St. Joseph And Barbie 07/13/19

Camping Alouette, Quebec, Canada (Montreal)

Do not withhold good from those who deserve it, when it is in your power to act.   ~ Proverbs 3:27

There was a lot of walking today.  Certainly more than was necessary.  But I’ll cover that later.  In the meantime, grab a chair.  It’s gonna be a long one. . . .

Right next to the campground is an RV sales and storage place.  It took a bit to realize that the name of their place was “RV St-Cyr”, because as you can see, the sign doesn’t exactly say that.  But we’ve learned that sometimes, the French say things backwards from us.  😊

Our destination today was supposed to include a stop at this famous and very old wood-fired bagel shop, then a stop at a famous and very old Jewish deli to pick up a sandwich or two (depending on how large they were) for our lunch later, and then Mont Royal, another of Montreal’s National Parks.  There were also a couple more destinations on our list after that.

However.

Once we got to Mont Royal and paid to park for the day, we discovered that the bagel and deli place was about an hour’s walk.  So scrap that.  Good thing we brought other boxed lunch stuff “just in case”.  (Thank the Lord Blaine’s a former boy scout!)  

Now we find ourselves at Maison Smith – or “Smith House”, the visitor center for Mont Royal, and they have no English maps.  Which is okay.  Blaine can follow a map in any language.  😊

But today, he forgot to close the driver’s side door on the Jeep! We were inside the Visitor Center, when a man with a heavy French accent walked up to him and said (as much as we could discern) “Jheep?” Blaine was wearing his Jeep hat, thank goodness! The guy then proceeded to tell us that the door was open. God is so good to us to send that guy looking for us! We thanked him profusely, in French, of course. We happen to know, “Merci!”

This is exactly how the house was built! This used to be the basement, but now it’s restrooms and some information down here.
I took this mostly to show you the difference in the size of the lettering between French and English. Remember when I talked about that the other day?
Don’t think you need to know French to understand what they’re trying to say. : )

Mont Royal’s peak sits 764’ high.  Way above the city, as you can see in the pictures.  The property was purchased by Canada from a guy in 1872 for $110,000.  That’s the equivalent of $2,309,486.07 today!  That’s a lot of moola!  It’s a wannabe volcano that’s never erupted and has no plans to.  It welcomes several million visitors each year, but we noticed that many just walk to the observation point and then back.  And they’re dropped off by the busloads. 

This is a very small portion of the people making their way to the observation area.

There’s also a lot of people crazy enough to bike to the top!  We were kinda surprised by that, and at the end of the day when we were leaving, we almost witnessed a car/bike accident when a car changed their mind and turned right in front of them!  Yikes!!

Gorgeous views from the observation area!  We couldn’t find out why that huge building is up here either.  It’s not because we can’t speak or read French.  There’s just no information.  Maybe they assume everyone knows?

This is the building we have no idea when or why it was built.
People were everywhere, but mostly at the rail to look at the city.
There was another “public” piano with another young man playing his heart out.
The gigantic inside of the building.
Views of downtown Montreal at 9:30am.

After we were done drinking in the view, we went looking for the infamous cross.  The story seems to be that during a flood many, many years ago in 1643, a Priest prayed for safety for the town and bartered with God that if He’d spare the city, the Priest would plant a wooden cross on the highest point of the city.  That’s here, on Mont Royal.  The city was spared and the Priest kept his promise – on January 6th (that’s the middle of winter, by the way!)  The wooden cross is now long gone, but in 1924, the current cross was set in place.  It weighs about 26 tons.  That’s pretty heavy to carry to the top of a mountain!  In 2009, the lights were replaced with LEDs.

Our first look at the cross. It’s so weird. Here’s this giant cross that they even light up, but there’s not a single information board anywhere.
To give you an idea of size, Blaine stood in the middle!

Our walk continued around the mountain until we returned to the Visitor Center and asked the girl working there about a walk to St. Joseph’s Oratory.  She said it was doable and worth the 30-45 minute walk.

On the trail around the mountain.
There were a bunch of these leaves. So pretty!!
Same thing with even less green!
Guess his knees are all better. He can climb trees again. : )
Still part of the trail, but we had to go down a bit.
There were a couple of views along the way, but not many.
Olympic Park
This is the Summit of Mont Royal – 763′.
We saw many of these in the trees around the Park.
They seem to be sort of like giant June bug catchers.
It’s a beetle of some kind, but we don’t know what.
The shortcut. : )

And off we went, through the Park and around a Lake where we stopped for lunch, then into a building they had near the lake.  We think they use it more during the winter.  I was so busy looking around and following the man in the green hat, I walked right into the men’s room!  Almost. . . fortunately, Blaine was paying more attention than I was and shooed me out at the door.  😊

This is Beaver Lake. It’s lovely here!
They even have a man-made waterfall.
Our lunch view (such as it was) for today.
That’s some kind of warming area, and the benches double as lockers.
The next few pictures – until you get to St Joseph’s – are from our walk.
This is the armory.
The entrance to the cemetery.
There’s another building just like it on the other side of the driveway arch.

Oh boy, was it worth the long walk!!  Except that once there, we discovered that we could’ve driven and parked there!  Our parking pass at Mont Royal was good for all day, so we could’ve left and come back, but the walk was interesting.  It was more difficult walking back to the Jeep.  😊

Not good lighting at noon. : (
If you look at the steps in the middle of the shrine, the ones that go through the grass? The center row?There’s 99 of them, and the most devout climb those stairs on their knees as they petition and pray to St. Joseph, who also happens to be the patron Saint of Canada.
By the way, you can walk up either side, but the center is reserved for the devout.

But what an incredible place! 

It’s the brainchild of Saint Brother Andre (Alfred Bessette).  He came to Montreal and joined the Catholic Congregation of Holy Cross in 1870.  By 1904, he was ready to build a small chapel to Saint Joseph.  Now we know who Joseph is.  In fact, there are a couple of them in scripture that we know.  But this one’s the Joseph who’s mentioned most.  You know him too.  Husband to Mary.  “Step-father” to Jesus.  But we didn’t realize it was that Joseph when we were there.  We actually thought it was some Catholic Priest from way back when. The Catholic church made him a saint in 1870.  What I want to know is, what took ‘em so long?

Anyway, this Brother Andre decided that Joseph needed a shrine.  And so, when the visitors to his small chapel became too numerous, he set out to build the biggest shrine you’ve ever seen!  This is not a church.  It’s a shrine. A monument.  A memorial.  A place to come for prayer and worship, specifically to Saint Joseph.  That’s it.  There’s no committees.  There’s no pot lucks.  There’s only mass a couple of times a day for whomever shows up, and that’s in another chapel area.  But with so many tourists (up to 25,000 a day!), who can really pray or worship in here?  The only prayers we offer, are to God through Jesus Christ Himself.  No one else is qualified.  But then again, we’re not Catholic.

So the place was built over a period of years.  A very brief timeline – – in 1904, Father Andre built his first chapel.  By 1912, it was on its fourth expansion. In 1915, they received approval for the basilica.  Between 1915 and 1924, several outlying portions of the basilica were put in place, including the Crypt Church which we visited today – but only a look through the back door because Mass was going on.  On August 31, 1924, Brother Andre blessed the basilica’s cornerstone before a crowd of about 35,000!  But the foundation work didn’t begin until 1926.  Work continued, seemingly at a snail’s pace until construction ended in 1931, due to an economic crisis.  Then in January, 1937, Father Andre died and for 6 days, 1,000,000 people passed by his open casket!  Enter 1937 and work resumes on the basilica, but it wasn’t officially opened until 1956!  The interior was completed in 1967, and the exterior lighting in 1979.  This was a very long process!

On March 16, 1973, Father Andre’s heart (in a glass case) was stolen from its marble pedestal beneath the basilica and held for $50,000 ransom.  The church refused to pay, despite donations coming in from around the world, as the story made headlines.  Eventually the police received a tip (for a lighter sentence) about the location of the heart and they were able to recover it and return it to its rightful place on December 21, 1974 after 645 days of captivity.

You can’t make this stuff up!  My question is . . . . why were they keeping his heart in a glass box on a pedestal in the first place?

Father Andre 1845-1937

Let’s get back on track. 

There’s a massive amount of work currently being done.
After 20 years, the government is finally working on making improvements for parking, etc.
Guess every government is the same, huh? : )
Thought I’d show you a map of the place.
This is the Crypt Church. We don’t remember why it’s called that.
Every picture that I found online, looks just like mine, with the brilliant bright light.
We have no idea what it is, but one would think it would have something to do with Joseph.
View from the first level. Shows part of the work being done.
Oh. And there were escalators to get us where we wanted to go.
Quite a few escalators! Pretty sure those were added fairly recently. : )
Their museum is all about Father Andre.
You had to pay to go in. We didn’t go in.
This was a very large creche from Germany made around 1900, and donated as a gift to the Oratory. Terrible lighting!
Another donation, but we forget from whom. It’s beautiful and very intricate.
Not sure why there’s a dragon on the side. : )
My oh my!
The dome height from the floor is 318′ and the diameter is 128′!
And someone was giving an organ concert while we were there!
It has 5,811 pipes divided into 78 stops. I know what stops are,
but I don’t know how you get that many pipes into that few of stops.
We sat and listened for awhile.
Beautiful!
I tried, unsuccessfully, to discover which three of the twelve apostles I took a picture of. We believe the middle one to be Judas Iscariot, the betrayer of Jesus, because he has two heads. But it could also be Peter, because of the upside down cross (the way Peter was crucified) and what appears to be a rooster (the cock crowed three times). Not sure why Peter would have two heads though. . . .
This was located down a long hallway that we weren’t allowed access to.
Don’t know what or who it is.
A small portion of the mosaic along the sides of the altar.
This is the votive hall. Lots of candles to light.
And lots of places to light them, I’m assuming depending on who you’re praying to?
Did you notice that the candles are different colors and spell something?
We don’t really know what this is, but there was a shrine at the end.
There was a mom and a little girl here before us and the little girl asked her mother several times why she put so much money in the donation box. : )
There were also pictures of the building process at this same shrine. Not sure why they were here . . .
We didn’t go in this way. It appeared to be the entrance for the myriad of bused-in folks.
Hey! What’s he doing here?? : )
The original chapel Father Andre built.
There was a constant flow of people in and out of the upstairs which showcases his room.
The Joseph shrine was in the downstairs part.
The crutches (I discovered later) were left by people who were supposedly healed
after praying at the shrine to St. Joseph.
He was either a small man, or he had to bend over to go in and out of his room.
I got a kick out of listening to the teenage girls behind us talking about how small everything was (“How could he sleep in that tiny bed?!?”) and the fact that there was not much stuff in his room. : )
This area led to an enormous garden walk area.
I did a little bit of it while Blaine waited on me.
Very nice, but we still had a lot of walking to do.

When we left, Blaine checked his step counter.  18,000 steps by 1:30pm!  But wait!  There’s more!  😊

We stopped for ice cream to eat on the way, and also took a minute to look through the fence at the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery.  It’s 354 acres and was founded in 1854.  Turns out, it’s the largest cemetery in Canada, and third largest in North America. There are more than 34 miles of road and over 1,000,000 people buried here.  Yes.  You read the zeros right.  One . . . . Million.  They have more than 65,000 monuments and 71 family vaults.  And you’re wondering why we didn’t go in and check it out?  Our view from the sidewalk was just fine.

Look at all those plots!!

They sure pack ‘em in tight! 

On our way back to the Jeep, we stopped at the overlook again and took some new pictures.

Views of Montreal at 2:15pm.

Time to walk to the opposite side of the mountain.  There’s a path (well, actually it’s more like a staircase) that takes you to the bottom of the mountain and drops you off at Peel Street, the address of our next destination – the Barbie Expo.  Yep.  I made Blaine go.  Hey!  It was free!  He likes free!  If that ain’t true love, I don’t know what is.  But to be fair, some guy on Tripadvisor said he went reluctantly and was surprised that he actually enjoyed it. I think Blaine went for the pure adventure of walking all those steps.  563 steps plus the sharp incline to actually get to the flat part of the street and the address of the Barbie Expo.

There were a lot of people heading down to Peel Street, and quite a few coming back up.

We had the address, but it was a huge mall, and we had some trouble finding the Expo.  We were tired.  We were getting hungry and had no idea where we were going to eat.  And there were no signs to help out.  We walked around unnecessarily quite a bit before we discovered it in a back corner.

This is the mall where Barbie is supposed to be.
Finally!

It was nice, but not exactly what I wasexpecting.  There were indeed a lot of dressed up Barbies and more than a few squealing girls, but there was no history anywhere and no vintage dolls.  It was more like a Barbie wax museum of clothing styles and some famous people made up Barbie doll size.

This was pretty cute – – it’s a moving runway with the observers taking pictures and their tiny cameras were blinking like flashes. : )
Dressed in costumes from different countries.
Fashion through the years.
The first blue one was a Gibson Girl, but that’s all I remember.
More fashion
Just a dress I liked
This gown was designed by fashion designer Bob Mackie. There were a lot of things designed by him in here.
And I thought David’s Bridal was only in NE Ohio!
Ha! Zombie Barbie!
Oh look! It’s Elvis and Priscilla!
And William and Kate!
If you look in the center, you’ll see 007. The newest version, Daniel Craig.
Faberge Barbies
Even Avon is represented!
And Dancing with the Stars. My Barbies never moved like that . . .
It’s Rock Hudson and Doris Day!
Speed Racer and Trixie! His eyes are waaaaay too small from what I remember! : )
The Munsters
Bert and Mary Poppins
Carol Burnett
This one made us laugh out loud – – so unexpected! She doesn’t look nearly frightened enough!
Even Capt Jack Sparrow was turned into a Barbie! That just seems wrong . . .
This was the only nod to Barbie history.

Dinner ended up being Italian tonight.  Just a bit of a walk, and very good food!

Downtown, trying to decide what’s for dinner.
There it is! Wienstein & Gavino’s
Our view
Blaine’s
Mine And the homemade bread
Blaine’s
Mine

Oh!  And I almost forgot (because we didn’t take any pictures), there was an enormous sidewalk sale going on that included some street vendors.  The road was closed for many blocks so people could sell stuff outside their shops.  There must’ve been a thousand people in the street!  The St. Catherine Street Sale is the largest one in Canada.  And we walked right into it. 

This is a former church that’s been turned into an art museum.
This was a really strange statute outside the Art Museum. I don’t get it . . . .

After dinner, it was time to climb back up the mountain.  Ugh!!!!  I stopped more than once.  Actually, more than twice.  But we made it.  My advice to you?  Don’t try to climb a mountain on an extremely full belly, nor after already putting in miles and miles.

There were some couples who passed us, who were taking the steps two at a time.  Sure they’re half our age and weight, and probably didn’t eat a bunch of pasta, bread and dessert right before they headed up, or spent the day walking 26,000 steps already, but still . . .   Show offs!

Montreal at 6:45pm
See that picture of the man on the side of the building? It’s 9-stories tall!
And that’s right at the area where we were walking around tonight.

We were going to hang around till sunset, but with an hour and a half to go, we were just too tired.

We walked, hiked, climbed, descended, ascended and almost crawled (by the end) just short of 13.5 miles today.  Yep-per.  In a single day.

I’ll let you know tomorrow if it was worth it. . . .

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