User:Deyancho/The Amazing Race 8: Neighbourhood Edition

Deyancho/The Amazing Race 8: Neighbourhood Edition
Season 8
Presented byPhil Keoghan
WinnersNick, Alex, Megan and Tommy Linz
No. of legs11
Distance traveled11,000 mi (18,000 km)
No. of episodes11
Release
Original releaseSeptember 27 (2005-09-27) –
December 13, 2005 (2005-12-13)
Additional information
Filming datesJuly 7 –
July 31, 2005
Season chronology
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Season 7
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Season 9

The Amazing Race - Neighbourhood edition

Leg 11 (Montana → Canada → New York)

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Teams spent the double-length leg in Canada by visiting Montreal Biosphère, which hosted Expo 67 (top), and continued on to the CN Tower, the tallest freestanding tower in the world, in Toronto (bottom).

Airdate: December 13, 2005

The first Detour of the leg was a choice between Slide It or Roll It. In Slide It, teams traveled to Glenfinnan Rink at McGill University to participate in the sport of curling. Each team member glided a granite stone 120 feet (37 m) down the ice to the house target. Once a team member got a stone into the house or touched the house with a total of 4 targets, they would receive their next clue. In Roll It, teams traveled to Morgan Arboretum and had to use lumberjack tools to roll four wooden logs along the 100-foot (30 m) course in order to receive their next clue from the lumberjack.

In the leg's first Roadblock, teams traveled to La Porte J at Trapezium, where one team member had to successfully complete a flying trapeze maneuver known as a "catch" in order to receive their clue.

The final Detour of the Race was a choice between Ship or Shoe. In Ship, teams sailed across Toronto Harbour from Queens Quay to the schooner Kajama. One team member climbed 100 feet (30 m) to the top of the mast to retrieve a nautical flag. Once they retrieved the flag, the captain would hand them their next clue. In Shoe, teams traveled to Bata Shoe Museum, where they would choose a pair of shoes; when they found a woman wearing a matching shoe among 100 women standing in the museum, they would receive their next clue.

The final Roadblock of the Race had teams travel to Joseph Davis State Environmental Park in Lewiston, New York, where one team member had to use 71 giant jigsaw puzzle pieces and complete a map of Central and North America (excluding the Caribbean). Once the puzzle was completed, teams were allowed to go to the finish line.

Additional tasks
  • At Square-Victoria Metro Station, teams had to find Underground City beneath the passageways of Centre CDP building to find their next clue.
  • After the Detour, teams were told to head to "American Pavilion" in which Montreal hosted Expo 67. They had to figure out that the next destination was Montreal Biosphère. Once there, teams had to climb to the 5th floor and get the next clue.
  • From Olympic Park, teams had to ride on a golf cart to the Olympic Stadium and enter through the one door large enough to drive through. Once arriving, teams had to search through 56,000 stadium seats for one of three charter flights to the mystery destination, with departure times the following morning at 5:45, 5:50, and 5:55 a.m. It was revealed to viewers that teams would be flying to Toronto.
  • Upon arriving in Toronto, teams had to find a clue on a marked GMC Yukon XL and made their way to the CN Tower. Once there, teams had to take an elevator to the observation deck at 1,122 feet (342 m). They then used binoculars to look for the next clue marker at Polson Pier.
  • At Whirlpool Jet Boat Tours on the Canadian side of Niagara Gorge, teams had to choose a jet boat from the boat ramp and take a ride up the gorge. Once there, teams had to grab their next clue from a buoy.
Final Amazing Challenge
  • After the race ended, CBS hosted the "Final Amazing Challenge" on the official website where the second and third place teams, Bransen and Weaver families, respectively, would compete for a GMC Yukon XL. Using the completed map from the final Roadblock, teams ran out to clue boxes to retrieve cutouts, each representing tasks they performed on the race, and placed them on the associated part of the map. This was repeated for twelve cutouts; the first family to complete the task would win the challenge.