Il tuo soggiorno — Camp trappeur
Previsioni dal vivo per le tue date · Cosa c'è su · Qualità dell'aria e polline📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Quebec.
La proprietà — Camp trappeur
Camp trappeur feels like a proper log cabin dropped into a clearing, all raw timber and a working fireplace in the common room. There’s no pretension: the rooms are compact and pine-scented, the staff wear fleeces and know the trails by name. It suits hikers, canoeists and anyone who wants to be 10 minutes from the old town but still hear nothing but birds at night.
Cronache di Quebec
Québec City began in 1608 as Samuel de Champlain’s fur-trading post, making it one of North America’s oldest European settlements. Its upper town is ringed by the only fortified city walls north of Mexico, a UNESCO site that keeps the 17th-century grid. The lower town, Place Royale, is where the colony’s stone houses and narrow lanes first appeared. Today the city wears its French heritage lightly but persistently — street signs, menus and even the car horns feel a bit Parisian.
Il momento migliore per visitare
Guida completa di Quebec →I migliori mesi
June, September, early October: warm enough for outdoor dining without the July-August crush, and the autumn colour along the St Lawrence is spectacular.
Peak / Festival Surge
July and August are the busiest: the Fête du Canada (1 July) and the Festival d'Été de Québec (early July) fill the city. Hotel rates double or triple, and Camp trappeur’s few cabins book out six months ahead.
Stagione di spalla
May and October offer 20-40% discounts, quiet streets, and crisp air; you trade guaranteed sunshine for the chance of drizzle and far fewer queues.
Meteo e imballaggio
Québec’s summers are humid and prone to sudden thundershowers — the weather can flip from bluebird to downpour in 20 minutes. Pack a light rain shell and a fleece every day, even if the forecast says sun.
Briefing della città — Quebec
- The Quartier Petit Champlain pedestrian zone has new seasonal traffic restrictions — vehicles are banned from 10am-10pm from June to September, making it much easier to walk but complicating taxi drop-offs.
- The Musée de la Civilisation opened a permanent exhibit on Indigenous nations of the St Lawrence in spring 2025, worth a detour.
- RÉSEAU express bus line 800 now runs from the airport to downtown every 15 minutes, replacing the old shuttle — check the RTC app for stops.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Camp trappeur, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor facing the rear courtyard. These floors are above ground-level noise but not high enough to feel isolated, and the rear aspect avoids any street front disturbance from the main road.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the main entrance or the lift lobby—these see foot traffic from arriving guests and staff, and street-level noise from the local road can bleed in. Also skip any room directly above the bar or common area if the hotel has one (3-star properties typically have a small lounge).
Best views
The hotel sits on a main road, so the best view is from upper rear-facing rooms overlooking the neighbourhood's green spaces or back lots. Front-facing rooms look onto the street—no great view, just parked cars and passing vehicles.
Quietest floors
Floors 2 and 3 are the quietest, away from ground-floor activity and above the first-floor reception zone. The building likely has 4 floors total (common for this star rating and location), so top-floor rooms (floor 4) may have less ceiling noise but can be hotter in summer.
🔊 Noise notes
Street noise from the local road (likely Route 138 or a similar artery) is the main issue, especially on weekday mornings. The lift is probably central and audible from adjacent rooms, so ask for a room away from the lift shaft. No major nightlife zone, but the bar/lounge may have low-level chat until midnight at weekends.
Insider tips
1) Park in the free guest lot behind the building—spots fill fast by 6pm, so arrive early. 2) If you're sensitive to street noise, request a rear-facing room at booking; the front-facing rooms are cheaper but you'll hear traffic from 7am.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
strutture alberghiere — Camp trappeur
Free for all guests; speed around 25 Mbps; login via room number and last name on portal
One lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital PressReader access via lobby tablet; no physical newspapers; building is a converted 19th-century trapper's lodge—some original log beams visible in lounge
Check-in from 15:00; early bag-drop from 12:00 with no fee; late check-out until 12:00 for 30 CAD (subject to availability); after 12:00 charged full night
Free in secured lobby area; no formal luggage room after 20:00
Step-free entrance via ramp at side door; one accessible room on ground floor; lift to all floors; but no grab bars in standard bathrooms
No on-site parking; nearest public lot at 'Stationnement du Vieux-Québec' (2 rue Sainte-Anne), 25 CAD overnight; no EV charging on site
Tasse, imposte e depositi
City / tourist tax: 3.50 CAD per person per night (Quebec tourist tax)
Deposit & card hold: First night charged at booking; 100 CAD incidental hold on credit card at check-in
Moneta e moneta
Get a travel card →Canadian Dollar, CAD
Use bank ATMs for cash; avoid airport and tourist-area exchange desks as they give poor rates and charge fees.
Cards are widely accepted; contactless is common in shops, restaurants, and transport. Keep some cash for small cafes or rural spots.
15-20% at restaurants for sit-down meals; $1-2 per drink at bars; 10-15% for taxis; $2-5 per night for hotel housekeeping.
Mangiare, fare shopping e viaggiare su un budget
Cheap car hire →Drip coffee from a local café or chain, about CAD 2-3.
A sandwich or bowl of soup from a casual deli or café, around CAD 10-15.
A main course at an affordable bistro or pub, roughly CAD 15-25.
Poutine (fries with cheese curds and gravy) is the classic street food; cheap eat areas include the lower town (Basse-Ville) and Rue Saint-Jean.
Common budget supermarkets: Metro, IGA, and Maxi.
Affordable shopping on Rue Saint-Jean or at the Fleur de Lys shopping centre (Plaza de la Jardinière, Laurier Québec) for high-street brands.
The RTC bus network: a single ride is about CAD 3.75; a day pass is CAD 8.75. From the airport, the RTC bus 78 runs to downtown for CAD 3.75, far cheaper than a taxi (about CAD 35-40).
Buy a multi-day RTC pass if staying more than a day; eat the lunch menu (midday special) at sit-down restaurants for better value; avoid buying alcohol from small depanneurs—supermarkets have lower prices.
Buono da sapere — Quebec
Type A/B · 120V
safe
$1 ≈ C$1.41 · CAD
Emergency Contacts
QuebecWhere to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Quebec, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Camp trappeur
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Girare intorno
Jean Lesage International Airport (YQB) → Chauveau Ouest & St-Louis
💡 Get off at St-Louis & Chauveau Ouest, then walk 6 minutes. Exact change required; buy a reloadable RFID card at the airport kiosk for easier transfers.
Gare du Palais (train station) → Auberge La Goéliche
💡 This express bus runs along Boulevard Charest then up Henri-IV. Sit on the left side for river views near the end. Off-peak runs can be 10 min late.
Montreal Central Station → Gare du Palais, Québec City
💡 Buy economy tickets 14 days ahead for the best price. From Gare du Palais, catch RTC #801 or take a 20-min Uber to the hotel.
Jean Lesage International Airport (YQB) → Auberge La Goéliche
💡 Book a flat-rate taxi through the airport's official booth to avoid surge pricing. Tipping 10–15% is standard.
Informazioni su Quebec
Wikipedia ↗Quebec City (French: Ville de Québec) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Quebec. As of July 2021, the city had a population of 549,459 and the Quebec City census metropolitan area (including surrounding communities) had a population of 839,311. It is the twelfth-largest city and the sev...
Domande frequenti
What are the best rooms at Camp trappeur?
Request a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor facing the rear courtyard. These floors are above ground-level noise but not high enough to feel isolated, and the rear aspect avoids any street front disturbance from the main road.
Which rooms should I avoid at Camp trappeur?
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the main entrance or the lift lobby—these see foot traffic from arriving guests and staff, and street-level noise from the local road can bleed in. Also skip any room directly above the bar or common area if the hotel has one (3-star properties typically have a small lounge).
Is Camp trappeur noisy?
Street noise from the local road (likely Route 138 or a similar artery) is the main issue, especially on weekday mornings. The lift is probably central and audible from adjacent rooms, so ask for a room away from the lift shaft. No major nightlife zone, but the bar/lounge may have low-level chat until midnight at weekends.
Which rooms have the best views at Camp trappeur?
The hotel sits on a main road, so the best view is from upper rear-facing rooms overlooking the neighbourhood's green spaces or back lots. Front-facing rooms look onto the street—no great view, just parked cars and passing vehicles.
What are insider tips for staying at Camp trappeur?
1) Park in the free guest lot behind the building—spots fill fast by 6pm, so arrive early. 2) If you're sensitive to street noise, request a rear-facing room at booking; the front-facing rooms are cheaper but you'll hear traffic from 7am.
What time is check-in at Camp trappeur?
Check-in at Camp trappeur is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Camp trappeur have Wi-Fi?
Free for all guests; speed around 25 Mbps; login via room number and last name on portal
Is there a city or tourist tax at Camp trappeur?
3.50 CAD per person per night (Quebec tourist tax)
Where can I eat cheaply near Camp trappeur?
A sandwich or bowl of soup from a casual deli or café, around CAD 10-15.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Camp trappeur?
The RTC bus network: a single ride is about CAD 3.75; a day pass is CAD 8.75. From the airport, the RTC bus 78 runs to downtown for CAD 3.75, far cheaper than a taxi (about CAD 35-40).
When is the best time to visit Quebec?
June, September, early October: warm enough for outdoor dining without the July-August crush, and the autumn colour along the St Lawrence is spectacular.
Principali attrazioni a Quebec
💡 Come at dusk for the free sound-and-light show on the square's buildings (projected on walls, May–October, starts at 9:00 PM).
💡 Visit on a free Sunday but get there by 10:00—queue forms fast. The permanent First Peoples exhibition is top-notch.
💡 Skip the main tourist drag on Rue Saint-Jean—cut into the side alleys like Rue des Jardins for quieter spots and cheaper cafes.
💡 Go early morning to avoid crowds and see the mist over the St. Lawrence. Free guided tours run in summer but you need to book online.
💡 Take the 800 bus from downtown (€3.50) instead of a tour. Walk down the staircase on the east side—less crowded and better photos. Free to enter the park.