Québec & Montréal: Collaborating Cultures

with optional Ottawa and Toronto Extension

Length: 5 - 8 days  
Guaranteed Dates Available
 

Quebec and Montreal Educational Tour | Quebec Flag
 
Map of Quebec & Montreal: Collaborating Cultures Educational Student Tour and Trip
 
Quebec and Montreal Educational Tour | Montreal
 
  • Day 1 Bonjour Québec
    Travel to Québec City and meet your Tour Director
    Québec City Walk 
    La Terrasse Dufferin Old Québec & Château Frontenac
    Details: Québec City Walk
    French-speaking patrons enjoying croissants in cafes. Ornate church spires peeking out from within the city walls. Is this really North America? Explore the Old World grace of Quebec City with your Tour Director as you stride along 17th century cobblestone streets. Historical animation of Upper Town conducted by your Tour Director. Stops include the beautifully lit National Assembly, Dufferin Terrace, Chateau Frontenac, famous architecture such as Aux Anciens Canadiens, gates and walls of Vieux Quebec, rue du Tresor (artist’s street) and the most photographed cannon ball in Quebec.
    Details: La Terrasse Dufferin
    Navigate your way through the street performers, vendors and tourists on this landscaped promenade for one of the best views of the St. Lawrence River, Levis & Lower Town.
    Details: Dinner at a crêperie
    A Quebec proverb claims that anyone who eats crepes on Candlemas (February 2) will have a full year of good luck, but any day of the year these flat pancakes are delicious. Top them with Gruyere cheese or spicy ground beef for dinner, and then drizzle some chocolate for dessert. Bon appetite!
  • Day 2 Québec City Landmarks
    Breakfast
    Québec Tour Director-Led Sightseeing 
    L’Escalier Casse-CouPlace RoyaleNotre-Dame-des-Victoires ChurchRue St Jean
    Dinner
    Optional  Excursion to Sugar Shack   $20
    Details: Québec Tour Director-Led Sightseeing
    Spirit of Lower Town including l’escalier casse-cou (breakneck stairs,) and Place-Royale and the beautiful Notre-Dame-des-Victoires Church. Experience the Old World and see first hand the original habitation of Samuel de Champlain. From Iroquois fur-trading post to UNESCO World Heritage Site, Québec City grew in picturesque leaps and bounds. Have you seen Catch Me If You Can? Maybe you will catch the site where part of the movie was filmed!
    Details: Musée du Fort visit
    During a sound-and-light diorama at Musee du Fort, students experience the famous sieges that led to the battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759.
    Details: Plains of Abraham Battlefield Re-Enactment
    Visit the Plains of Abraham where your Tour Director will discuss the events that took place on September 13, 1759. The students, divided into two teams representing the troops of Generals Wolfe and Montcalm, re-enact the famous battle.
  • Day 3 Québec--Montréal
    Breakfast
    Travel to Montréal along the St Lawrence River
    Montreal Tour Director-Led Sightseeing 
    Old MontrealMcGill UniversityPlace Ville MarieBell CentreMont Royal
    Dinner
    Details: Panoramic Tour of the Beaupre Coast
    Take a scenic drive down Canada's oldest road, Chemin Royal, for a panoramic tour of the stunning Beaupre Coast.
    Details: Basilica of Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré visit
    Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre for an insight on the importance of religion in the history of Quebec. See the sight where thousands of pilgrims journey to pay homage to Ste-Anne every year.
    Details: Montmorency Falls visit
    Believe it or not, the lesser-known Montmorency Falls are actually 30 meters higher than the famous Niagara Falls! The falls are located just outside of Vieux-Québec and originate from the Montmorency River where the water cascades over the cliff shores and into the St. Lawrence River below. Staircases and a suspension bridge over the falls allow you to get an up close look at this amazing natural wonder.
    Details: Village-des-Hurons Wendake guided visit
    Discover the world and culture of Québec's Indigenous peoples as you explore this authentic recreation of a traditional Huron site.
    Details: Montreal Tour Director-Led Sightseeing
    Students experience the city’s highest points and lowest depths, and everything in between. At the highest point, Saint Joseph’s Oratory rises majestically on Mont Royal. The church’s dome is second only to St. Peter’s in Rome. On the other end of the spectrum, students witness the double-decker city of Montréal – an underground city comprised of a series of tunnels and galleries connecting shops and restaurants.
  • Day 4 Montreal Landmarks
    Breakfast
    Dinner
    Details: 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.
    Details: Pointe-à-Callière, Montréal Museum of Archaeology and History guided tour
    Visit the very site where Montréal was founded over 350 years ago, learn about Canada's archaelogical history and visit Pointe-a-Calliere where important archaeological remains and artifacts collected from archaeological digs at the site are displayed.
    Details: Visit Olympic Stadium
    Montréal'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. Students will tour both the Olympic Stadium and the impressive Olympic pools of the Sports Centre.
    Details: Montréal Tower Observatory
    Ride the funiculaire to the tallest leaning tower in the world, rising 170 meters at a 45-degree angle, for a spectacular birds-eye view of the city.
    Details: Montréal Biodôme visit
    Exploration and rally through four recreated eco-systems of the Americas at the Biodôme. From Tropical Rainforest, Laurentian Maple Forest, Gulf of St Lawrence, and Sub-Polar Regions, students will see more than 300 live animals in each simulated habitats -- macaws in the Tropical Forest, lynx in the Laurentian Forest, penguins in the Antarctic and different kinds of fish that inhabit the waters of the Saint Lawrence River.
  • Day 5 End Tour
    Breakfast

  • Or
  • Day 5 Start Extension in Ottawa and Toronto
    Breakfast
    Transfer to Ottawa
    Ottawa Guided Sightseeing Tour 
    Peace TowerEmbassy RowParliament Buildings & Changing of the Guard
    Dinner
    Hotel Overnight
    Details: Ottawa Guided Sightseeing Tour
    It’s a good thing Ottawa is so photogenic – Queen Victoria chose the provincial logging town as Canada’s capital in 1857 after seeing only a few watercolors of the area. (More cosmopolitan rivals Toronto and Montreal were not amused). Setting aside its reputation for barroom brawls, Ottawa concentrated on running the country from its London-style Parliament Buildings, built in the 1860’s. The central Peace Tower indicated when Parliament is in session. The 90-mter tower was built in 1927 to honor the Canadians who served in World War I and was paved from stones from the battlefields of Europe.
    Details: Byward Market visit
    Originally the hub of Ottawa’s logging industry, the Byward Market area has many restaurants and cafes. The area hosts a daily market with crafts, fruits and vegetables, souvenirs, clothing and more.
    Details: Crime and Punishment Jail Tour
    Tour the Old Carleton County Jail, built in 1862, and learn about why Ottawa was once considered 'the most dangerous town in North America'. Learn about early prison life, as you see the jail cells, death row and the last working gallows in Canada. Students learn about classic tales of strange occurrences and ghostly visitations.
  • Day 6 Ottawa--Toronto
    Breakfast
    National Gallery visit
    Transfer to Toronto
    Toronto City Walk 
    Yonge StreetFinancial DistrictOld City HallMOCCA
    Details: Rideau Canal guided bike tour
    Ottawa boasts some of the best recreational pathways in North America. What better way for students to explore the nation's capital? Strap on your helmet, hop on your bike and tour along the easy pathways along both sides of the scenic Rideau Canal.
    Details: Toronto City Walk
    Step back a century of so at the BCE Place, where the faces of twelve buildings that survived the city’s 1904 fire still stand, one of them seemingly encased in glass. The complex’s 19th-century Bank of Montreal Building now houses the Hockey Hall of Fame. Continue your sports education at the Air Canada Centre (home to the Raptors and Maple Leafs) and the Rogers Centre (Skydome), under whose retractable dome the Blue Jays won their second World Series title in 1993. After a view of the city’s harbour, go back to the future at City Hall, a modern glass-and-concrete crescent reaching into the sky. The beloved statue that stands outside the building, “The Archer,” was so controversial in 1965 that the city refused to use public money to buy it; the mayor raised private funds for it and then was soundly defeated in the next election. The walking tour will end up in Kensington Market and Toronto’s Chinatown and experience first had the ethnic diversity of Toronto.
    Details: CN Tower visit
    The entire metropolis of Toronto spread beneath your feet as you hover 346 meters in the air. Ride the glass-front elevator to the glass-floored observation deck of the CN Tower, the world's tallest manmade self-supporting structure. It's the perfect place to get a view of the city.
  • Day 7 Niagara Falls Excursion
    Breakfast
    Details: Niagara Tour Director-Led Sightseeing
    There is more to Niagara than the thunderous falls themselves. Travel to Queenston Heights, the site of the 1812 Battle of Queenston Heights where Major-General Sir Isaac Brock was killed in the defense of Upper Canada (now Ontario) and see Brock’s Monument. Then watch as huge ferries and barges make their way between Lake Ontario and Lake Erie on the man-made Welland Canal.
    Details: Battle of Queenston Heights Re-Enactment
    After a discussion with your Tour Director, students re-enact the battle of Queenston Heights where General Sir Isaac Brock died while leading his troops to victory over the American Forces. The monument, erected in 1856, serves as a testimonial of the fallen General who saved Canada from being overrun by its southern neighbor.
    Details: IMAX Theatre Niagara Falls - Legends and Daredevils
    This spectacular IMAX movie takes you back to the days when Native peoples worshipped the thunder spirits, and when the first European encountered of this wild wonder of nature. Meet the daredevils who challenged the fury of the Falls, from the Great Blondin, who completed a death-defying tightrope walk over the river in 1860, to Annie Taylor, a 63-year-old schoolteacher, who became the first person to go over the Falls in a barrel and live to tell the tale. Share the heart-pounding terror of seven-year-old Roger Woodward, who survived the plunge with only a lifejacket. Following the film, explore the Daredevil Gallery, the world’s largest collection of Niagara Falls history including real artifacts and vessels used by Niagara Falls Daredevils!
    Details: Maid of the Mist ride
    Board the Maid of the Mist for a cruise to the base of Niagara Falls. This exciting and memorable trip passes directly in front of the American Falls, the Rock of Ages, beyond the Cave of the Winds and on to the foot of the thundering Horseshoe Falls.
  • Day 8 End Tour
    Breakfast
  •  
    Step
    1
    2
    3
    4

    In order to price this tour, please log in. Don’t have an account? Call us at 1.888.378.8845.