Our Trans-Canadian adventure began on Friday night (4/5/12) when we boarded Via Rail 002, “The Canadian” from Vancouver. The train runs all the way to Toronto but we had sensibly decided to break the journey with a couple of stops so our first leg was only (!) 19 hours to Jasper in Alberta. We had dinner before getting on the train so we settled ourselves into our economy seats looking enviously at the people heading to their sleepers. Luckily the train wasn’t too full so we could each have a couple of seats to ourselves and lie down to sleep until we reached Kamloops at 6am when a whole tour group got on and took over the front carriage. The train lady had warned us that the whole tour group were going to have breakfast so if we wanted a place, we had to get there at 6.30am. Seeing as she had woken me up to move at 5am, that wasn’t too much of a problem so we wobbled through 5 carriages to the dining car and had a very nice breakfast with a random couple traveling from Vancouver to Toronto in a sleeper. We weren’t scheduled to arrive in Jasper until 4.30pm so we spent the day looking out the window at the terrain changing from wide river valleys and rolling hills to proper snow capped mountains as we approached the British Columbia/Alberta border. The train stops now and again in tiny towns to change engineers or refuel and it’s nice to get off and get some fresh air if only for 10 minutes. It’s quite relaxing to not really have anything to do the whole day and no internet or tv to be a distraction - I have read a lot, sorted all my photos and written all these blog posts!
We arrived in Jasper a little bit late, and we were immediately pleased that we had decided to break our journey there as it is a jaw droppingly beautiful place.
The town is in the Jasper National Park, and sits in the valley of the Athabasca River surrounded by mountain ranges. They had a bumper snow year so there was still a lot of snow on all the mountain tops which made it even more beautiful. We stayed in a little guesthouse in Jasper town centre - the owners of the house have converted their basement into two guest suites with a living area and separate bedroom. It was perfect for our needs and had a small kitchen so we could make breakfast for ourselves which saves a few pennies. Chris was ready for a beer so we had dinner at Jasper Brewing Company and Chris couldn’t decide which beer to choose so he had the tasting flight!
We woke to a perfect blue sky sunny day (finally!) so we decided that it was perfect weather to go on the Jasper Tramway (cable car) up to the viewpoint on Whistlers Mountain. The views were spectacular and we kept our eyes peeled for a bear that had been spotted a few minutes before underneath the tramway line but he didn’t make an appearance for us :-( We had a coffee at the top before heading back down. In summer there is a hiking trail to the summit, but it was still a good couple of metres covered in snow so the trail was closed.
After lunch, we went for a cheeky walk. Which turned into a 15km hike as the weather was perfect and sunset was at 9pm so we had plenty of daylight left. I’m still not quite used to the long days after so long in Syndey! We walked up to Old Fort Point for some amazing views of the town and the ridiculously blue lakes, and then headed around Beauvert Lake and along the river before crossing over the bridge and back to town along a path just under the railway line.
We saw a whole bunch of wildlife including squirrels, chipmunks (ground squirrels), marmots, elk and mountain sheep. I think my constant chattering and singing to warn the bears that we were there worked as we didn’t see one - although it would have been amazing to see one, I am not quite sure I would have reacted appropriately i.e. not run away screaming like a crazy girl! It was quite tiring always being on the alert and Chris constantly sucking on Jolly Ranchers with their fake fruit aroma potentially attracting them didn’t help my paranoia :-)
We were positively knackered after all that walking so we filled up on pizza (and poutine...) and chilled out in our room using the free wifi to make plans for our next train journeys.
We have always had fun days when we have hired bikes, so the next day we picked up some swanky mountain bikes (mine was brand new!) and stowed our luggage with the bike people so we could enjoy the whole day out on the bikes. We cycled up to Patricia and Pyramid Lakes - about 7km from town mostly uphill. All the lakes and rivers in Canada are so clear - Chris actually walked into the water by mistake at Patricia Lake as the rocks looked them same underwater!
The blue lakes are fed from the Columbia ice fields so are glacial water which reflects the light in such a way to look very very blue. We continued cycling to Pyramid Island with some more spectacular views of the mountains. We cycled about 20km over the course of the day again trying to keep making noise to let the bears know we were there - mountain bikers are particularly susceptible to bear encounters as you move so much faster and almost silently going downhill. Must have worked again as we still didn’t see a bear!
Our legs and bottoms were feeling it by the time we got back to the town so we had a late lunch and a quick shop for some train food supplies (mmm raspberry and white chocolate scone....) before dropping the bikes off, picking up our bags and heading to the station to reluctantly say goodbye to Jasper. Next stop Winnipeg!