Travel from Canada to hike

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Hillwalker

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After spending quite a bit of time trying to find the answer for this question on the net I have decided to pose to question to my fellow inhabitants of this forum.

I am traveling from NH to Scotland for another hiking month in May. Recently I discovered that not only is the airport in Montreal a quicker trip for me, but that flights from there to the UK are much less expensive than from Manchester or Boston. However I wondered if there are any restrictions about a US Citizen entering Canada by car, going to the airport, and then leaving Canada for the UK. Then returning a month later to Canada and thence back to the US.

It is a hiking related question, just not in this country:)
 
I am traveling from NH to Scotland for another hiking month in May. Recently I discovered that not only is the airport in Montreal a quicker trip for me, but that flights from there to the UK are much less expensive than from Manchester or Boston. However I wondered if there are any restrictions about a US Citizen entering Canada by car, going to the airport, and then leaving Canada for the UK. Then returning a month later to Canada and thence back to the US.
Why should there be. Except for having the car, what is the difference between flying to europe, landing in one country because it's the cheapest, then leaving that country to travel elsewhere. People do things like that all the time.
 
You should be just fine (obviously, you'll need your passport). Enjoy Scotland and saving the money by flying out of Montréal.

By the way, check out the Lonely Planet's Thorn Tree forum for answers to this sort of stuff (and other travel-related queries).
 
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