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  #41  
Old Posted Jun 11, 2024, 4:12 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is offline
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Originally Posted by DTcrawler View Post
Their site is pretty janky but I found this link via Google search
That's now down and replaced with a bright red button at the top of this page, and:

https://www.watertaxieh.ca/

Ooof. $32 round-trip, half-hour ride? I think I'll grab the 6 and walk down from Maple Lane. It's alright as an excursion and experience at that price point, but not as transport.
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  #42  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2024, 12:55 AM
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rocketphish rocketphish is offline
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River taxis are a cool idea in a sizzling Ottawa summer
Bruce Deachman tries his hand at piloting a water taxi that plies the waters between the Rideau Canal, Canadian War Museum, Canadian Museum of Civilization and NCC River House.

Bruce Deachman, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jun 25, 2024 • 4 minute read




As I steered the 24-foot, 12-seat water taxi towards the dock outside the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Gatineau last week, I turned to Lara-May Baumann — technically the captain of the vessel despite the fact that I was at the helm — and asked if she wouldn’t mind docking the boat. I’d had a couple of practice runs doing it without passengers, but they weren’t the smoothest of transitions, and I didn’t want the pair of brochure-clutching tourists I was now responsible for ferrying across the Ottawa River to be left: a) with a poor impression of our city simply because of an ungainly landing on my part; or b) soaked.

Now if you’re wondering how someone without fully developed boating skills could be in the position I was, welcome to the club. It turns out that $60 and a three-to-four hour online course, accompanied by nearly 100 multiple choice questions, is all you need to get your Pleasure Craft Operator Card. Were I to actually join the ranks of Aqua Taxi’s regular drivers — they are looking for marine enthusiasts/retirees/hobbyists to captain their vessels in and around the river’s parliamentary basin — I’d need to navigate my way through a few more hoops. But as long as no more than six passengers boarded the pontoon boat while I pretended to be in charge, I ticked all the required boxes.

I wrote about owner Luc Côté’s Aqua Taxi, a.k.a. Water Taxi Eh? business last November, in a column encouraging greater public use of Ottawa’s considerable waterways.

I also announced in that column that Ottawa Boat Cruise would start operating a water taxi service on the Rideau Canal this year. That service, known as Ekeau Water Taxi, was launched in May during the Tulip Festival, with attendees ferried between Carleton University (where there is vehicle parking) and the Dow’s Lake dock (where there isn’t). Ekeau, meanwhile, recently commenced its summer taxi service. It now picks up and drops off passengers at the Senate/Shaw Centre, Canal Ritz, Bank Street and Dow’s Lake. The cost is $15 per passenger per trip, and online booking is required.

Aqua Taxi, meanwhile, plies the Ottawa River between the Ottawa Locks at the mouth of the Rideau Canal; Richmond Landing near the Canadian War Museum; and the Canadian Museum of Civilization. Additionally, it does runs from the Ottawa Locks to the NCC River House. The latter trip, which includes a miniature Maid-of-the-Mist type close approach to the Rideau Falls — such a welcome respite during last week’s heatwave — must be pre-booked, while the others are catch-as-catch-can. The cost for the River House trip is $18, one way. The others are $9 for a single stop, and $20 for hop-on, hop-off service. There’s also a discount card available for frequent wayfarers.

A builder and inventor, Côté gets more of a thrill from designing and constructing his boats than piloting them. During my maiden voyage, he motioned to the solar panels that comprise the boat’s roof. “It excites me to do something that no one is doing,” he said.

So he scores originality points on a couple of fronts. Once he finishes converting the fifth of his fleet’s five boats from electric power to solar in a couple of weeks, Côté says that Aqua Taxi will be the first net-zero, multi-vehicle water transportation company in Canada. And we like our transit green.

He also earns kudos for some of the services he’s attempting to create that will expand our options about how we can get around. Right now, for example, only about 20 per cent of the company’s current customers are local residents, but Côté sees potential in dialling that up, especially with cyclists looking to more easily cross the Ottawa River. To that end, he’s in discussion with the City of Gatineau to use its dock at the Rest-o-bord marina directly across the river from the River House.

He’s also negotiating with Escape Bicycle Tours on a plan that would allow people to go to or from the River House by boat and make the other half of the round trip by bike. For those thwarted by the River House’s limited access and parking, this solution could be just the ticket.

And when the Alexandra Bridge, a significant commuter link between Ottawa and Gatineau, is dismantled and replaced beginning in 2028, some of the 2,000 pedestrians who currently cross it each day may find themselves relying on water taxis to get from hither to yon.

Meanwhile, back at the Museum of Civilization dock, my inaugural passengers debarked without incident, their brochures intact. The last I saw of them, they were walking from the dock up to the museum, delighted (I tell myself) by their refreshing and safe aquatic journey on an otherwise blistering heat-dome of a day. Mission accomplished.

How easy, I wonder, would it be to get my Pleasure Helicopter Operator Card?

bdeachman@postmedia.com

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...summer-opinion
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  #43  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2024, 12:52 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
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Something simple and cheap running along the canal (from downtown, to Canal Ritz, to Lansdowne to Dow's Lake and back) would be amazing for tourism & locals alike (something like $5 per person, per way).
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  #44  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2024, 7:04 PM
bottlebob32 bottlebob32 is offline
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Originally Posted by OTSkyline View Post
Something simple and cheap running along the canal (from downtown, to Canal Ritz, to Lansdowne to Dow's Lake and back) would be amazing for tourism & locals alike (something like $5 per person, per way).

This exists!

https://www.ottawaboatcruise.com/tour/water-taxi
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  #45  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2024, 7:57 PM
zzptichka zzptichka is offline
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Yesterday was the first time I saw more than 3 people at a time using their services.

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  #46  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2024, 8:46 PM
YOWetal YOWetal is online now
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Originally Posted by bottlebob32 View Post
Except it's $15+ so not for transport
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  #47  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2024, 10:35 PM
FrostyMug FrostyMug is offline
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Originally Posted by YOWetal View Post
Except it's $15+ so not for transport
Depends on how you look at it I guess. To me this is an great opportunity to showcase a view of Ottawa many of us never get to see. I did the water taxi tour in Fort Lauderdale a few years ago. I just checked the price. $40 US for an all day, get on and off as much as you like pass. So $15 isn't that bad. I think people might even pay more if they knew you could travel all day, there were multiple points of interest to keep people engaged and looking for what came next. Tourists love this sort of thing.
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  #48  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2024, 10:41 PM
YOWetal YOWetal is online now
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Originally Posted by FrostyMug View Post
Depends on how you look at it I guess. To me this is an great opportunity to showcase a view of Ottawa many of us never get to see. I did the water taxi tour in Fort Lauderdale a few years ago. I just checked the price. $40 US for an all day, get on and off as much as you like pass. So $15 isn't that bad. I think people might even pay more if they knew you could travel all day, there were multiple points of interest to keep people engaged and looking for what came next. Tourists love this sort of thing.
No hate on it as a tourist experience. Even as a once in awhile thing for locals. Hot day at the river house it's a nice way to get there.
It is not any kind of a option for commuting or running errands.
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  #49  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2024, 1:53 AM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is online now
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Originally Posted by YOWetal View Post
No hate on it as a tourist experience. Even as a once in awhile thing for locals. Hot day at the river house it's a nice way to get there.
It is not any kind of a option for commuting or running errands.
Apart from cost, they'd need to be much faster to be useful for local transport.
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  #50  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2024, 7:57 PM
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J.OT13 J.OT13 is offline
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Originally Posted by YOWetal View Post
Except it's $15+ so not for transport
I feel like they could make more money by lowering the price.

Quote:
Originally Posted by FrostyMug View Post
Depends on how you look at it I guess. To me this is an great opportunity to showcase a view of Ottawa many of us never get to see. I did the water taxi tour in Fort Lauderdale a few years ago. I just checked the price. $40 US for an all day, get on and off as much as you like pass. So $15 isn't that bad. I think people might even pay more if they knew you could travel all day, there were multiple points of interest to keep people engaged and looking for what came next. Tourists love this sort of thing.
So this one is a get-on get-off?
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