Day 123
Off to Vancouver today for the weekend.
I very much enjoy the ride on the ferries, particularly if the weather is good. On one occasion several years ago I had a letter to the editor (Times Colonist) published in response to multiple complaints about some of the inadequate services on the Coho route. I noted strongly that the ride is a mere 90 minutes, and all this business of restaurants, gift shops, arcades, massage chairs, state rooms (i.e. beds), and cafeterias that we have on the Tsawwassen route is quite unnecessary in the first place!
Take the Coho, I wrote, which is nearly identical in travel time, and you'll find people reading, conversing, looking out at the ocean, and (God forbid) spending actual time with their children. Is this such torture that we must cry out in anguish to the local news?
So, as always, I shall bring with me a trusty book (currently plugging away at Great Expectations) and perhaps a water bottle & granola bar, since the trip, with bussing times included, may require a snack.
Advice from Dwight Schrute: KISS: Keep it simple, stupid.
I very much enjoy the ride on the ferries, particularly if the weather is good. On one occasion several years ago I had a letter to the editor (Times Colonist) published in response to multiple complaints about some of the inadequate services on the Coho route. I noted strongly that the ride is a mere 90 minutes, and all this business of restaurants, gift shops, arcades, massage chairs, state rooms (i.e. beds), and cafeterias that we have on the Tsawwassen route is quite unnecessary in the first place!
Take the Coho, I wrote, which is nearly identical in travel time, and you'll find people reading, conversing, looking out at the ocean, and (God forbid) spending actual time with their children. Is this such torture that we must cry out in anguish to the local news?
So, as always, I shall bring with me a trusty book (currently plugging away at Great Expectations) and perhaps a water bottle & granola bar, since the trip, with bussing times included, may require a snack.
Advice from Dwight Schrute: KISS: Keep it simple, stupid.
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