David*BJ70
Looking forward to reach the end of the world
Yeah, you read the title «2018» and think I procrastinated! ? Well, you are right !
Here is a jorney that I wrote for the TLCA magazine which appeared in the Toyota Trail magazine of March-April 2019.
Hope you enjoy to read it !
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Two weeks. That's all we had for our summer vacation. Still, that was enough for my wife and I to drive what we call, the Newfoundland loop. That overland trip had well matured in my mind for several years already and it was finally time to achieve this goal and put a check mark beside this long cherished project on our wish-list.
Our boys are old enough now to stay at home with confidence so we took the RTT from our expedition trailer and mounted it on our 60 series Landcruiser. This was the best decision for us since this allowed us to be nimbler to achieve what was going to be a journey of 7100km (4411 miles) on one of the most isolated roads in eastern Canada.
Our adventure started early in the morning while I lead the Landcruiser along the north side of the majestic St-Lawrence River. The first few hundred kilometers were very familiar to me since I used to drive them often for work, but it is quite different once we passed the city of Quebec. There, we left was it known to be the St-Lawrence valley to enter the Canadian Shield. The road starts to climb to a much more mountainous landscape allowing us to admire the river by overlooking it. It is very pleasant to appreciate this huge waterway which is an important passage for convoy merchandise on the way to the center of America, up through the Great Lakes, which widens more and more to the ocean hundreds of kilometers downstream.
After a ferry crossing on the vast Saguenay River Fjord and a few more hours, we stopped in the city of Baie-Comeau to fill up our diesel tank for the first time since we left of a fuel that will eventually be much more expensive due to the remoteness of the next gas station. First tank with our fully loaded rig (2950kg / 6500lbs): 785km / 488 miles. I love to drive a diesel powered Landcruiser!
We then headed north on the infamous route 389 which is widely known for those hundreds of curves where many people experience road sickness. First built to the edification of the Manic-5 dam (AKA Daniel-Johnson-Dam) (Google this!) 215km / 133 miles from Baie-Comeau, this road eventually stretches to access the province of Newfoundland from the north via a ferry, 1705km / 1060 miles further, and, somewhere in between, takes the name of Trans-Labrador Hwy.
Here is a jorney that I wrote for the TLCA magazine which appeared in the Toyota Trail magazine of March-April 2019.
Hope you enjoy to read it !
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two weeks. That's all we had for our summer vacation. Still, that was enough for my wife and I to drive what we call, the Newfoundland loop. That overland trip had well matured in my mind for several years already and it was finally time to achieve this goal and put a check mark beside this long cherished project on our wish-list.
Our boys are old enough now to stay at home with confidence so we took the RTT from our expedition trailer and mounted it on our 60 series Landcruiser. This was the best decision for us since this allowed us to be nimbler to achieve what was going to be a journey of 7100km (4411 miles) on one of the most isolated roads in eastern Canada.
Our adventure started early in the morning while I lead the Landcruiser along the north side of the majestic St-Lawrence River. The first few hundred kilometers were very familiar to me since I used to drive them often for work, but it is quite different once we passed the city of Quebec. There, we left was it known to be the St-Lawrence valley to enter the Canadian Shield. The road starts to climb to a much more mountainous landscape allowing us to admire the river by overlooking it. It is very pleasant to appreciate this huge waterway which is an important passage for convoy merchandise on the way to the center of America, up through the Great Lakes, which widens more and more to the ocean hundreds of kilometers downstream.
After a ferry crossing on the vast Saguenay River Fjord and a few more hours, we stopped in the city of Baie-Comeau to fill up our diesel tank for the first time since we left of a fuel that will eventually be much more expensive due to the remoteness of the next gas station. First tank with our fully loaded rig (2950kg / 6500lbs): 785km / 488 miles. I love to drive a diesel powered Landcruiser!
We then headed north on the infamous route 389 which is widely known for those hundreds of curves where many people experience road sickness. First built to the edification of the Manic-5 dam (AKA Daniel-Johnson-Dam) (Google this!) 215km / 133 miles from Baie-Comeau, this road eventually stretches to access the province of Newfoundland from the north via a ferry, 1705km / 1060 miles further, and, somewhere in between, takes the name of Trans-Labrador Hwy.
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