Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Crossing Niagara's Rainbow Bridge

Q: Is there a way to determine the wait time to cross the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls?

-- N. Papowitch, Etobicoke

A: You can receive border wait time information on Twitter. The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has launched a pilot project to broadcast estimated wait times for crossing the Canada-United States land border. For the Rainbow Bridge, go to twitter.com/CBSA_RBB. For those who aren't up on their social media, an old fashioned website -- niagarafallsbridges.com -- also reports regularly on wait times.

Q: What kind of programs does the Sleeping Giant Park offer? Do we have to pay for extra if we're staying overnight in the park?

-- W. Keeley, Toronto

A: Located near Thunder Bay, Sleeping Giant Provincial Park is a natural wonderland on a foliage-laden peninsula that juts into mighty Lake Superior. The main campground at Marie Louise Lake has 200 sites (85 of these with electrical service). There are two comfort stations with flush toilets, showers and laundry facilities. Camping fees range from $36.75 to $46 per night for a serviced site. The park sells firewood for $6 a bundle, kindling for $5 a bundle and ice for $3.50 a bag. Outdoor equipment such as kayaks, canoes, etc., can be rented from the visitor centre from $10 per hour (half-day and full-day rates are available). The laundromat runs about $7 per load. There are lots of free activities from hiking, fishing, swimming, wildlife viewing, outdoor film and slide shows at the park amphitheatre, and naturalist walks and talks. Local critters include white-tailed deer, red fox, porcupines, moose, bears and wolves. The Thunder Cape Bird Observatory (tbfn.net ) at the tip of the Sibley Peninsula has recorded more than 190 species of birds. A list of activities can be found at the Gate House and Visitor Centre. For more on activities, see thefriendsofsleepinggiant.ca

Send questions to Ilona Kauremszky at mycompass.ca

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Winner's home is Vancouver airport

VANCOUVER - The self-dubbed "Anderson Cooper" of the Vancouver International Airport compared his new reporting job to winning the lottery after his landslide victory was announced for Live@YVR Monday.

Jaeger Mah, 29, won the contest created to celebrate the airport’s 80th birthday, beating out his closest competitor by more 2,000 votes, garnering over half of the votes submitted among dozens of entries.

The Port Alberni, B.C., native will have to stay in the airport for 80 consecutive days starting Aug. 17, bunking down at the Fairmont Vancouver Airport Hotel each night.

Mah will be armed with a video camera, a computer, editing software and a small daily allowance during his stay. His job is to compile a variety of social media postings, as well as produce four 90-second videos each week.

The airport authority is encouraging the public to send in story suggestions.

"Maybe you’d like to know the strangest cargo ever shipped out of YVR," airport spokesman Rebecca Catley said. "Or how many litres of paint it takes the mark the runway lines?"

Mah said his success was largely due to the "small town" support he got from media exposure and word of mouth. The Vancouver Art Institute graduate is looking forward to the possibility of meeting famous visitors during his residency.

"To actually meet some of the stars and celebrities that come through the airport ... even just to talk to (Richard) Branson or Donald Trump and who knows, maybe royalty figures," he said. "That would give me a chance to sit down with these people and really find out how they got to where they did today."

The former Small Business B.C. special events co-ordinator won’t be able to leave Sea Island, but will have full access to its beaches and pubs.

Mah said the whole trip will be similar to a paid "staycation," and he’s looking forward to partying with his friends and family during his downtime.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Visiting Andy Griffith's Mount Airy

MOUNT AIRY, N.C. -- In Opie's candy store the Moon Pies are selling briskly. Next door, in Floyd's barber shop, customers are browsing the hundreds, maybe thousands, of photos of past visitors pinned on the walls. Snappy Lunch offers its signature pork-chop sandwich. The special in Barney's Cafe is "Meat plus Two" -- entree and two veg -- for five bucks. Down the road, a tourist stops to take a picture of Wally's Service Station. In the motor inn a maid carefully arranges Aunt Bee's eyeglasses, dress and shoes.

Opie, Floyd, Barney, Wally, Aunt Bee, Snappy Lunch . . . Aren't these names from a 1960s TV show that's still in endless reruns somewhere?

To drive home the point, the jangly theme from that show pours, muted, from a dozen speakers along Main St. and the water tower bears a silhouette of a man and a boy with a fishing pole. Yes, it's The Andy Griffith Show, maybe better known from its rerun title Andy of Mayberry.

Mount Airy is Griffith's home town and the citizens have taken him to their hearts by replicating his fictional Mayberry downtown. But there's more than nostalgia at work here: The makeover brings something like 65,000 visitors a year to this western North Carolina town (population: 10,000).

Readers scarcely need to be reminded that Griffith played Andy Taylor, the easy-going widowed sheriff of rural Mayberry. Ronny Howard (who grew up to be movie director Ronald Howard) was his son, and they lived with Andy's Aunt Bee (Frances Bavier). Don Knotts was the inept deputy Barney Fife.

There wasn't much crime in Mayberry, so the stories revolved around the everyday problems of its citizens, problems that were, as often as not, solved in the Snappy Lunch or the Bluebird Diner (yes, it's here, too, in resurrected form), or down at Wally's service station.

Strolling around, you'll find posters and cutouts of the main characters everywhere. Most visitors end up at the Andy Griffith Museum, at the old Rockfort St. school, where Griffith first appeared on stage at the age of 10 and decided he wanted to be an actor.

Much later, guide Roger Sickmiller says, Griffith was involved with producers in Hollywood, working on the rural sitcom that became The Andy Griffith Show.

"To get the feel of a small southern town, Andy persuaded the producers and writers to come here, which is why Mount Airy is so like Mayberry," he says. "But the show wasn't filmed here; it was shot on a backlot of the Desilu studios in Hollywood."

Griffith's boyhood home is now an upscale six-bedroom B&B. The museum reviews his career on the stage, films and television, through posters, costumes, awards and other artifacts.

Visitors who get tired walking can take a "squad car" tour of the town. They ride in a 1960s Ford police cruiser, just as Andy and Barney did, driven by guide Sickmiller in khaki police uniform, just like Andy wore.

And if they have a mind to, they can get married in the cell of the (fake) Mayberry Police Station, with Sickmiller (did I mention he's a clergyman, too?) reading the vows.

Mount Airy mounts a festival called Mayberry Days every September (22-25 this year), with parades, a golf tournament, talent contests, musical events and lots more hoopla. Actors who appeared on the show are usually honoured guests; this year's line up includes Betty Lynn (who played Barney's one-time girlfriend, Thelma Lou) and Maggie Peterson Mancuso (Charlene Darling), as well as Don Knotts' daughter Karen.

-- Mount Airy is just south of the Virginia state line, 60 km northwest of Winston-Salem, N.C. For more information, see visitmayberry.com.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Ups and downs of Valparaiso

VALPARAISO, Chile -- Santiago may be Chile's capital but the country's cultural centre is Valparaiso, two hours and 120 km to the northwest. While Santiago is inward-looking and hemmed in by mountains, historically cosmopolitan Valparaiso is more open to the world atop hills that form a natural amphitheatre with vast views over the Pacific. Colourfully painted houses throng steep slopes and form the audience for a ballet of cranes unloading plump vessels stacked high with containers.

Settled by Spanish colonists around 1540 on a narrow strip of level seaside land, the city grew rapidly after Chile gained independence from Spain in 1810, sprawling up ever steeper slopes. The wealthy needed a convenient method to reach hillside mansions, and the poor to reach their shanties yet higher still. Towards the end of the 19th century a solution was found in the construction of ascensores or "elevators" -- funicular railways that still crawl up the often shockingly steep slopes.

Around half of the original 30 or so remain in use today, zigzagging across hillsides and lacing the city together. They provide novel links in improvised walking routes that alternate between the city's sea-level World Heritage-listed business centre and high-level residential terraces with panoramic sea views.

Valparaiso was designated Santiago's official port in 1544 and the city grew rich on exports of wheat and saltpetre, and on servicing vessels rounding Cape Horn. British and German immigrants founded substantial banks and trading companies and opened South America's first stock exchange.

By the end of the 19th century the city was one of the continent's most important ports, and today it retains a well-planned grid of sober, neo-classical buildings at sea level, while its residential districts sprawl upwards in relative disorder, with streets that wind up the hillsides or snake around contours.

A profusion of brightly painted houses tumbles prettily down the slopes, and the ascensores, whose stations and cars are often just as colourful, are often lost between them, their entrances hidden among the labyrinth of streets and stairways. Sometimes the stations teeter against the skyline as if about to plummet into the densely clustered buildings below. Open on one side, they sometimes resemble boathouses deposited on hilltops by the ultimate in tsunamis.

In Valparaiso cerro is the word for both hill and district, and neighbouring Cerro Concepcion and Cerro Alegre, above the heart of the city and the docks, boast a cluster of ascensores. Here, steep Templeman and Almirante Montt streets are home to bohemian cafes and restaurants beloved by Valparaiso's university students, and just east the upper station of the Ascensor Reina Victoria of 1902, named for the British queen, is a battered, yellow-painted shed of corrugated iron on an isolated high point reached by an elevated wooden walkway.

Inside there's a heavy turnstile, but payment is at the lower station. The fare is a mere 100 pesos (about 20¢) but then the distance to be travelled is only 40 metres, although at a hair-raising 57 degree angle. An attendant slides back the door to a rickety, wood-lined metal cage holding a maximum of seven people, then closes and locks it.

Two cars on parallel cogged tracks are joined by hawsers that loop over large steel wheels at the upper station, and halfway through the rattling descent the partner car passes, looking like an improbable garden shed raised on slender scaffolding with a sharply angled base and tiny wheels.

The exit is to the beginnings of the well-preserved evidence of Valparaiso's former prosperity, and the walk east along Cumming and Esmeralda is past the imposing frontages of banks and the statue-topped offices of El Mercurio, a newspaper in continuous publication since 1827. The large banking halls are worth visiting even if you have no need to change money, their original luxurious interiors of panelled wood, Carrara marble and stained glass still intact.

The privately owned Ascensor Concepcion is the oldest, opened in 1883, its entrance is hidden down a narrow passage. It climbs swiftly twice as far back up the hillside, but at a more gentle 45 degrees, to where a wooden upper station gives onto a terrace with views down to slim grey warships of the Chilean navy at anchor.

Walking west it's easy to get lost among the winding streets even with a map, although that's part of the pleasure. Up, down, and sideways stretch rows of two and three-storey houses in pink, purple, lemon yellow or green, with equally gaudy bougainvillea and other pretty flowering shrubs spilling over garden walls. Artful murals on empty walls add further colour. Some are playful, some political, and some even depict Valparaíso's signature transportation.

The route takes the Pasaje Bavestrello, a staircase that climbs through an apartment building, passes between houses, crosses a bridge, climbs again, and gives on to further streets whose steep snaking turns force houses into unlikely wafer-like shapes. The Palacio Baburizza near the top of Ascensor El Peral is an Art Nouveau masterpiece of 1916 that is worth coming to see in its own right; all chequered panels, dancing figures in relief, ornate hanging lanterns and organic columns.

El Peral, of 1902, drops with a whoosh to where a short walk through the city's administrative heart and past bustling markets and seafood restaurants leads to Ascensor Artilleria, where, money ready, you discover that payment is at the top for once. It was originally opened in 1894 to take students up to a naval college.

The car is large, the track visible through gaps in the floorboards, the slope gentle, and the ride a relatively long cliffside 175 metres, giving generous views across the harbour throughout.

No two sources agree on the numbers of funiculars still operating in Valparaíso, and even local people seem unable to keep up with their closures. Residents may love their city's icons, but they're actually riding the minibuses that storm noisily up the steep slopes blowing clouds of black exhaust.

Approval for the first ascensor was given in 1877, but this novel solution to the problems of inconvenient geography arrived only just in time for the city's decline. The opening of the Panama Canal in 1914 made many of the long and risky voyages round Cape Horn unnecessary, more freight crossed North America by rail, and the new steamships preferred ports with easy access to coal.

Valparaiso is now officially recognised as the Cultural Capital of Chile, and much investment in renovation of its historic buildings is beginning to revive tourism.

As residents know only too well, life in Valparaiso has its ups and downs.

IF YOU GO TO CHILE

MORE INFORMATION

For more on travel to Chile, see tourismchile.com. Valparaiso's official tourism site has its own informative pages at ciudadvalparaiso.cl. Several companies operate luxury buses from Santiago's Alameda terminal with departures every few minutes for around 3,500 pesos ($7). The city sits on 42 hills and while there are frequent minibus services, about 12 working ascensores, and taxis, there's no avoiding a steep climb or descent on foot from time to time. Ascensores are 100 to 300 pesos (20¢-60¢) per journey. Children pay full price unless small enough to be carried through the turnstiles, in which case they travel for free.

DINING AND LODGING

It's best to stay uphill in Cerros Alegre or Concepcion, where evenings are quiet. There is a wide choice of restaurants, and numerous hostels for the budget travellers who have been leading the return of tourism to Valparaiso (see hostelworld.com and similar sites). Many are in historic buildings and have comfortable apartments and cheaper shared rooms, such as the highly recommended Luna Sonrisa (lunasonrisa.cl) whose helpful owner is also the author of Footprint's Chile. Apartments can be rented through sites such as apartmentrental-valparaiso.cl. The Valparaiso tourism site lists upmarket boutique hotels in historic buildings.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Quebec offers gems in culture

Quebec's Outaouais region posed three problems before I'd even arrived - how to spell it, how to pronounce it and how to find it on a map.

The first two were overcome by memorization, the third by learning that Outaouais (pronounced oot-a-way, accent on the first syllable) is French for Ottawa.

So finding Outaouais was as simple as crossing the Alexandra Bridge linking the capital with Gatineau, just over the river from the Parliament Buildings.

You probably know Gatineau better as Hull, once notorious as an after-hours boozing destination for Ontario residents chafing at grimly puritanical liquor laws.

Outaouais covers more than 33,000 square kilometres. I had less than three days, barely time to hit a few high spots.

First up was a guided tour of the Canadian Museum of Civilization, touted as Canada's most popular one.

Thanks to Metis architect Douglas Cardinal, it's all curves. "No corners for evils spirits to hide in," guide Richard Lavergne explained.

There are four main exhibition areas. If you're pressed for time, I'd focus on two - the visually stunning Grand Hall, with its West Coast totems, and Canada Hall, which begins with the arrival of the Vikings in what is now Newfoundland, leaps centuries and distances, and finishes in a replica of the Wildcat Cafe, which still operates in Yellowknife.

Travelling with children? Break up the two with the IMAX movie.

Guided tours cost $3 per person per hall, and I recommend them. Ask at the information desk. Audio guides are also available.

Lodging/dining tips: The Four Points by Sheraton, across from the museum, is comfortable, and its rates are lower most of July and August; www.fourpoints.com/gatineau. Three-course table d'hote suppers at Le Tartuffe, just around the corner, run from the high $30s to the mid $40s. Charming setting and excellent food; www.letartuffe.com.

For a change of pace, check out Les Brasseurs de Temps - BDT, as it's better known. On the site of brewery that opened in 1813, this brew pub also houses a regional brewing heritage museum; www.brasseursdutemps.com.

Guide Marc Godin told us Hull flourished during Prohibition, becoming a portal for the smuggling of alcohol from Montreal to Ontario. Gambling clubs sprang up and the downtown was packed with liquor stores.

Just outside old Hull is Gatineau Park, with a network of parkways, 200 kilometres of maintained trails for cross-country skiing, the summer estate of former prime minister Mackenzie King. and some of the most colourful fall foliage in eastern Canada.

A steam train runs mid-May to mid-October from Gatineau (Hull) to the attractive village of Wakefield. Passengers have two hours free time before returning. Wakefield, population 800, boasts 21 restaurants and lots of boutiques.

Lodging/dining tips: The 27-rooom Wakefield Mill Inn & Spa uses a mill built in 1837. A separate building scheduled to open some time this month will add 13 more guest rooms; www.wakefieldmill.com. The inn's cuisine is matched by the view from the dining room, a waterfall created by the La Peche River. Trois Erables, one of Wakefield's many B&Bs, is in the heart of the village and has a four-star rating; www.lestroiserables.com.

Fairmont Le Chateau Montebello, an hour's drive east of Ottawa, is a destination in its own right. A prestigious private club, the Seigniory Club, until 1970, it was built with 10,000 red cedar logs; www.fairmont.com/montebello.

Nearby is Manoir-Papineau National Historic Site, built in 1850 by politician Louis-Joseph Papineau and lived in by his family for the next 79 years. Many of the sumptuous furnishings belonged to them. Guided tours available May-October; phone Parks Canada, 1-888-773-8888.

Have a sweet tooth? Pop in to Choco Motive, an economuseum that opened last summer in Montebello's old railway station. Owner Gaetan Tessier and his staff attack waistlines with Peruvian fair-trade cocoa beans and Quebec butter, cream and honey; www.chocomotive.ca.

Doug English can be reached at denglishtravel@gmail.com or by mail c/o London Free Press, P.O.E. Box 2280, London, Ont. N6A 4G1.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Ten great songs about places

Whether you're a resident or a visitor, nothing can bring back memories of a place the way music can. With this in mind, the members and editors of travel website VirtualTourist.com have compiled this list of great songs about places. Some have become inadvertent anthems while others actually paint quite a dismal picture. Regardless they've become inextricably linked to their respective places.

1. "AUTUMN IN NEW YORK," BILLIE HOLIDAY

Almost nothing can ignite the sentimental side of hardened New Yorkers like this tribute to the city, and while there have been countless recordings, it is arguably Billie Holiday's restrained and languid interpretation with which most fans are familiar. The song is so evocative you can almost smell leaves when you listen to it.

2. "CALIFORNIA," MANFRED MANN'S EARTH BAND

Groovy, bittersweet, and made for driving the open highway, this song may not necessarily be about California directly, but it certainly evokes the feeling of it. For music aficionados the long and incredibly impressive guitar solo right in the middle of it is one for the record books.

3. "LOVE THAT DIRTY WATER," THE STANDELLS

In spite of being somewhat dark in theme (some of the lyrics revolve around a mugging experienced by the band's producer), this is a song that Bostonians consider an anthem. In fact, it was actually chosen as the official victory anthem at Fenway Park.

4. "MARRAKESH EXPRESS," CROSBY, STILLS AND NASH

If ever there were a song that made you want to get out there and see exotic lands, this is it! Although melodically laid back and mellow, lyrically this song perfectly describes the chaos of this famous ride from Casablanca to what is now Marrakech.

5. "I LOVE PARIS," ELLA FITZGERALD

For Francophiles no song could say it better. A love song to the City of Light if ever there was one, the simple lyrics reflect the deep affection admirers feel toward the world's most glorious and romantic town.

6. "TAKE ME HOME, COUNTRY ROADS," JOHN DENVER

The ultimate '70s classic, this song is the official anthem of West Virginia University. Interestingly, those who've taken apart the song's lyrics say it's actually about the western part of the state of Virginia, rather than West Virginia proper.

7. "GOOD MORNING BALTIMORE," "HAIRSPRAY"

A tribute to "Hairspray" creator John Waters' hometown, this sunny and stirring hymn to the Maryland city opens the show and why wouldn't it? With lyrics like "Every night is a fantasy" it makes Baltimore seem more like Hollywood.

8. "IT HAPPENED IN SUN VALLEY," GLENN MILLER

If this charming and uber-nostalgic song doesn't make you want to visit Sun Valley, nothing will. With lyrics like "There were sunbeams in the snow/And a twinkle in your eyes" you may end up on the slopes by sunset.

9. "AMSTERDAM," JACQUES BREL

Although it may not create the rosiest picture of this exceptionally beautiful city, it's still a favourite among those who live and travel there. While purists may argue that Brel's version is definitive, there are those who say that David Bowie's version is better.

10. "A FOGGY DAY (IN LONDON TOWN)"

Performed by everyone from Fred Astaire to Rufus Wainwright this classic written by the Gershwin brothers makes you feel as if you're walking down Regent Street, regardless of who happens to be singing it. First introduced to the public in the 1930s it continues to be a favourite of recording artists.

(c) 2011  VirtualTourist.com , Distributed by Tribune Media Services Inc.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Top 10 museum destinations

NEW YORK - If you're heading to Paris, you'll stop in at the Louvre to see the Mona Lisa, in Washington the Smithsonian is a must-see and the Vatican in Rome should be on every museum-lover's bucket list. With that in mind, online travel adviser Cheapflights (Cheapflights.com) offers its top 10 museum destinations. Reuters has not endorsed this list:

1. Washington, D.C., United States

If you're interested in history, architecture, art, religion, aerospace, or even wax, Washington D.C. has a museum - or 12 - that will pique your interest. The 19 Smithsonian museums, including the National Museum of Natural History, the National Museum of American History and the National Air and Space Museum, may appear to eclipse other institutions in the mid-Atlantic city, but other niche museums do just fine holding their own. Spend a morning reflecting at the Holocaust Memorial Museum and an early afternoon at Ford's Theater - where Lincoln was shot - before strolling the National Mall and other outdoor hotspots like the spectacular National Arboretum.

2. Cairo, Egypt

It goes without saying that if you're heading to museums in Cairo, you're into history. And you'll get plenty of it at the renowned Egyptian Antiquities Museum, which properly holds the world's largest collection of Egyptian antiquities. The most popular exhibit is the Tutankhamen collection, but be sure to make time for the Mummy Room. The breathtaking spectacle is one-of-a-kind, though you'll have to join the crowd - and turn your camera flash off. Other museums are lesser known, but stand out nonetheless. The Egyptian Ethnological Museum beautifully details daily Cairo life through the city's long history, while the Military Museum is a trip back in time to study ancient warfare in the region.

3. Barcelona, Spain

It's almost unfair how much amazing art is housed in Barcelona's museums - the works of Picasso and Miró, not to mention the largest collection of Catalan art in Spain. Any trip to Barcelona requires paying homage to the strange architectural genius of Antoni Gaudi. Start with La Pedrera. One part apartment building, one part Gaudi museum, La Pedrera is a good primer on the naturalistic forms he preferred. Finish with La Sagrada Familia. The unfinished masterpiece church, under construction since 1882, resembles a drizzled sand castle and embodies the brilliant eye of the great Gaudi. Speaking of paying tribute to offbeat Spanish geniuses, the Dali Museum in Figueres is worth the 90-minute car ride from Barcelona. The museum houses one of the largest collections of surrealist painter Salvador Dali's work - and is a work of art itself.

4. New York, United States

Even New Yorkers who live downtown are willing to venture above 14th Street when the long haul means a visit to the finest mile of museums in the world. Along Fifth Avenue and Central Park's east side, ten museums are densely packed into 22 city blocks, creating the infamous Museum Mile, home to powerhouses like the Frick, the Guggenheim, and grandfather to them all, the Met. The Metropolitan Museum of Art contains more than 2 million works of art, from ancient sculptures to 19th century portraits like Washington Crossing the Delaware. Work your way to the other side of the park if dinosaurs and science are more your speed: the American Museum of Natural History is a guaranteed favorite for museum-goers of all ages.

5. Vatican City, Italy

Italy's holiest of cities houses wonderfully extensive collections of the Catholic Church in some of the greatest museums in the world - the Vatican Museums. Open to the public for free on the last Sunday of each month, the museums feature works by prolific Italian artists like Raphael, Botticelli, Caravaggio and - of course - Michelangelo. Spend time admiring papal thrones, sculptures, and paintings before immersing yourself in the grandeur of the Sistine Chapel. Art critics today revere Michelangelo's four-year project, including The Last Judgment, as his finest life's work.

6. Paris, France

The Musée du Louvre is the world's most visited art museum and The City of Light's pride and joy. Visitors to Paris's paragon, which houses nearly 35,000 works of art, including Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, can spend hours, days - even weeks - exploring the beloved trove. After winding your way through the Louvre, cross the Seine to the intoxicating Musée d'Orsay, which boasts 19th and 20th century art by impressionist masters like Monet, Van Gogh and Cezanne. Perhaps your passion lies with modern art? The Center Pompidou - commonly referred to as the Beaubourg - is Europe's largest modern art museum and hosts consistently spectacular exhibitions.

7. Toronto, Canada

Begin a weekend in Toronto by finding half-priced inspiration at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), a fabulous hodgepodge of thousands of artifacts featured in more than 20 exhibits. Friday nights are half off, and the museum welcomes visitors, from students to seniors, to admire its dinosaur, Indian and textile exhibits - and, of course, the magnificent Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, designed by architect Daniel Libeskind, a spectacular entrance constructed of glass and aluminum to resemble an intricate crystal. For visitors with foot fetishes, or just a love of history, consider the Bata Shoe Museum. The downright fascinating museum is committed solely (get it?) to shoes, footwear, socks and all things feet. Pay what you can get to get in, and learn all that you'll ever need to know about the history of footwear. The ultimate destination to celebrate Canadian art, though, is the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO). Housing the largest collection of Canadian art in the world, AGO underwent a $250 million-plus renovation in 2004, developed by world-renowned architect Frank Gehry.

8. Berlin, Germany

Berlin's dynamic history and the preserved monuments to wars, political strife and cultural relief leads visitors to sometimes feel like they're walking through a museum just by strolling the German capital's streets. Twenty-seven museums have opened - and re-opened - in the past decade, helping to establish the city's Museum Island as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and pave the way for international artistic respect. The Anti-Kriegs-Museum is the world's first anti-war museum and - after a temporary relocation to Belgium - re-opened proudly in 1982. For something a tad spicier, check out the Beathe Uhse Erotik-Museum and take a 2,000-year exploration of eroticism and sex through pictures, painting, illustrations and figures in over 5,000 exhibits.

9. London, England

London has every type of museum you'd expect - art, science, history - but it's the quality of these museums that makes them stand out. Start with the Museum of London and learn about the city itself from prehistoric times through Roman conquests, medieval London and present day. Or, if you want another type of look at the city's evolution, head over to the London Transport Museum where you'll find vehicles and artwork representative of 200 years' worth of London commuting - including the world's first underground steam-powered train. But if it's the cutting edge of modernity that you want, look no further than the Design Museum. Located on the River Thames, the world-class exhibits here illustrate the bravura of 20th and 21st century designers of all mediums, from fashion furniture, to graphics and architecture.

10. Vienna, Austria

The Habsburgs single-handedly positioned Vienna as an art mecca for eternity after ruling over Austria - and its art production - for more than 600 years until the beginning of the 20th century. Visit Wien's Museum of Fine Arts and admire the vast majority of the ruling family's collections, from Ancient Greek preservations to pieces by Rembrandt. For a more contemporary vibe, pay admission to the Kunsthalle Wien, which features contemporary international art and works by Klee and Picasso, or the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien (MUMOK), which focuses more on Austrian art and revolutionary artists like Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele.