyond my comprehension - particularly as they never knew whether their rendezvous was going to turn out to be a Gestapo set-up...

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Paratrooper's collapsible bicycle.

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Fairey Swordfish
- one of the stalwarts of the Fleet Air Arm during WWII. Known affectionately as the Stringbag - apparently because, like a string shopping bag, it was extremely versatile in what it could be used for...

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It was primarily a torpedo attack aircraft. One of my Sea Harrier pilot mates used to fly the RNAS Historic Flight's Swordfish for displays - he told me he'd never been so cold...

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About the same vintage, but looking decades apart, is the Heinkel He 162 Volksjäger (People's Fighter). Powered by a single jet engine mounted over the fuselage, it entered service in about January 1945, by which time the war was clearly lost...

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Messerschmitt Bf109F
, a slightly later model than the E variant, which was used during the Battle of Britain, the Bf109 was a fine fighter and was produced in vast numbers (nearly 34,000)...

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Beautifully finished AT6 Harvard advanced trainer...

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Avro Anson, multi-engine trainer...

OK - that's it for now - more later...:-)
 
9th June 2025 - (cont)

Okay - ready for round two? Let's start with some helicopters...

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Weird looking little Piasecki Retriever, which has a few "firsts" to its name - notably that it was the first helicopter to perform a loop...
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Right next door is a Sea King - which must be one of the most successful helicopters ever built...

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Look! Another Link Trainer!

I have to say, this museum is very well laid out - and there are a couple of primary school classes being shown around as I mosey about... :-)

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Hang on a tick - that looks just like the Tiger Moth being restored at Hamilton - the one I thought was being converted to a Thruxton Jackaroo...

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Turns out to be a Menasco Moth - named for the US engine fitted. They were under-powered compared with a Tiger Moth, so were mostly used for Radio Telephony training...

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Back to the egg-beaters - this is the Sikorsky HO4S - although Brit's will recognise it as the Westland Whirlwind, where we built ours under licence...

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Bell 47 Sioux (in British use)...

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Familiar to anyone who has seen an episode of M*A*S*H, this was an army workhorse all over the world. Hard to imagine you could build a simpler helicopter...

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Not a Chinook, although you can be forgiven for mistaking it for one, but a Boeing Vertol Labrador - the Canadians' name for a Sea Knight...

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Strange little development aircraft, the Canadair CL-84 Dynavert. It never went into production, but you can see its DNA in the V-22 Osprey...

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CF-104 Starfighter...

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CF-5 Freedom Fighter, painted in Soviet Aggressor markings and camo...

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McDonnell CF-101 Voodoo
- this was bought as a stop-gap all weather fighter, when the Avro Arrow project was cancelled...

Like the TSR2 cancellation in the UK, the cancellation of the Arrow sounded the death knell for independent combat aircraft manufacture in each country. Anything we've done since has either been under licence, or in cooperation with other countries...

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They have the nose of an Arrow on display - I'm not sure whether it was a mock-up or off one of the prototypes...

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A wing tip, definitely off one of the prototypes, rests against the wall...

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Nearby is the massive shape of a Bomarc missile...

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It's a very long-range surface-to-air missile - with an atomic warhead - designed to target formations of enemy bombers at high level...

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Which brings us neatly to the Cold War: this is, effectively, A MiG 15, but is built under licence in Poland and designated a WSK LiM-2...

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Right next door is its NATO equivalent - the Canadair CF-86 Sabre...

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Eye-wateringly brightly painted CT-33 (called the Silver Star in RCAF service), whilst above is...

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...a DHC Vampire...

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Getting us bang up to date, the CF18 Hornet...

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A few oldies, as I wend my way towards the gift shop - always good to see a DC-3...

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Boeing 247...

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Lockheed Electra...

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Hurricane and, of course...

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...a Spitfire (another clipped wing variant)...

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The business end of a Lancaster...

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The large bulbous radome, you can see aft of the bomb bay, is the aerial for the H2S radar. The Vulcan still used an updated form of H2S for bomb targeting throughout its operational life. The term H2S is short for Highly, Highly Secret. I hope that's true...

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I am delighted to learn that climbing translates as grimper...:-)

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Almost done - can't leave out floatplanes, can we?

This magnificent machine is a Curtiss HS-2L...

Do you remember the Space Shuttle?
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Late in the programme, they fitted it with a vast mechanical arm, so they could wrangle satellites in and out of the cargo bay...

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Well, the Canadians made that... :-)

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You didn't think you were going to get away without a Beaver pic, did you?

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I make my way out past a collection of lovely old DH Moths of various designs...

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Some looking a bit ambitious in their carrying capacity...

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Past a Fairchild FC-2W2...

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...and a Junkers W 34, which has seen better days...

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Before exiting via the gift shop...

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It's still raining, so I make my way back to the hotel to write the journal. At about 1400 I decide that I need something to eat, so ask for a recommendation at the front desk.

Ten minutes takes me to...

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Where they have both sorts of music - Country and Western...
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I'm quite hungry - I order a lemonade and...

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...nachos. What's not to like? :D

After an hour or so shooting the shit with Ted, the bar tender, I settle up and drive back to the hotel. I've been recommended the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa, so ask at the front desk if I can extend by a couple of nights. Unfortunately, they are sold out tomorrow, so I book a room for two nights in The Days Inn...

I get back to work on the journal...

Good day.
 
Im really enjoying this, especially as I’m heading to Toronto / Ontario for a couple of weeks with the wifey in September so it’s incredibly useful to see.

Thanks for taking the time to document it all 👍👍
 
Im really enjoying this, especially as I’m heading to Toronto / Ontario for a couple of weeks with the wifey in September so it’s incredibly useful to see.

Thanks for taking the time to document it all 👍👍
My wife and I will land at Toronto Pearson no fewer than three time next month.

We had a day at the exceptional National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC recently, so we're done with aircraft museums for now.

But on our 'to do' list are:

  • take a train through the Rockies
  • see Grizzly bears in Lake Louise
  • visit the Husband Daycare Centre in Banff
  • walk behind Niagara Falls
  • canoe in the Algonquin National Park
  • ascend the Statue of Liberty
  • walk across the Brooklyn Bridge (where they invented the bends - decompression sickness)
What we cannot do is visit Churchill and see polar bears. That'll have to be another trip.
 
10th June 2025

I sleep well and wake just before 0900. I've decided to spend a couple more days in Ottawa, but unfortunately, this hotel is sold out tonight, so I've booked a room in a Days Inn a few kilometres away. I'm abluted, suited and booted in no time, and wheel my luggage to the lift down to the garage.

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Sacha is enjoying breakfast with his family… :-)

I come back up to fill my water bottle with chilled water, and my travel mug with fresh coffee — nothing else on offer piques my interest…

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I do, however, snaffle one of their 'to-go' lunches…

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As I approach the car, it starts a little light show and shines a 'puddle' light in the shape of a horse on the floor by the door…

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Today, by way of a little light relief, we are visiting the Canadian War Museum

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After parking and catching the lift to the entrance, I pay my (seniors) fee off about $20 and set off following the arrows…

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It covers the entire history of warfare in Canada, from colonisation to the present day…

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It's beautifully presented and — despite being apparently dimly lit — my iPhone's camera manages to cope with it…

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South African wars — imagine having to fight in woollen tunics in the heat…
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The Canadian Army received their first machine gun — a Gatling gun — in 1885…

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A reminder of how far the British Empire spread in Victorian times…

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Of course, we had to keep the locals onside, using tools like this 12-pounder field gun…

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The Great War introduced conscription for the first time in Canada. Lots of these exhibits are designed with education in mind, and this one allows kids to test whether they would be fit enough for call-up…

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U-boats weren't a new menace in WWII — the Kaiser's navy used them to great effect against transatlantic convoys during WWI…

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There are good exhibits of all the equipment — including these rifles — used in the trenches in WWI…

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These gas masks…

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…along with a gas rattle (bottom centre), which you would sound when a gas attack was suspected. A foul method of warfare…

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A porthole from the liner RMS Lusitania, sunk by a U-boat, with the loss of nearly 1200 lives. This event started a wave of anger towards the Germans from the USA, although it would still be a further two years before they joined the war…

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Excellent dioramas of trench warfare…

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…and some full-scale replicas. I'm too tall for trench warfare…
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How close does combat get, that you have to mount a bayonet on your revolver?
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This quote says it all…

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At last — an aeroplane
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A Nieuport 17, flown by Canadian Lt (later Air Marshall) Billy Bishop VC…

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As the war continued in its terrible stalemate of attrition, machinery got more efficient…

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…and air-burst shrapnel was an efficient killer of those not sheltering in bunkers…

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Away from the mud and shrapnel, perhaps, but the aviators had little to defend themselves with and their life-expectancy wasn't high…

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This German field gun was about to be overrun, so the crew detonated a shell in it…

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This machine gun was captured by the Germans on the Russian front — then captured again on Vimy Ridge by the Canadians…

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Hitler's car! No points for make/model/year…

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A new set of audiovisual cues drag us towards WWII…

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Another bloody Link Trainer…
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The Battle of the Atlantic — probably the most important of the war. It was apparently the one Churchill was most concerned about…

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If you've seen — or read — The Cruel Sea (and if you haven't — why not?), then you'll recognise this model as being that of a Flower class Corvette, which formed the backbone of convoy escorts across the Atlantic — many manned by Canadian crews…

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This is what they were trying to avoid taking delivery of. Anti-submarine warfare was in its infancy at the start of the war, but, by the end, U-boat crews were effectively going on a suicide mission whenever they left their home port. If you're interested in this part of WWII, I can recommend The Battle for The Atlantic by Jonathan Dimbleby — I have it as an audiobook.

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The models in the museum are really top-notch…

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Amongst other wartime ephemera, they have an Enigma machine

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The 88 mm flak (anti-aircraft) gun was a much-feared weapon — as it was when it was used against troops and light armour…

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A later model Spitfire — not sure which, but it has cannons in the wings and bulges in the underside of the wing to accommodate the ammunition…

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Very unwell looking STUG III, taken out during a battle on the Gothic Line…

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Slightly happier looking Sherman. This tank — Forceful III — was one of 69 tanks deployed — and the only one of those to have remained in action until VE Day, although it was struck by enemy shells during combat…

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Several captured pieces of hardware, like this PAK 38, and the splendidly named Nebelwurfer multi-barrelled rocket launcher…

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…known to the allies as Moaning Minnie…

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Plenty of iconic WWII German weaponry — the Schmeisser MP40;

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The Luger pistol…

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…and the Walther P-38.

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To round off the WWII part, there's a balcony overlooking a display of tanks of all eras…

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As well as a CF-101 Voodoo…

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Re-entering the halls, there's what I first take to be a Bren-gun carrier. In fact, it is based on one, but carries a flamethrower…

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…and is designate the Wasp…

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There's a display commemorating the Holocaust — with a quote saying “This is why we went to war”…

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There's one of those folding paratroop bikes again…

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Our journey continues into the Cold War…

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As well as being a founding NATO member, Canada has also taken part in several UN Peacekeeping operations...

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Notably in Rwanda…

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Croatia…

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…and Cyprus, where they man the border between Greek and Turkish Cyprus…

Enough. I've seen as much of people killing others as I need today…

I wander down to the café, where I have a rather good 'Smashed Cheeseburger Combo'…

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I pay my parking fee, then steer the car about five klicks to the Days Inn, where, despite being too early, the desk staff check me in :-).

I use a trolley to get my luggage up to my fifth-floor room…

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Turn the ac to Ceres, and start uploading pics…
 
Late in the programme, they fitted it with a vast mechanical arm, so they could wrangle satellites in and out of the cargo bay...

Well, the Canadians made that... :-)

A distantish Canadian relative of mine, Steven Glenwood MacLean, was payload specialist on a couple of shuttle missions and operated that thing, apparently he was the first Canadian to do so :nod
 
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11th June 2025

I don't sleep well — no particular reason I can fathom. I get up and get ready for the day, then go in search of a diner for breakfast…

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That looks good — right next door to a bio-test laboratory…
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From their extensive menu

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… I choose the “Hungry Man”, which is quickly delivered, along with my travel mug full of coffee and my flask being filled with iced water…:dukegirl

It was delicious. I decide that today is going to be a slow one — perhaps catching up on some sleep and getting ready to drive back down towards Toronto. Today's forecast is for 28°C and high humidity, whereas the next few days show a drop in temperature.

I fill up with fuel at a corner Esso station — the Mustang is doing 37.8mpg…
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I get back to the hotel and dial the ac to Ganymede and relax…
 
Another superb report Mike .... thank you :thumby:

Keep it coming please

:beerjug:
 
11th June 2025 - (cont)

I spend the day being bone idle — catching up on some correspondence and reading. At about 1700, I decide it's time to investigate the Persian restaurant that's attached to the hotel — the Persis Grill…

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As expected, it's very quiet this early in the evening — only one couple are eating as I enter…

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The lovely Mitra seats me and talks me through the menu…

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…as I haven't tried Persian food before, although much is familiar from Greece and Turkey…

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I eventually decide on Torsch Kebab…

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…with Shrin Polo (“Sweet Rice”),

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…and a Corona…

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I first get served a creamy mushroom soup…

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…which was great…

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The main course arrives with a salad, which I leave until the end…
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It's absolutely delicious.

After I've finished, I have a chat with Mitra, as she doesn't have any customers. She's Iranian, but moved to Georgia (the country) seven years ago, and then on to Canada a year ago. She had to leave her daughter in Georgia with family when she came here, but she'll be joining her here at the end of June…:clap

I often wonder at the sheltered life I've led. Mitra spent six years without a passport or other papers in Georgia — the sword of Damocles hanging over her head, that, by some whim of government (I'm looking at you USA
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), she could be deported back to Iran without notice. What kind of stress does that cause, and how do you live with it?

Her eyes light up when she speaks of her daughter — I wish them both well, and tip heavily…:-)

I get the lift to my room and start preliminary packing — I'm heading for Oshawa tomorrow…
 
12th June 2025

An average night's sleep — I wake at about 0530 and listen to a podcast and gently drift off again. I awake at about 0830 and go about the short job of abluting and finishing my packing. I take the lift to the ground floor to pick up a trolley, then, with my luggage loaded onto it, make my way to the car park and stuff most of it in the boot (trunk). I return the trolley and my keys and thank Merrill at reception — it's been a pleasant stay…

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First stop — breakfast…
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I return to the bio-test laboratory, which is well populated this morning, and this time order the “Meat lover's Omelette”…

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…which arrives quickly and is great…

Lori, the sole waitress, whisks my coffee mug away and returns with it full of coffee with milk… :-)

Whilst eating, I ponder routes on Waze. As ever, it wants to put me on the main highway towards Toronto, but I'm fed up with driving on — effectively — motorways, so choose a slower route…

It's 19℃, with about 50% cloud cover and a bit of a breeze, so I put the roof down and follow directions out of town.

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To begin with, I'm steered down divided highways, but after a few kilometres this changes to a two-way road, with a speed limit of 80kph…

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This is more like it. It's about 21℃ now, just about perfect weather to be tootling around with the roof down…

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…and my deviation away from major routes is soon rewarded, as we come across the first collection of old cars of the trip…

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Plenty of points available for make/model/year…:-)

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Come on — this one's easy:D

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How about that for a pickup?

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They all have prices in the windows…

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Which are — ambitious…

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…and which I'll share with you when they've all been identified…

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Weird little thing…

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Understated little number…

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Likely not owned by a shrinking violet…
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No prizes for guessing the VW Beetle…

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…which is in lovely condition, saving for the fact that it's still a VW Beetle…

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Goodness knows what this is…

I have a mental image of the garage owner setting the prices on the cars…

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Anyway — let's get back on the road…

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A few klicks down the road, I pull off for a leg stretch at a picnic area. It's beautiful, and the air is thick with dragonflies…

I finish my coffee and set back off…

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See — you don't get cool barns like this on the main roads, do you?

At length, I'm steered back onto the main highway. After an hour or so, I drop into a Tim's in a service area…

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I get my mug refilled with coffee with milk, and buy a box of Timbits…

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OMG…

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…what have I done?

My phone connects automatically to the Wi-Fi and I upload some pics and check my email. Good news from the people that are cleaning my patio and driveway — they'll be doing the job on Monday (their first postponement was for the day I got back). Thankfully, this time they told me by email, rather than ringing me at 0530… :D

I'm also contacted by a company that monitors my power usage and contracts; to be told I'm approaching the end of an agreement and can save £260 over the next year by signing up for a new one. It turns out the cheapest deal is signing a new agreement with my current provider (see what I did there?), so I go through the rigmarole of changing things over. In no time, I'm done.

And the box is empty…
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I waddle out to the car and rejoin the highway. There are a hundred or so motorcyclists travelling in two vast convoys…

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I watch them all turn off into the next service area — good luck to anyone behind them trying to get fuel in a hurry…
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I arrive at the Best Western Plus at Durham at about 1530, and I'm quickly checked in. Slightly unusually, there's a set of stairs to the check-in desk, but a side entrance with a lift, should you need it.

I go to the side door and follow the corridor, past where they keep the werewolf…

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…and enter my huge room…

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I feel so full…
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Come on — this one's easy:D

IMG_4694-X4.jpg


How about that for a pickup?



They all have prices in the windows…

IMG_4702-X4.jpg


Understated little number…



Likely not owned by a shrinking violet…
lol8.gif


IMG_4704-X4.jpg



IMG_4998-X4.jpg


…and enter my huge room…



I feel so full…
fpalm.gif
paul edgcombes padded room :D

nineties plymouth prowler pre 65 bug ford stacklight galaxie?

z3m some kinda mini :D c3 corvette pick up is f100 early fifties

theres a jaaaaag post 65 thunderbird the dodge dont know without looking

the coupe is a buick (the things on the wings/fenders) 40s?
 
paul edgcombes padded room :D

nineties plymouth prowler pre 65 bug ford stacklight galaxie?

z3m some kinda mini :D c3 corvette pick up is f100 early fifties

theres a jaaaaag post 65 thunderbird the dodge dont know without looking

the coupe is a buick (the things on the wings/fenders) 40s?
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Good effort Hairnet
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