So, here's a thing, next month I will be spending some time on various bits of the Atlantic / Gulf of St Lawrence / Bay of Fundy (WHY DO I HAVE TO GO THERE?) coasts of Canada. I have never been to Canada before (I'm British, I can understand and speak a reasonable amount of France-type French but have no idea what Quebecois sounds like). I've only ever visited the USA briefly, so answers that work for North America in general are also useful. What should I do / eat / buy?
I will have two days of complete touristy freedom in Quebec City, and then I'll mostly be working in other places with occasional chances to e.g. nip to the shops or go out for dinner (most of my meals will be provided through my work so I don't need to go forage all my food).
I will definitely buy some maple syrup (but is real maple syrup a thing you can buy for half the price in a supermarket instead of somewhere tourist-focussed?), but are there other things made from/with maple syrup that don't normally get exported, that I should look out for?
What other touristic shit should I buy? What should I buy for my sister's kids that says 'exotic foreign stuff from the cool auntie?' What artwork or jewelry should I get for my house and myself that says 'incredibly well-travelled and tasteful grownup'? (If I wanted a carved wooden dick, they sell a lot of them in Spain, and I would probably have one already. Thanks.).
I imagine I'll go to at least one Tim Hortons somewhere, they seem to have wifi - it feels like I've visited a McDonalds in every country of Europe looking for wifi, so a bit of variety would be nice. Anywhere else that's particularly Canadian? And what's so significant about Tim Hortons anyway?
[HAHA WHOOPS wrong account. will leave it here anyway.]