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Field Trips and Educational Tours for Teachers and Students | Questions? Call 1.888.310.7101
| Day 1 Bonjour Québec | Day 2 Québec City Landmarks | Québec guided sightseeing tour From Iroquois fur-trading post to UNESCO World Heritage Site in less than half a century, Quebec City grew in picturesque leaps and bounds — a citadel here, a cathedral there. Join a licensed local guide for a tour of Old Quebec, the only walled city in North America. See the massive star-shaped Citadelle, the largest North American fortification still occupied by troops, and photograph the magnificent castle-like Château Frontenac, a hotel that has housed Queen Elizabeth, Alfred Hitchcock, and (so the legend goes) at least a pair of honeymooners every night since its opening in 1893. , Parliament buildings, Citadel, Battlefields Park |  | Walking Sightseeing Tour, Lower Town, Place Royale, Murals, Port & Petit-Champlain |  | Rue St Jean |  | Musée du Fort visit A multi-media journey into Quebec’s history. |  | Optional Sugar Shack excursion $40 Maple taffy rolled out onto sow, melting on your tongue. Ham roasted beneath a sweet glaze of hardened syrup. Beans baked in sauce of maple syrup and mustard, traditional French-Canadian Tourtiere drizzled in maple syrup. Sound good? Head out to a working maple syrup farm and learn all about the process of concocting the sweet stuff from tapping the tree to pouring the syrup on your pancakes. Stay for dinner, a traditional Quebecois feast in which each course features – what else? – Maple syrup as a main ingredient. Be entertained by traditional Quebecois music and maybe learn to play the spoons! |
| | Day 3 Quebec to Montréal | Day 4 Montreal Landmarks | Montreal guided sightseeing tour When he saw his church completed, the Protestant architect of the Notre Dame Basilica was so inspired that he converted to Catholicism. The blue-and-gold interior certainly is inspiring; practically every bit of the immense wooden church is covered in gold leaf. The imported stained-glass windows show the history of Montréal, further illustrated by the statues of famous residents outside (the dog depicted warned the city of an impending attack in 1644). Equally impressive is St. Joseph's Oratory, rising majestically from Montréal's highest point. The church's dome is second only to St. Peter's in Rome. Dive from high to low in Montreal’s Underground City, a 19-mile-long series of tunnels and galleries connecting shops, hotels, offices, and subway terminals that provides refuge from the often inhospitable weather above. , McGill University, St Patrick's Basilica, Place Ville Marie |  | Guided Walking Sightseeing Tour, Old Montreal, Notre Dame Basilica visit When he saw his church completed, the Protestant architect of the Notre Dame Basilica was so inspired that he converted to Catholicism. The blue-and-gold interior certainly is inspiring: practically every bit of the immense wooden church is covered in gold leaf. The imported stained-glass windows show the history of Montreal, further illustrated by the statues of famous residences outside. This famous Basilica helps demonstrate how the church played an important role in Canada’s history. , Mont Royal |  | Olympic Stadium visit Who needs Pisa? Montreal’s Olympic Stadium has the tallest leaning tower in the world, rising 556 feet at a 45-degree angle. The swooping tower was designed to retract the stadium’s plastic roof, but engineering problems led the city to close the dome permanently in 1998. Built for the 1976 Olympics by a Paris architect, the stadium now hosts various exhibitions and concerts throughout the year. |  | Tower Observatory Following the guided visit of the Olympic Stadium, ride the Furniculaire of the Olympic Tower for a beautiful view of the city. |  | Botanical Garden |  | Biodome visit What happens to an Olympic Cyclodome after the Olympics? The Montreal Biodome showcases the different ecosystems of Canada. Tamarins and sea cucumbers and penguins and poison arrow frogs and two-toed sloths. Tour the world’s natural diversity in the four ecosystems, from tropical forest to polar ice cap. Try to spot an anaconda, the most elusive of the thousands of species that call the Biodome home. |  | Insectarium |
| Day 5 Home | Travel home |
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