设万维读者为首页 万维读者网 -- 全球华人的精神家园 广告服务 联系我们 关于万维
 
首  页 新  闻 视  频 博  客 论  坛 分类广告 购  物
搜索>> 发表日志 控制面板 个人相册 给我留言
帮助 退出
小狗漫步的博客  
https://www.youtube.com/c/AutoWorldzz  
https://blog.creaders.net/u/6138/ > 复制 > 收藏本页
我的名片
小狗漫步
注册日期: 2012-04-09
访问总量: 3,484,038 次
点击查看我的个人资料
Calendar
我的公告栏
最新发布
· Honda S2000: A Roadster Legend
· 丰田AE86:点燃漂移之魂 - 传奇
· "Shelby Cobra Roadster: Roarin
· Porsche 9xx
· 福特的Super Car
· 道奇 VIPER
· BENZ 63 AMG
友好链接
分类目录
【新车推介】
· "Shelby Cobra Roadster: Roarin
· Porsche 9xx
· 福特的Super Car
· 道奇 VIPER
· Super Car EP1
· What we know about Audi e-tron
· What we know about Audi Q3 202
· 2022 Mercedes-Benz SUV Lineup:
· Infiniti QX60 Review
· 2022 Mercedes Benz EQS Review,
【日常】
· Honda S2000: A Roadster Legend
· 丰田AE86:点燃漂移之魂 - 传奇
· BENZ 63 AMG
· BMW Super Car
· Super Car EP6
· Super Car
· 怀旧系列,家里的面包车
· Super Car EP1
· 多伦多全民免疫的时代来临,无论
· What we know about BMW I3 2022
存档目录
08/01/2023 - 08/31/2023
07/01/2023 - 07/31/2023
04/01/2022 - 04/30/2022
03/01/2022 - 03/31/2022
02/01/2022 - 02/28/2022
01/01/2022 - 01/31/2022
12/01/2021 - 12/31/2021
11/01/2021 - 11/30/2021
10/01/2021 - 10/31/2021
09/01/2021 - 09/30/2021
08/01/2021 - 08/31/2021
07/01/2021 - 07/31/2021
06/01/2021 - 06/30/2021
05/01/2021 - 05/31/2021
04/01/2021 - 04/30/2021
03/01/2021 - 03/31/2021
02/01/2021 - 02/28/2021
01/01/2021 - 01/31/2021
12/01/2020 - 12/31/2020
11/01/2020 - 11/30/2020
10/01/2020 - 10/31/2020
09/01/2020 - 09/30/2020
08/01/2020 - 08/31/2020
09/01/2015 - 09/30/2015
06/01/2015 - 06/30/2015
02/01/2013 - 02/28/2013
12/01/2012 - 12/31/2012
11/01/2012 - 11/30/2012
06/01/2012 - 06/30/2012
05/01/2012 - 05/31/2012
04/01/2012 - 04/30/2012
发表评论
作者:
用户名: 密码: 您还不是博客/论坛用户?现在就注册!
     
评论:
<p>When I first saw, and heard, Suzanne Young on the Rocky Mou
   

When I first saw, and heard, Suzanne Young on the Rocky Mountaineer luxury sightseeing train, she was chattering non-stop in her charming Aussie accent.

Initially, she was gabbing with her travelling companions — her husband Ross and another couple from their hometown of Adelaide.

Then she told me how the Rocky Mountaineer was part of a bucket-list trip to Canada for the group. “Everybody knows about the Rocky Mountaineer in Australia,” she gushed. “It’s everyone’s dream to ride it.”

Upon further discussion, it seems it doesn’t hurt that the Rocky Mountaineer had a booth at a recent Travel Expo that Young attended in Adelaide and that commercials featuring the exclusive train touting Canada as a travel destination seem to be on the telly every night in Oz.

Apparently the train’s international marketing prowess is also big in the U.S., Britain and New Zealand.

In fact, my 9-year-old daughter Grace and I seemed to be the only two Canadians aboard the train, which glides through the quintessentially Canadian Rocky Mountains on two-day trips showcasing some of the world’s most stunning scenery.

Although the Mountaineer clearly values its foreign passengers, it wants more Canadians to ride the rails, too. It seems the adage of people being blasé about what’s in their own backyard holds true.

Canadians know the Rockies are there and may even have driven through them, but many still don’t consider it a holiday the way they do Hawaii, the Caribbean or Europe.

But the Rocky Mountaineer is the most luxurious, relaxing, eye-popping and culinary ride I’ve ever had.

Admittedly it was on the GoldLeaf service, the train’s premium experience in a double-decker, glass-domed car for maximum mountain gawking and comfort.

“Whoa, these are our seats,” said my daughter after climbing a spiral staircase into the second-floor dome. The seats are wide, give forever legroom and recline way back.

“They’re better than airplane seats. And the ceiling is a window,” Grace added as she cranked back the recliner, looked up and then spread out her gadgets: laptop, iPod and Nintendo handheld.

Turns out she hardly needed the diversions she brought along. The scenery is just too dramatic to miss for a movie, music or games.

On the 600-kilometre stretch between Kamloops, B.C., and Calgary, the mountains roll out all the hard-hitters: the Columbia River Bridge, Glacier National Park, Rogers Pass, Rocky Mountain Trench, the Spiral Tunnels, snow-capped peaks like Mount Stephen, Temple, Mountain and Three Sisters, the Continental Divide, Banff National Park and, finally, the glittering highrises of Calgary at night.

There’s even the odd elk, bighorn sheep, rabbit and eagle sightings. By the time word of a grizzly bear reached our car, though, the bruin had made himself scarce in the woods.

Although we took in these sights through the windows and see-through ceiling, we also wandered the observation car, took regular blasts of fresh air in the outdoor viewing vestibule, and headed to the dining car for breakfast and lunch.

The dining car is down the spiral staircase and harks back to a time when train travel was leisurely and lavish. It’s all white tablecloths, fine china and gourmet food.

Grace and I could have had a table for two but instead chose to share a table for four. How else would we have met mothers and sons Joan and Greg from California and Elizabeth and Andrew from York, England; Kiwi brother and sister Mike and Lisa; or husband and wife David and Shirley from just outside London, England?

All share one thing: Seeing the Rockies was a dream vacation and, with research, the Rocky Mountaineer popped up as the most decadent way to do it.

These conversations were over breakfasts of buttermilk pancakes, berry parfaits, omelettes and eggs Benedict, and lunches of wild salmon filet, Alberta pork tenderloin and Fraser Valley pan-seared chicken breast.

They were accompanied by either merlot or chardonnay from Sumac Ridge Winery in the Okanagan.

“Certainly there’s nothing more beautiful than the Rockies,” said Mountaineer communications manager Nancy Dery. “But from the feedback we get from guests, it’s the overall onboard experience they remember the most — the service, the socializing with others from around the world.”

Steve MacNaull travelled as a guest of the Rocky Mountaineer.http://blog.51.ca/u-208080/

JUST THE FACTS

PLANNING The Rocky Mountaineer does four main routes seasonally April to October — a two-day First Passage to the West (Vancouver-Kamloops-Banff-Calgary); two-day Journey Through the Clouds (Vancouver-Kamloops-Jasper); two-day Rainforest to Gold Rush (Whistler-Quesnel-Jasper); and a half-day Sea to Sky Climb (Vancouver-Whistler).

GOING All routes can also be done in reverse.My daughter and I did the flagship First Passage to the West ride with an overnight at the Coast Hotel in Kamloops and post-train stay at the landmark Fairmont Palliser Hotel (Fairmont.com), which is in the same downtown Calgary complex where the Mountaineer pulls into the station.

PAYING First Passage to the West packages start at $850 per person for the two days on the train and overnight hotel, or $1,900 per person for the GoldLeaf service with the double-decker, glass-domed observation deck and dining car.

 
关于本站 | 广告服务 | 联系我们 | 招聘信息 | 网站导航 | 隐私保护
Copyright (C) 1998-2024. Creaders.NET. All Rights Reserved.