A Veteran's Guide to the Montreal/Toronto Megabus
So
you’ve decided to become a member of the Ontarian expat community in Montreal.
There are plenty of guides out there to teach you about various aspects of the
city and I will leave those be. This guide is for anyone out there who is cheap
and lazy. The train is for the rich, ride shares are for enterprising and
social people who are willing to hunt through facebook to find a tolerable
person to ride with. If you aren’t described by the above, chances are you are
going to take the damn Megabus. When it comes to the commute between Montreal
and Toronto, I am a distinguished veteran. Over my six years I have made this
commute too many times to count, and I will use this space to share the tactics
which I have gained during that time. Make no mistake, this trip is a drag, but
these tips will help make sure you are having the best drag possible.
*Disclaimer*
- This guide is intended for single riders only. If you are in a couple, stop
reading but also quit it with the PDA’s, the Megabus is no place for that
bullshit.
The Basics
Try and book in advance. Try to book at
off-peak hours. Don’t pay for the premium seats. Get there between 10-30 mins
early if you can (though I have pulled off many last-minute arrivals). The trip
takes just under six hours if traffic is good, but I have had it take up to nine.
There is one in between stop at Kingston almost exactly half-way between the two
destinations. You get” one piece of luggage under the bus, a backpack sized
carry-on, and a “personal bag” which is ambiguous enough to let you bring a lot
of food with you outside of your backpack.
Rule
#1 - Expand
Everything
about the Megabus trip becomes easier and more enjoyable if you manage to get
two seats to yourself. If you have to sit with someone else, you can’t spread
out, you have to put your shit under the seat, if you don’t get the aisle you
have to negotiate going to the bathroom... God forbid they are chatty and all
of a sudden you are expected to be social, that’s a nightmare waiting to
happen. If you want to have a good Megabus journey, you want to do everything
possible to stop that from happening. I’m assuming you arrived early. Pick a
seat on the top level, away from the stairs so that you won’t be the first spot
people pass. Sit in the aisle seat. Take advantage of how lenient they are
about carry-on, and start to spread out over the two seats. Pull things out of
your carry-on if you have to. Ideally, have some kind of food that is somewhat
inappropriate for public consumption: milk, cottage cheese, hard-boiled eggs in
a jar, all of these are great options. Anything with an odour is great too. You
should be dressed and in general looking unpleasant. You probably worked up a
sweat trudging through the snow, let that shine. NEVER shower/shave/groom yourself
before a trip, you want to look and smell as awful as possible. Wear your loosest,
most stained clothing. Keep a sneer on your face and have headphones on,
ideally loud enough that some sound is leaking out, again, the more annoying
you seem to sit next to the better. The ideal situation is where everyone but
you is sitting next to someone else during the journey.
Rule
#2 – Preparation
This
might have been number 1 if I didn’t think expansion was so essential. It ties in
regardless. Six-plus hours is a long ass time, longer than you think. Absolute
necessities are:
- · Snacks
- · Ibuprofen
- · Chargers
- · Water
- · Coffee
- · Toilet Paper (no really, bring your own, it makes everything better AND makes you seem more like someone not worth sitting next to)
- · Neck Pillow (I don’t have one but I really should)
Beyond those essentials, it’s all about
giving yourself a variety of options. You will
get bored if you only bring one thing to do. My usual loadout includes the
above, my laptop (w/ external hard-drive loaded w/ movies), some schoolwork, two pairs of headphones (1
bluetooth 1 regular), some fiction, and my phone (loaded with podcasts). Beyond
the general off-putting nature, you should also dress in layers. The temperature
on Megabus is incredibly weird and variable, sometimes it gets very cold, sometimes
it gets very hot. You want to be flexible, is the general rule. It helps that
this flexibility makes it easier to spread out over two seats.
Rule
#3 – Take Advantage of the Kingston Stop
About
2.5 hours from Toronto and 3.5 hours from Montreal you run into
the Kingston stop, where they change drivers. They will tell you not to get off
the bus, that’s B.S. That said, it’s not a bad idea to be ready as the bus
pulls in so that you can beat the other passengers to Tim’s. There’s a Tim
Hortons across the road which is open 24 hours, fill up your water-bottle
either there or inside the station, and if you want, buy some food or coffee
for the second half of your trip. Take advantage of their bathroom, it’s
usually pretty clean. Have a smoke or two if that’s your thing, sometimes they
will make you get off the platform. The other key to this stop is to improve
your seating situation if necessary and ensure that a pesky Kingston hop on
doesn’t worsen it. If you are sitting with someone and enough people get off in
Kingston, grab yourself a new seat – you’re helping both yourself and the other
person. If the premium seats have been left vacant (Queens kids seem to buy
these all the time) go ahead and grab those, they have some slight perks.
Overall, take the opportunity to stretch but don’t let that stretching fuck you
over for the other half of the journey. I once thought I had done well by leaving
for Tim Hortons early and had a business kid with a suit bag take the aisle
seat, essentially the worst case scenario. Don’t let that happen to you,
remember rule #1!
Rule
#4 – Conduct
“But
Ian, you said ‘seem as unpleasant as possible,’ clearly manners aren’t a
priority here!” The key word here is seem.
It’s every rider for themselves, but that doesn’t mean you should be an
asshole. A second stern demand to couples: knock the PDA off. The Megabus is
not an enchanted journey it is a way to get from point A to point B. If you are
a talker, keep it down. In general I try to avoid phone conversations. If you
are unfortunate enough to end up with a seat-mate, be courteous to them, even
if they are a talker. Don’t hog both of the plugs. You’re not obligated to talk
to them for long but an exchange of names can’t hurt. Try and keep an eye on other
people using the bus bathroom, and plan your trips so that you don’t end up
creating a long line standing up. If you do use the bathroom, pee sitting down.
Make a toilet paper cover if you must, just don’t make that shit worse for everyone
else. In general, just keep to yourself, and if you do end up sitting next to
someone, it’s appropriate to void rule 1 and not spread yourself out. Sometimes
rule 1 doesn’t work, and you have to accept that and make the most of the trip
regardless.
Concluding
Notes
I hope this gives
you the tools you need to survive the commute between Eastern Canada’s major
cities. Despite all the negative stuff I’ve said, it’s really not that bad if
you are prepared, and it can be a good opportunity to get around to stuff you
have been meaning to, reflect on stuff, message and catch up with friends etc.
etc. Who knows, there are probably people who have actually made friends with
seatmates, though I will believe that when I see it. If you have any questions,
email me at ian.rodgers@mail.mcgill.ca
Errata
- · It is not worth transporting large quantities of alcohol from Montreal to Toronto, regardless of whether or not you get away with it. Trust me, I’ve tried, it was a disaster.
- · Don’t expect the Megabus wifi to be any good. It’s always spotty, and it’s recently gotten even more annoying because they created some bullshit app for phones. Download the media you will consume on the bus and save some data for the trip.
- · Sometimes you will get completely screwed and end up in an old fashioned coach which doesn’t even have spotty wifi or plugs. In this situation, battery management is absolutely crucial, and you should make use of analog forms of entertainment.
- · I’ve been doing this for 6 years and I still always manage to fuck up the preparation side of things, which is why it’s good to have fallbacks and to check off the essentials.
Lol!
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