Finally, a good excuse for not blogging for over a week. :-) We spent spring break in Montreal, which is a lovely city (I’d move there in a heartbeat) but perhaps not at its finest in early April. Our weather was fairly awful but that didn’t keep us from having a great time.
This is the view from our hotel. From left to right the buildings are Christ Church Cathedral, the Tour de Catedral office tower (built on land that originally belonged to the church), and
Here are my kids (don’t tell them, I promised I’d never put them on my blog) standing at the observation area at the top of
One way they’ve dealt with the weather in
With a llama.
I did manage to sneak in a visit to one of the yarn stores. I’ve never seen a store like it.
There are rows of boxes full of cones of very fine yarns of all types and colors. If you like you can choose up to 12 and they’ll wind them onto bobbins for you. I was more than a little overwhelmed by the sheer number of choices. They also have a variety that they’ve already blended. One of those really appealed to me, and I decided that I wasn’t likely to do better (at least not in anything resembling a reasonable amount of time, and while my daughter did humor me in visiting a yarn store – not to mention walking 2 miles with only vague directions to find it – I didn’t want to push it. They had 2.5 pounds of the color I liked and assured me that would be enough for a sweater. You will not believe the price. It was $25 Canadian, which works out to just about $22 US. Unbelievable.
Yeah, it’s a little bright. What can I say – I love pink. :-)
And my other favorite purchase? Yarn Harlot’s new book. I hadn’t been able to find a copy at home, and I was inordinately pleased to buy it in her home country. And nothing could be more perfect than spending an evening reading a travel book about knitting while on vacation.
2 comments:
I was in Montreal when they were building that mall. They had the whole cathedral up on stilts, and dug undernteath it. It was a bizare sight, let me tell you. The story behind the whole thing was that the foundations of the cathedral needed fixing, and they couldn't afford to do it. So the cathedral got a new foundation, a place for its bookstore in the mall, and its foundations fixed.
Just finished reading your post. Montreal is only a two hour drive from Ottawa, and that shop looks like it might be worth it. What part of town was it in?
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