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JBlavl

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Posts posted by JBlavl

  1. Starting at Drakkar on Wed night then heading for the Casino then the Delta and back to Drakkar on a 3 day loop. Already book at Drakkar both start and finish days. Figure small place and want to get the place I want. They have a reasonable cancellation policy (24hr). When I went to book at both the casino and delta it was either pay up front, non refundable for lowest fare, or pay a little more for no fee cancellation. But fine print says only no fee cancellation up to 48 hours in advance. So question is are these places large enough that I shouldn't have a problem getting a room if I call at lunch day of our ride there? Casino will be a Thursday night, Delta will be a Friday night. I'd hate to book ahead and have weather or a break down etc change plans and still get boned with a room I don't use. Also don't want to not book then get stuck without a room because of a hockey tourney or something.

  2. On 2/20/2018 at 10:24 AM, Revxman68 said:

    Question on a 3 day pass, do they mark down the time like Maine does?

    Reason being if I buy a pass upon my arrival at 2pm it allows you to ride that afternoon, 2 full days and up until 2pm the last day the it expires.

    Please let me know as we are planning a trip.

    Thank you,

     

     

     

     

    They've never put the time on the 3 day passes I've got the last couple years. Just the date you want to start riding and the date you finish.

  3. 12 minutes ago, stupe said:

    I try to keep it under 225 because the group sometimes grows to 10+ guys.  175 - 200 would be ideal.  But if the trails are fast, then 250 is do-able.  Is Maniwaki a good launching point?  I've been up through Mont-Laurier and up 13 but never West of that so I'm not familiar with hotels. 

    Auberge Du Draveur is a fine starting point in Maniwaki. No point in driving farther than necessary. From Lake George you are about a 6 hour drive from there. You may want to check and see what conditions are like in the area if you are thinking about going soon. I know they just had a storm come through earlier this week but up until then I had not seen a lot of grooming activity in the area. 

  4. Domaine L'Ombre du Vent is in Parent and it's a great place to stay. Very nice. Very clean. Sleeps 5 or more easily. Price is very attractive. Beds are rock hard but other than that I can't complain about a thing. See pictures attached.

    http://www.ombreduvent.com/home.html

    Food around Parent? eh. Not a lot of choices for a fine dining meal but you can find something at Hotel Central right in town that'll fill your belly.

    I did the exact same loop you are thinking about doing 2 years ago. Did it in 3 days. If you wanted to break it up more I think Pourvoirie Fer A Cheval looked like a decent place to stay. I heard Hotel Tamarac in Clova may be open again, the school house in Clova I also heard is nice. And I've heard Pavillon La Verendrye is an ok place to stay. When I was there it didn't look like much for sleeping accommodations but I didn't stay so don't take my word on it. 

    Good luck and have fun. It's an awesome loop that'll take you out in the middle of god's country!

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  5. 6 hours ago, Fozzy said:

    It's not the first time I hear of dealers pulling parts from their showroom sleds in Quebec. Impressive. I think you would have a hard time finding a dealer to do that in Ontario.

    I've heard this of Quebec dealers too. Amazing. That happened here and you pulled into my dealer like that you'd be waiting a week just for them to confirm the problem.

  6. GFS says it's going to be wet Friday.

    image.thumb.png.95aa3dba4df3da856fcfb4909c022703.png

    Canadian Model says it's going to be wet as well:

    image.thumb.png.a9bbb7cf40b766a27fa13d65a213032b.png

    The Euro also shows precipitation:

    image.png.3f8e42ecd43d682ab12ea714a5959934.png

    And it shows that it's going to be above freezing:

    image.png.3d912ce3df741f1609474ecb4e6ad596.png

    These all seem to be in pretty good agreement for Friday but I would bet they change before Friday comes. That's a long ways out for a storm this complex.

  7. 21 hours ago, Shore1066 said:

    My only concern would be the engineer that designed the sled put rivets in that area for a reason. If other fasterns would work they would have installed them there. Besides if removing and replacing rivets each year may be a great reason to get yourself a air rivrting tool. A present for you from you. Lol 

    Engineers are tasked with using the cheapest solution that is practical for the application. Pop rivets on a manufacturing line are installed in seconds and they do the job and cost almost nothing compared to a lot of the other fasteners mentioned here. Serviceability is low on the priority list for the manufacturers. 

  8. 51 minutes ago, iceman said:

    Most times it’s a matter the french speaker being intimidated and shy. Many more people than you think understand english quite well if you speak slowly. You would be surprised to know there are many who can understand what you are saying so be warned. Responding to you in English is a whole different story. Those who travel alot obviously have had more exposure to english and therefore are a bit more comfortable “practicing” their english with you. This is not the case for most here and most may know some english but are very shy to try to speak it as they very rarely do so. Being here almost 8 1/2 years now its a difficult language “french” and I do just fine but it’s surely not easy to master(i doubt I ever will). As far as the article the argument has been going on for years and I understand they want to keep their culture intact “i get it.” But for business and travel it certainly would benefit most to have more english skills. That being said it’s not gonna change anytime soon. The kids take english in school (trust me mrs Ice teaches english here) from elementary through high school. However they don’t  use it and as with any skill with no practice you will be bad at it or not be able to do it at all.

    Some tips...

    1 speak slowly 

    2 one person speak at a time 

    3 encourage the people who do speak some english and tell them thank you for trying 

    Merci Bonsoir

     

    For sure iceman I have run into this situation before as well. A couple of times in fact. Last year we were sitting on the ice near shore of Lac St. Jean when we were all talking in English a man we had passed sitting on a snow bank overheard us and came over to say hi. He said it was very rare for him to hear people speaking in English and wanted to practice with us. He was relatively good for never speaking and not being of the newer generation and we enjoyed chatting with a local. Had a similar situation when we were lost around St. michelle des saints 10 years ago. Ran across a man walking down a trail hunting when we stopped for directions. We gathered quickly that he had a hard time with English but we worked through it with him and got the information we needed and thanked him and went on our way. I can come up with a few more scenarios but my point being I know where you are coming from and I at least find that is part of the appeal of going to Quebec. Learning about the language and culture but understanding I am in the minority end of the language barrier and more often than not feel like the fool in the conversation than the french speaking person, and that's ok. It's part of the experience to me. I wish I was better at French so I could practice my French with them. But the experience I mentioned above was very different. The waitress had an attitude anyone could pick up on. More or less laughed at us when we were trying to use google translate. After finding out later she knew at least some English and picking up and thinking about her body language more after the fact made me realize she had done it on purpose. It was deception at it's finest. 

  9. This article reminds me of going to the snack bar in St-David-de-Falardeau last year. When our waitress came over we politely in French asked if she spoke English. She said no and got rather cold to us. Granted we know very little French we were tying to be nice in asking a couple questions and using google translator and the waitress was clearly very annoyed with us and paid very little attention to us after that when we were the only people in there. We were being very respectful and doing our best to bridge the language barrier but when we went to pay she gave me back my change and said what my change was in English. I said you do know English and she just smiled and walked away. She must subscribe to this nationalist movement the article talked about. If she knows English and just doesn't want to speak it thats fine but I didn't see any justification in her attitude after she knew we did not speak French. I mean we were there spending money in her establishment. We didn't have to be there. In general I've found that speaking English on the western part of the province is more accepting. The farther east I've gone I've encountered similar situations to what I just mentioned. 

  10. Ding ding ding Alain you nailed it. Thanks. Looking at the trail map it doesn't look like the trail goes right through there now but it is close. Was so long ago its hard to remember but maybe we skirted the road to find the place. Mystery solved!

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