For a while, the two long-distance trains I’ve most wanted to ride have been the Canadian and the Empire Builder - a pair of trains that work quite nicely as a round-trip loop - and despite planning this late I finally managed to put it together this year. My trip started with me making my way to Toronto on Saturday, July 30th, so that I would be there to board the Canadian the next morning. Unfortunately, the options for getting from Michigan to Toronto without a car aren’t great. While there’s VIA service to Windsor, there is no pedestrian crossing, no intercity bus, and transit service across with the Tunnel Bus from Detroit is still suspended (and getting a cab from where I live in Ann Arbor would be quite expensive if you could even find a driver to go that far). Flying is expensive and means you land in the hell that is Pearson airport (unfortunately, Detroit has no flights to the smaller island airport, or I may have done that). I don’t drive, though this lack of options would be an issue even for someone who could drive - if you drove to Windsor to catch VIA there, you’d have to get back there somehow if taking the Empire Builder back.
To solve this, I got creative, taking multiple airport shuttles to make my way to Toronto without ever getting on a plane or in a car. First, after catching a local bus to downtown Ann Arbor, I caught a Michigan Flyer shuttle to Detroit Metro airport. From there, I caught the Robert Q Airbus shuttle to cross the border. They are based out of London, Ontario (or “Fake London”, as YouTuber Not Just Bikes calls it), but pick up at both Detroit and Toronto airports with various drop-off points in between. My shuttle showed up on time, and we crossed using the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel - there was a back-up in the tunnel, though we eventually made it through. We had to exit the shuttle after the border to do customs/immigration in a building, though we at least didn’t have to drag our luggage in. That went smoothly - one of the people in our shuttle got an extra surprise gift of a random take-home COVID test, though not me (and I was happy I didn’t have to figure out how to do that and drop it off before my departure).
From there, our shuttle ended up going nonstop to London, Ontario. I had considered having them drop me off in Windsor and taking VIA Corridor service to Toronto, but the designated shuttle stop for Windsor was the other side of town and I was afraid that plus border delays would have me miss my train. As it turns out, they would have let me just get off after clearing the border, which would have given me more than enough time even with the delay in the tunnel. Though I had just taken the VIA corridor 6 weeks ago, and I had never seen the highway route to Toronto. That wasn’t anything super-special, besides slightly-different highway signs from the US (including a few in French). We made a few stops in London en route to the Robert Q terminal (yes, this airport shuttle has its own terminal building). When we got there we found that my connecting shuttle to Toronto had left without me, though my driver from Detroit radioed them down and met them before they got far.
From there, it was a smooth trip to Toronto Pearson Airport, though I was disappointed they pulled into Terminal 3 before Terminal 1 (weirdly there is no Terminal 2), since I wanted to catch the UP Express downtown from the latter. That made me just barely miss a train, and have to wait almost 30 minutes for the next one. Once we got moving, I made a spur-the-moment decision to exist at Bloor instead of Union since that would be a few dollars cheaper (and thus I wouldn’t have to refill my Presto to transfer to the subway at Union). In the process, I got a bit lost looking for the transfer from Bloor to Dundas West station - while the map makes it look like the same station, it’s actually more like Chicago Union Station to Quincy or Clinton. That set me back a little more time, as did the subway getting stuck for a while once I was on it (and dragging my luggage up and down stairs didn’t help).
Eventually I finally got to my hotel, about an hour later than I had hoped given the mishaps (and it would have even earlier had I just got off the shuttle in Windsor and caught VIA). I stayed at The Rex Hotel, which is connected a jazz and blues bar. Fairly primitive, but it had good reviews and was far less expensive than other options by Union, and I just wanted a place to sleep close to Union Station so I could make the train in the morning with minimum hassle. Almost splurged for the Royal York, but it would have cost 3 times as much, and most other hotels available in the vicinity were close to that. Ended up eating at the bar, though I didn’t stay for the music since I just wanted to get to bed before the big trip.
To solve this, I got creative, taking multiple airport shuttles to make my way to Toronto without ever getting on a plane or in a car. First, after catching a local bus to downtown Ann Arbor, I caught a Michigan Flyer shuttle to Detroit Metro airport. From there, I caught the Robert Q Airbus shuttle to cross the border. They are based out of London, Ontario (or “Fake London”, as YouTuber Not Just Bikes calls it), but pick up at both Detroit and Toronto airports with various drop-off points in between. My shuttle showed up on time, and we crossed using the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel - there was a back-up in the tunnel, though we eventually made it through. We had to exit the shuttle after the border to do customs/immigration in a building, though we at least didn’t have to drag our luggage in. That went smoothly - one of the people in our shuttle got an extra surprise gift of a random take-home COVID test, though not me (and I was happy I didn’t have to figure out how to do that and drop it off before my departure).
From there, our shuttle ended up going nonstop to London, Ontario. I had considered having them drop me off in Windsor and taking VIA Corridor service to Toronto, but the designated shuttle stop for Windsor was the other side of town and I was afraid that plus border delays would have me miss my train. As it turns out, they would have let me just get off after clearing the border, which would have given me more than enough time even with the delay in the tunnel. Though I had just taken the VIA corridor 6 weeks ago, and I had never seen the highway route to Toronto. That wasn’t anything super-special, besides slightly-different highway signs from the US (including a few in French). We made a few stops in London en route to the Robert Q terminal (yes, this airport shuttle has its own terminal building). When we got there we found that my connecting shuttle to Toronto had left without me, though my driver from Detroit radioed them down and met them before they got far.
From there, it was a smooth trip to Toronto Pearson Airport, though I was disappointed they pulled into Terminal 3 before Terminal 1 (weirdly there is no Terminal 2), since I wanted to catch the UP Express downtown from the latter. That made me just barely miss a train, and have to wait almost 30 minutes for the next one. Once we got moving, I made a spur-the-moment decision to exist at Bloor instead of Union since that would be a few dollars cheaper (and thus I wouldn’t have to refill my Presto to transfer to the subway at Union). In the process, I got a bit lost looking for the transfer from Bloor to Dundas West station - while the map makes it look like the same station, it’s actually more like Chicago Union Station to Quincy or Clinton. That set me back a little more time, as did the subway getting stuck for a while once I was on it (and dragging my luggage up and down stairs didn’t help).
Eventually I finally got to my hotel, about an hour later than I had hoped given the mishaps (and it would have even earlier had I just got off the shuttle in Windsor and caught VIA). I stayed at The Rex Hotel, which is connected a jazz and blues bar. Fairly primitive, but it had good reviews and was far less expensive than other options by Union, and I just wanted a place to sleep close to Union Station so I could make the train in the morning with minimum hassle. Almost splurged for the Royal York, but it would have cost 3 times as much, and most other hotels available in the vicinity were close to that. Ended up eating at the bar, though I didn’t stay for the music since I just wanted to get to bed before the big trip.