Five ideas for family fun in Ottawa this Thanksgiving weekend

Looking for some family fun this Thanksgiving long weekend in Ottawa? Here’s five ideas! (Edited to add: please note this post was written in October 2009. The last four points still apply, but the Lego exhibit was, alas, in 2009 only. In 2012 I wrote a new post with five MORE ideas for Thanksgiving activities for families in Ottawa!)

1. The Lego exhibit at the Museum of Science and Technology. Free with museum admission, this is a wonderful exhibit in one of Ottawa’s best locations for family entertainment. We checked it out last weekend, and all three boys were thrilled with the hands-on Lego displays, and the amazing exhibits created by master Lego builders. They’ve put out separate tables of Lego for the big kids and Duplo for littler fingers. Even though we’ve got bin upon bin of Lego at home, we still spent the best part of an hour just in this part of the museum alone.

2. The butterfly exhibit at Carleton University. We tried this one year, but I’m just bug-phobic enough that I was uncomfortable with the idea of all those dangly legs and antennae. If you’ve got a higher threshold for insects, though, the kids will love having the chance to see so many beautiful creatures up close and personal.

3. Parc Omega. The fall colours are at their peak this weekend; why not drive the couple of hours out toward Montebello to visit Parc Omega? We visited last year around this time, and the scenery was spectacular. Here’s my post about Parc Omega from last year.

4. Saunders Farm. An Ottawa fall classic! There’s corn mazes, a Discovery Barn, a Barnyard Treehouse, a “haunted hayride” and — for the older kids — the Barn of Terror. We paid $60 for our family of five last year and found it was worth every penny. We might check it out ourselves again on Monday if the weather holds.

5.Take a hike! Let’s face it, the weather might not be ideal right now but the forecast calls for six months of winter, so you might as well get out and enjoy fall while it lasts! Two of our favourites are Mud Lake and Stony Swamp.

What are you doing this holiday weekend?

(Edited to add: Don’t forget to check out my updated post written in 2012 with five more ideas for Ottawa Thanksgiving fun for families!)

Apple picking 2009

Apple picking is one of my favourite fall traditions. We’d never been before 2005, but now I can’t imagine going a year without a trip to the orchard. This year, we headed back to our first favourite, Kilmarnock Orchard. It’s the better part of an hour’s drive from Ottawa, but the drive is beautiful on a bright blue autumn morning, and if you make a stop at nearby Merrickville on your way home, it’s a lovely way to spend a day together.

Brothers

This tree is not indicative of the size of tree you’ll find at Kilmarnock, but I was charmed by it. It’s a Charlie Brown Apple Tree!

Charlie Brown apple tree

Lucas was even more adorable than usual. He loves apples, and calls any round-ish fruit an “abble” — nectarines, peaches, and tomatoes are all “abbles”. He was beyond excited to see not only the tractor-pulled “train” that took us out to the orchard, but the fact that there were apples as far as his eye could see. If he said “Abble!!” (you can actually hear the exclamation points) once, he said it five dozen times.

Lucas eating apple again

Why should you pick the apples way up there on those branches, when there are tonnes of apples just lying around in the grass, waiting to be collected?

Ground apples

(I’d like to assure you that in the picture above, he’s actually eating an apple I picked for him instead of one of the ground apples, but the odds are only about 50/50. *shrugs*)

I love the apples, I love the chance to get outside, I love to watch them enjoying themselves, I love to notice how much they’ve grown in the year since we last went apple picking. But what I really love? The chance to spend time with my menfolk.

Family portrait

(It’s not the best portrait, but I love the matching expressions on Lucas’s and Tristan’s face!)

I had better success with individual portraits. The orchard light in September is lovely!

My menfolk

(Lucas is in B&W because his skin tone was really uneven in colour, reflecting the red and green of the tractor we were in, and I haven’t figured out how to fix that in Photoshop yet! Besides, I like portraits in B&W.)

It was well after lunch time by the time we’d picked our fill, meandered the length of the orchard, gone for an extra train run, and picked up a home-made apple-caramel pie, so we scooted up to Merrickville for a bite to eat and a wander down the main strip.

fries and ketchup

Merrickville is a picturesque little town right on the Rideau Canal, a haven for the artistic sorts. These are just a few of the things we enjoyed.

Merrickville mosaic

So now we have three heaping serving bowls of apples, mostly Lobos and Macs. (I’m disappointed, my faves are Empires but because of the cruddy summer they’re slow in ripening this year.) Do you have any good apple recipes to share? I’m particularly looking for an easy apple crisp recipe. Mmmmm, abbles!

Perfect apple

(There are even more photos on Flickr! And about 150 on the computer that I didn’t post but don’t have the heart to delete…)

Ottawa’s Hidden Treasures: Valley View little animal farm

I‘m on a “Ottawa’s Hidden Treasures” tear these days! The photos from this post were actually taken a couple of weeks ago, but I’m just getting around to posting them now. No wonder we’re not getting any housework done — every time the sun shines, I feel the need to pack the boys up and celebrate with an excursion of some sort. Lucky for us, Ottawa never lets us down — there’s always something fun for a family to do.

We’ve been visiting Valley View Little Animal Farm since we moved to Barrhaven six years ago, but I suspect that a lot of people have overlooked this little gem. It’s right on the outskirts of Barrhaven, off Fallowfield Rd between Moodie and Eagleson. Admission is $6.50 per person, and kiddies two and under are free.

Valley View is the perfect place for the toddler to early school age set. There’s fun stuff to climb on at the front of the park, and a small barn with goats, chickens, rabbits and the usual petting zoo type creatures that you can feed by hand. My boys have always been fans of the dozens of metal yellow Tonka trucks strewn around near the entrance… when they were toddlers, I think we could’ve just paid our $6 to get in, play with the trucks for three hours and then leave again without actually looking at the rest of the farm!

Behind the small animals barn, there’s a path that meanders beside a duck pond on one side and some bigger animals in pens on the other side. This blue-eyed meanie scared the heck out of me when I got a bit too close — even though there was a fence in between us, I still jumped back hard enough to fall on my arse when he hissed angrily at my obnoxious camera in his face.

211b:365 Goose

This donkey was a lot more placid. Beloved and I agreed, there is something in his soulful eyes and “pet me, please!” demeanor that highly resembles our Golden-Shepherd mix, Katie.

donkey

Other animals include peacocks and llamas, deer and ponies, pigs and some very unfriendly emus. They also have some gorgeous horses.

The animals are my favourite part, and the boys like them well enough, but what they really want to do is run wild over the half-acre or so of play structures strewn around the end of the park. They’ve added quite a few since the last time we visited. There’s a few of the traditional climber-and-slide combinations, but they have a whole bunch of custom structures in adventure-inspiring shapes like pirate ships, trucks and airplanes. There must be a dozen or more in various shapes and sizes and styles.

Tristan airplane

I really didn’t think we were going to be able to get Lucas out of this tractor-train combination. He would stand aside to let other kids have a turn at the wheel, but would not, under any circumstance, consider actually leaving the vehicle for the best part of 20 minutes. (Is it me or do the terrible twos start earlier with each kid?)

Lukey tractor

You know how just about every city playground has the same basic look and feel, with largely the same sorts of stuff? The thing I like best about Valley View, in addition to the animals and the small, friendly feel to the place, is the fact that they have such unique things for the kids to explore, from the hand-built play structures and the sea of Tonka trucks to this really neat see-saw built from old wagon wheels.

tristan see saw

New this year, they’ve also opened up a whole new section with a farm machinery museum. It’s 365 heaven back there! I can’t remember what this does, but I love looking at it!

211:365 Contraption

And what is it about milk jugs that make them so interesting? Or is that just me?

Milkjugs

Something about this row of tobacco tins gave the farm museum barns a feel of authenticity. This is one of my favourite shots of the day, for some reason I don’t quite understand.

Tobacco tins

Of course, no trip to the farm is complete without inspecting the old tractor beside the equally weathered barn!

Tractor

Oh wait, you mean we’re not here to indulge in my endless quest for photo opportunties? This is about the kids, you say? Well then, no trip to Valley View is complete without a ride on the tractor train around the corn fields, sunflower valley and the pumpkin patch!

Valleyview train

I’d forgotten how much I love Valley View in the year or two since we’ve been, and it’s practially around the corner from us. We tend to go to the Experimental Farm when we need our farm fix, simply because we have the annual membership, but there’s a sweet quaintness to Valley View that makes it unique and worth the trip to the far southwest corner of town. This is a great place for a sunny autumn day family adventure – definitely one of Ottawa’s best kept secrets!

Ottawa’s Hidden Treasures: Britannia Beach sunset

For more than 15 years, I lived in Ottawa completely oblivious to Britannia Beach. I’d visited Mooney’s Bay, Lac Phillip, Meech Lake and scores of others, but none came close to the Lake Huron beaches of my childhood growing up in London. Then one happy summer, we discovered Britannia Beach, and it’s just not summer without at least a few easy trips out to enjoy its wide sandy beach and surprisingly clean water.

For all the times we’d visited Britannia Beach during the day, though, it never occured to me until this summer that it would make a spectacular spot to watch the sun set. It’s free, it’s close, and it’s a perfect end to a pretty summer day.

Saturday night we checked it out ourselves. The evening was so perfectly clear, there was nothing to inhibit our view as the sun slowly dipped toward the horizon directly across the river from us.

229c:365 Sunset on the beach

Boys being boys, they didn’t have quite the attention span for the setting sun that I did. Lucas led the chase after some feathered friends.

1 Chasing duckies

The big boys were more interested in climbing the boulders on the breakwater.

Hiking the rocks

There were huge boulders and gravel, but not a lot of skipping-sized stones. That didn’t stop the boys from enjoying the timeless pastime of throwing rocks into the water, though.

3 Jumping

(I love how his feet are clear off the ground!)

I don’t think we could have chosen a more perfect night to watch the sun set. There were a few other families out there, but not nearly so many as you might expect, had you known that you’d get to watch this.

229b:365 Sun set across the water

It didn’t take long for the sun to disappear almost entirely, leaving one last kiss of sunshine on the horizon.

Duckie

(Tip: to make sure your camera registers the tones and saturated colours of a gorgeous sunset or sunrise, meter for the sky just to the right or left of the sun.)

After considerable debate, I chose this one as the picture of the day.

229:365 Last kiss of sun

This is one little adventure we’ll be adding to our regular repetoire of local favourites. Matter of fact, I can see making a full-day adventure out of a hike around Mud Lake, a picnic dinner, and then sunset on the beach. Who needs a cottage or camping, anyway, when you can have all this and still sleep in your own comfy bed?

Another excellent Ottawa family adventure: Mud Lake

I don’t know how the weather was in your neck of the woods this Labour Day weekend, but here in Ottawa we got the sun and mild temperatures that July forgot. This means that the mile-long to-do list was promptly abandoned in favour of some end-of-summer outdoor family fun. So much fun, in fact, that I’ll need two posts to cram in all the photos!

First, let me tell you about one of Ottawa’s true hidden treasures: Mud Lake. Never heard of it, right? Me neither! I came across it in looking at someone’s list of great locations for photography in Ottawa, and had wanted to check it out all summer. Yesterday morning was clear and the weather was perfect, so we recruited UberGeek and a few of his boys to join us as we went off in search of nature and a bit of exercise.

Mud Lake is here, just a smidge to the east of the Britannia Yacht Club. According to the NCC:

A patch of wilderness in the middle of an urban setting, Mud Lake is an amazing area of forest and wetlands. Located in Ottawa’s west end, Mud Lake is home to hundreds of species of wildlife, with raccoons, frogs, turtles and foxes, to name but a few. This ecologically significant urban natural landscape is also prime birding territory, with thousands of birdwatchers coming each year to observe hundreds of different species. A walk through this easy-to-access urban jungle provides an exciting escape from city life.

We parked on Cassels Street, just down from the Britannia Filtration Plant, and we could see the entrance to the trail from the street. We briefly debated bringing the stroller, knowing neither the quality of the trail nor the length of the hike, but decided against it in the end. If you’ve got a durable stroller with big wheels, you could easily bring it through — or you could, as we did, spend the entire hike caught between the leaping, running, adventuresome five-to-eight year old boys and the toddling, curious, must-stop-to-inspect-this-dirt-even-though-I-just-inspected-that-dirt-two-steps-back-and-oh-look-here’s-a-rock-and-I-must-inspect-this-pinecone-too-and-hey-did-you-see-there’s-some-more-dirt-over-here-and-oh-a-stick-and-no-I-will-NOT-hurry-up-and-you-may-absolutely-NOT-carry-me-thank-you-very-much-oh-look-here’s-some-very-interesting-dirt-I-wonder-what-it-tastes-like 19-month old.

The very first thing we saw as we set out was a turtle sunning himself on a log in the middle of the lake. It was also the first instance of boy getting too close to the water and getting a soaker. Not too far down the trail, we came across this little dock, perfect for inspecting the frogs and fishes below, not to mention giving mothers great photo opportunities.

230:365 Mud Lake dock

This is what they were looking at:

Frog

It was just about a perfect morning for a hike. It was clear and mild, the day just starting to warm up. For the most part, the trail is clear and obvious, although there are lots of little sub-trails here and there. There were very few mosquitos out, for which I was extremely grateful. I think this guy (girl?) might have been helping out on that front.

Spider

(While we were stopped to admire this giant web — easily three or four feet across! — the chickadees started circling. Note to self, bring seed to feed the chickadees next time! I’m not much of a birder, but we came across quite a few people with binoculars, whom I’m sure were delighted with our whooping, crashing, running lot of boys!)

The trail wanders around the edges of Mud Lake, sometimes through the canopy and sometimes right up to the edge of the lake, with lots of opportunities for pretty vistas.

Explorers

Hard to believe this is smack dab in the middle of the city, isn’t it? Can you spot the goose in the riot of colours and reflections here?

Fall colours and Canada Goose

This is my favourite spot on the hike, an old wooden bridge across a tributary of the lake. You can see the hint of fall colours, and there were ducks swimming under the bridge. I stopped so long here to take pictures that the others wandered off without me!

230b:365 Bridge

There was only one point where it wasn’t completely obvious which trail to follow, and we ended up having to double back a little bit. The lake is shaped like an inverted V and I think we followed a trail that petered out right in the lee of the V, so to speak. We found our way back to the main trail, though, and finished the hike about 90 minutes after we started out, after circling the entire lake. For our crew, that might have been about 30 minutes longer than ideal, but it was still a wonderful morning out and a great way to celebrate the end of summer.

Stay tuned, and later this week I’ll show you another of Ottawa’s Hidden Treasures, almost right next door to Mud Lake!

Walking with the Dinosaurs reviewer for CBC?

I got this request from my friends at CBC radio:

I’m wondering if you happen to know anyone who’s taking their kids to the “Walking with the Dinosaurs” show this week. We had the idea to have a couple kid “reviewers” on the show — kids who are old enough to have an opinion–maybe ages 8 to 12 or so, roughly, and who are pretty chatty.

My folks are bringing the boys to the show on Saturday, but they’d like someone who sees the show on Wednesday or Thursday to participate in a kid-review on All in a Day on Friday. I said I’d be happy to put the word out on the Ottawa parents’ network and see if anybody else might be interested. Let me know if you are and I’ll pass your coordinates on to the folks at CBC radio!

Papa Lou’s Excellent Hot Air Balloon Adventure

“Hey Dani, you blog a lot about affordable adventures for family fun in Ottawa. But what do you recommend if I’ve got a wad of cash burning a hole in my pocket and a need to see the city from a different perspective?”

How about a sunset trip over the city in a hot air balloon?

216:365 Granny and Lucas

We’ve toyed with the idea of giving my Dad a hot air balloon ride as a gift for years, and finally thought the occassion of his 65th birthday in May was an excellent time to do it. It’s not cheap (in the neighbourhood of $225 per person) but worth it as a once-in-a-lifetime experience for someone who has always been fascinated by hot air balloons.

He’d scheduled a ride for last week, but a poor weather forecast caused them to scrub the flight. (Ironically, by the time the sun set that day, the clouds had passed and the winds settled — but better safe than sorry, I’m sure!) When his flight was rebooked for last night, he invited the boys and I to come out to watch the launch. He knew the boys would be fascinated – they were – and that I’m forever grubbing for unique photo opportunities.

It was a gorgeous evening, bright and clear and warm, and just watching the launch was an event in itself — I can’t imagine how excited the boys would have been if we’d actually taken off. In fact, Simon said he wasn’t overly keen on the idea, but Tristan and I would have tagged along in a heartbeat had they suddenly found room for two stowaways.

Papa Lou's Excellent Hot Air Balloon Adventure

I haven’t had the chance to check in with Papa Lou to see how he enjoyed the ride, but the smile on his face as he waved to us and drifted over the treetops was well worth the price of the gift certificate. They were headed south-east toward Gloucester based on the wind direction. Passengers apparently get a champagne picnic upon landing, and a van drives them back to the launching spot. Sounds like quite the adventure!

Well, now I know what to do the next time I’ve got a spare thousand dollars or so burning a hole in my pocket. Or, ahem, if you happen to be the proprietor of a hot air balloon company and are looking for an enthusiastic photographer/blogger to document a ride, I’m your girl! *grin*

(P.S. I know, I know, the blog content has been skewed heavily to pix over words lately. Too many pictures? The photo opportunities just keep throwing themselves at me and I can’t help but share!)

Ottawa SuperEx 2009

Looking for something fun to do with the family this week? We never miss an opportunity to visit the Ottawa SuperEx. This year, we went early in the day, gambling against a forecasted 60 per cent probability of precipitation. The rain stayed away, the lineups were surprisingly short, the sun warm and bright, and the boys had a great time. I don’t think we came away from a single carny game without a prize of some sort — just one of those great days when everything comes together.

SuperEx 2009

See the centre and right picture in the top row? This was the first year that we let Lucas go on a ride other than the carosel, largely because Tristan could ride with him. I absolutely adore these two pictures, the centre one because of the expression on Lucas’s face as he looks at Tristan — “Dude, this thing is *moving*!! Are you sure this is okay?” — and the top right one because of Tristan’s protective arm around Lucas’s shoulder. It’s little things like this that make my heart sing with love for my sweet boys. (You can see the pix above in greater detail on the Flickr set, if you like. The square crop of the mosiac just doesn’t do justice to a few of them.)

And how often do you get to feed a seven-month-old lion cub her breakfast? Talk about an irresistable opportunity for a unique photo-of-the-day!

215:365 Lion cub

The Ottawa SuperEx runs through next Sunday, August 30. It’s *not* cheap, but I’ve never felt it wasn’t worth it.

Project 365: The Vacation Edition

Can you believe I almost forgot to put up my 365 post this week? My goodness, a little sunshine appears in an otherwise damp and dreary summer and suddenly the blog is the last thing on my mind. Sheesh!

It was a busy week for photo opportunities, largely because we tried to cram an entire summer’s worth of activities into five warm and mostly sunny days. The week started on a high, with a fun birthday party and this perfect birthday cake handcrafted by my excellent friend Jojo:

193:365 Birthday cake!

Isn’t it great? I laughed out loud when I saw it, and it tasted even better than it looks. And yes, the photo was entirely edible and no, I have no idea how she did it!

On my actual birthday, we went to the beach. I love this shot, called “birthday beach bliss”:

194:365 Birthday beach bliss

This is my brother. He’s being eaten by a tyrannosaurus. His shirt pretty much says it all. (As one of my flickr friends said, ‘That’s going to leave a scar.”)

195:365 Jurassic Sean

On the Civic holiday Monday, we did something I’ve been meaning to do for years: we went to the Changing of the Guard ceremony on Parliament Hill. I have a thing for marching bands.

196c:365 Marching

I almost called this one RGB Icons — don’t you love the intense colours? That’s straight out of the camera. If only I’d had a hockey stick on me, I’d’ve been able to cover the Canadian iconic spectrum in this shot!

196b:365 Canadian icons

After the Changing of the Guard, we wandered over to Sparks Street to catch the last day of the Busker Festival. These guys, a local act called The Cow Guys, put on an excellent show with a bull whip, juggling machetes and some really impressive balancing acts.

196:365 Buskerfest revisited

As much as I love my D40 (a *lot*) I do have to say, my little Fuji Finepix point-and-shoot takes some awesome super-macro shots. I can’t get closer than 15 cm or so with even my fastest dSLR lens (I’m coveting a macro lens, but can’t justify the hundreds of dollars right now) but the little Fuji can get within 1 cm. This is one of the roses from the birthday bouquet my mom gave to me (in a yellow happy face bowl — very sweet!)

197:365 Vintage rose

(I had a lot of fun with photoshop this week! Almost all of the shots have some sort of post-processing play on them.)

I called this one “Toddler Rage.” He’s officially one and a half today, but the terrible twos have already set in. My, but the boy has a temper on him. (Mind you, I’m holding a half-eaten fudgesicle just outside the frame of the camera, and just outside of his reach. Can’t say I blame him for giving me a piece of his mind. If there were a thought bubble over his head, I imagine it would say, “I am not your dog and pony show. Get that &%$#@ camera Out. Of. My. FACE! And give me back my popsicle!!”)

198:365 Toddler rage

On Thursday, we tried to visit the Farmer’s Market at Lansdowne Park, but found out too late that it doesn’t start until 1 pm. Instead, we entertained ourselves with a wander through the Glebe to Sugar Mountain. The plethora of photo opportunities kept me content, and the boys (big and small) were thrilled with their sugary booty.

I searched the Web for the story behind this weathervane outside the Aberdeen Pavilion, but couldn’t find any explanation. It’s a flying cow with bicycle wheels, perched on a fish. ???

199:365 Weathervane

Speaking of whimsical, I was entertained by this house near Lansdowne, tricked out to look like an old street car. I loved the complimentary colour blocks.

Red green house

After much agonizing, I selected the cow weathervane as the picture of the day because of whimsical nature of it, but I think in the end I prefer this photograph of a painted bicycle tire outside a bike repair shop on Bank Street.

199b:365 Primary tread

I’ve been waiting patiently throughout my 365 project and this endlessly soggy summer for a decent rainbow picture. I finally got my rainbow on Sunday:

195c:365 Rainbow

And then yesterday, when I had no other good ideas, I made another one of my own!

200:365 Colours

Each week, though, I’m reminded that after all the flowers and rainbows and whimsical oddities, I still have a few favourite subjects that make it all worthwhile…

195b:365 Lucas laughs with daddy

Ottawa’s Hidden Treasures: Crysler Beach

Looking for a perfect “stay-cation” adventure near Ottawa? How about a miniature train ride and a day on the water at Crysler Beach? It’s a lovely hour’s drive through the charming small towns along highway 31 to the St Lawrence Seaway — totally worth the drive on a sunny summer day that also happens to be your birthday, especially if your in-town beach plans were marred by a colossal sewage dump a couple of miles downstream from your favourite (Britannia) beach.

We visit Upper Canada Village almost every year, and we’ve taken a spin on the miniature train almost every time… but we’ve never gotten off the train at the far terminus of Crysler Beach before. After hearing it recommended a couple of times, we decided to try it out with my brother’s visiting family and my mom last Saturday.

We got a slow start to the day, so it was nearly lunch time when we arrived at Upper Canada Village. We stopped for our favourite lunch of Village-made fresh bread and cheese, and a few other goodies from the snack bar, and enjoyed them on the patio.

lunch

You don’t have to pay the admission to Upper Canada Village to enjoy the snack bar and gift shop, nor to ride the train. There is a small fee for the train ride, though — I think it’s $5 for adults and $3 for kids over four or something to that effect. The train runs every half hour, and you can get off at the Crysler Beach station or stay on for the full loop.

train at the station

The train ride to Crysler Beach is a lovely little 15 minute jaunt, complete with a ride under a covered bridge and a run alongside the St Lawrence River. The point you can see is the breakwater just on the edge of the beach.

St Lawrence Seaway

The beach itself is quite a bit larger than I was expecting. It has covered changerooms and washrooms on site, and apparently there’s a play structure, too, but we didn’t make it that far. I’d’ve liked it a lot better if there were a lot less goose poop and a few less rocks — there’s about two feet at the very edge of the surf that are painful to walk on, and then the bottom gets sandy again.

Tristan and Simon

Of course, sometimes rocks are not a bad thing. Lucas’s new word for the day, in fact, was an enthusiastic “RRRROX!”

fingers in the surf

It’s a good beach for little kids, because while the slope is a little steeper than the gentle grade at Britannia, it’s still fine for kids who are steady on their feet. My not-quite-three year old niece had a blast! And even on a calm day, there’s just enough surf to be fun to play in.

dad and daughter

Of course, you don’t need to get wet to enjoy the beach…

sunglasses

Tristan

Once you’ve had your fill of sun and surf (and stones), just wander back to the train station and catch the next loop back to Upper Canada Village.

Crysler beach station

A game of tag with Granny helps to pass the time while you wait for the train…

catch me

here comes the train

And if you happen to have a few extra minutes before you hop in the car for the hour-long drive back to Ottawa, Lucas has an excellent suggestion for the perfect end to your adventure, at the Upper Canada Village store:

great idea

Next time we go, I’d love to do an overnight camping trip at the St Lawrence Park (they have sites with both pre-pitched tents and little cabins, from what I understand) and make our way over to see the dinosaurs at Prehistoric World!

(As always, there are even more pictures on Flickr…)