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{Hello, mountains! My view of Calgary as we descended...} |
I had high hopes for Calgary. First of all, I did a little
research prior to booking travel and since I had that awful 6:00am flight, I
figured I would do a few touristy things when I got into town at 11:30am.
However, I did not account for all of the snow and frosty temps. It was COLD
and super snowy, as in snowing pretty much every day I was there. And so, being
the cultured Midwest girl that I am, I went and got a manicure. Because, hey—a
lot of people are looking at my hands and fingers as I point and gesture during
my training on the robot. And I think this shellac business has gotten me
addicted—I never ever used to wear nail polish, unless it was clear, and now, I
find myself choosing the most unpredictable colors (“Kiss Me, I’m Brazilian”?
Yes, please. Also, does anyone else think OPI just recycles their colors and
gives them new names? I feel like I have an awful lot of pinks that are
suspiciously similar in shade…). So, yep, instead of climbing to the top of Calgary Tower, which is what I had planned to do,
I instead stuck closer to the ground and drove fearlessly to the nail salon and
then on down the road to my hotel, where I penned my oh-so-eloquent previous
blog post and caught up on House of Cards.
(Oh. My. Gosh. Addicted.)
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{...And my view of Calgary when I landed. Snow, sleet, and cold. Boo. Would you want to climb up 1228 meters (however tall that is) above sea level in this weather? Yeah, me neither.} |
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{A little blurry, but check out the temp up there in the right corner. This is what I came out to each morning. Also, on my last day there, I finally asked the hotel clerk why there were outlets in front of the parking spots. She said sometimes it's so cold, you have to plug your car in to get juice for it to start. You have to plug your car into an outlet. That's COLD, friends.} |
I actually stayed in a town outside of Calgary called
Strathmore. It was kind of a small town and it reminded me of somewhere in
central Kansas (the smell of cattle wafted through the air as I arrived). I don’t know if
this is common knowledge, but Calgary was very proud to be known as the
“Gateway to the NEW West,” and they also host a pretty serious rodeo
apparently. I saw a lot of cowboy hats and big ol’ trucks, which is not what
comes to mind when I picture Canada. So that was interesting. Otherwise,
Strathmore was really snowy and cold and it had maybe the best restaurant I’ve
found in my travels so far. It was a take-away Japanese place, but you could
get a bento box with stir-fry, sushi and dumplings or a springroll for like
$12. I ate there maybe three times in my three day stay (yeah, that’s every
night). Edo Japan, please come to Kansas. You’d do well. I promise.
I also discovered Aero chocolates, which are ah-mazing. I
think the Hershey’s Bubbles are a knockoff, but these are flavored chocolates
and they’re in the shape of little balls. The orange were my fav. Let’s
see…what else, what else? The accents in this part of Canada are waaaaaaay more
noticeable, eh? The “oh” sound is much more pronounced, and “eh” really is part
of their vernacular. They use it like “yeah?” or “okay?”. Pretty funny, but I
have noticed that I have a habit of mimicking wherever I am. When I was down in
the southern states before Christmas, my draaaawl came out. And up in Canada,
I’m all about the “oot” sound. Although, up north, they all thought I had a
southern accent. Ha!
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{Candy pic? Check. Isn't my life on the road simply stimulating?} |
My journey home was where the real adventure started. Because
of a scheduling snafu, I ended up having to travel to Canada a day earlier than
expected, and come home a day earlier as well. So…I got booked on the red-eye
home. I left my pharmacy at 2pm (after working since 7am); drove to Calgary;
flew to San Francisco at 6:30pm; flew to Houston at 1am; and finally flew home
to KC at 8:30am. It was a lonnnnng day/night. Also, let me add to my previous
list of People You Don’t Want To Sit Next To On An Airplane:
Guy Who Never Stops Moving. First of
all, I knew this guy was trouble when I sat down in my seat on the plane and I
could smell his breath as I hugged the window. Halitosis? It’s real. It’s
rough. Secondly, he picked his nose. Not just like, swipe and be done. I’m
talking, he picked with his fingers,
rutting it around in there consistently throughout the three hour flight.
Picked and flicked. Barf. And he did. not. sit. still. He was moving his legs;
he was rolling his head around; he was leaning forward in his seat and putting
his head on the seat in front of him; he was hogging the armrest and moving
into my territory, so I may have had to throw some ‘bows, if you know what I
mean. It was annoying, to say the least. Let’s just say, I’m glad to be back
Stateside and let’s all cross our fingers that the flight to Buffalo this
weekend is uneventful and there is NO MORE SNOW.