This is the bridge we crossed in Canada. It's pretty cool, and if I were an encyclopedia I'd tell you the name and the history of it, but I'm not. Instead I'll just post a pretty picture of it and let you do the grunt work if you feel the need.
We got to the hotel in Vancouver and ditched the car because I'm a nervous driver and we decided it was for the best. We walked to the transit center thing and rode the Canadian equivalent of the Max train thing in Portland into town. We walked and walked and walked and ate a falafel and walked some more.
We found the expo center and got some chai latte's to wash that crazy onion taste from the felafel's out of our mouths. It start to rain while we were order, and by the time we got outside it was pouring and then it started to hail and then it started to REALLY hail and then there where huge organ-shaking thunders and lightnings. We walked around under the overhang watching float planes land in the crazy weather until it cleared up a little.
The storm leaving.This is a building that's still under construction. It looked neat so I thought I'd take a picture. It's going to have a killer view when it's finished. Right next to it and a little behind it in the picture there's the floating gas station where all the planes were filling up.
Dharyll showed me this crazy graffiti wall somewhere in Vancouver. Don't ask me where it is because I don't think I'll ever be able to find it again.
Van Gogh, graffiti style.
Tiger lady! Huzzah!
And then we went to China town.
The gate.
Big kitties.
A memorial statue for all of the railway workers. From far away it looks like they're flying so I thought it was a superhero statue. I guess it kind of is, if you want to think about it that way. Flying shovel man!
I just really liked these flowers.
Wooden gumby!
The second day we went to Granville Island. I really liked it, even more than Vancouver itself. There's something about a shanty town and a grisly murder in Granville's past, but I didn't want to read Wikipedia's page far enough to find out more. Today, there are cool buildings all over the place (I thought mom and dad might like some of them) and crepe stands. It's just a neat little place, especially when the weather gets a little less nippy than it was.
Cool building.
Canadian guard: where do you live?
And here it is.
So that was our trip. Oh yeah, on the way back home we stopped at Trader Joe's just south of Seattle got some things, drove drove drove and then I realized that I forgot my chai tea mix, the one thing I stopped to get. So we stopped at another one right along the highway slightly further south. Well worth it.
Hey, we should go to Vancouver some time!
2 comments:
you painted a lovely picture with your customs story :-)
p.s. you should NEVER be a drug mule
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