Zoom zoom! Hop on and come along for a ride!
below: Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. What direction should we go today? Where will your feet take you next? Thinking interesting thoughts as we explore. “Life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself”. What have you created today? What should we create next?
Rather lofty words and ideas when all we’re doing is walking up Keele Street… where just looking at the stairs makes me tired.
below: It was good fun to see an altered Neighbourhood Watch sign – great to know that some still exist. Five years ago (yikes!) I posted a collection of “good guys” that I had found around the city. I don’t know if Andrew Mutton, the man responsible, is still making them but I haven’t seen any new ones for a long time.
This November has started with wonderful walking weather. In fact, the whole autumn has been a delight for those of us who like to be busy outside. The colours of the trees, shrubs, and vines seem to be more vibrant this year and I don’t think that it’s wrong to say that the colours have lasted longer than usual.
below: Keele and Annette
By the time you get to Keele and Dundas you are definitely in “The Junction” named for its proximity to the junction of a number of different railway lines. In 1884 this area became the village of West Toronto Junction.
below: Looking north up Keele to Dundas. Dundas is a long street that winds its way across the city. Here in the west end, it runs north south as it crosses Bloor West. Moving north from Bloor, Dundas parallels the GO tracks for a half kilometre or so and then bends almost ninety degrees to run parallel to the Canadian Pacific railway line. The junction of these two railway lines is a short distance away (to the northeast)
below: CP tracks
below: Back by the tracks
below: The remains of a vegetable garden. Are these brussell sprout plants where the sprouts part have already been removed?
From Keele, it’s a short walk east to the West Toronto Railpath which is on the east side of the GO tracks. The northern most entrance to the path is off of Cariboo Ave which is a tiny one block street north of Dupont. The southern end, although near College and Lansdowne, is actually where the GO tracks cross Dundas…. which is very confusing. If you look at it on a map, it makes a lot more sense!
below: The mural, “Strength in Numbers” is still on the underpass walls at Dupont and can be seen from the railpath. You can find more photos of it if you follow the link.
below: From the same bridge, looking east on Dupont. The twin steeples belong to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of St. Andrew the Apostle
below: Street art on the glass wall separating the path from the railway tracks.
below: Hoardings. Paintings. In the middle is a section that has been painted with these words: “The greatness of a community is most accurately measured by the compassionate actions of its members, a heart of grace, and a soul generated by love.: C.S.K. [Coretta Scott King]
below: Black Lives Matter, Run for Ahmaud, mural by kizmet32 and Francis Pratt. Tribute to Ahmaud Arbery who was out for a run when he was murdered by two white men, Gregory McMichael and his son, Travis
below: Kizmet street art on a Henderson Brewery truck on Sterling Ave.
below: The West Toronto Railpath crosses Bloor Street.
below: The giraffe building at Dundas and Bloor is still there.
below: That corner is getting a new mural, a thank you to front line workers during Covid. Borat has snuck into the photo too – but then his poster does say “Wear Mask, Save Live”. You can’t see all the words here…
below: But they are more visible here….
below: Street art in a parking lot. The one on the right is kizmet.
below: The building makes a wedge. On the right is the wall in the photo above.
below: Smash, crash, gambit
below: A skinless smoker with a third eye by bodh.io
below: Drible-drible with many noodles (?) and on a more political note, someone wants Doug Ford to resign.
below: A trio – More feelings boi, a collaboration between him and tbonez., and a tribute to jazz musician John Coltrane.
… and that’s all for now!
There are older posts with photos from the Junction and/or the West Toronto Railpath. I’ve been walking and blogging long enough now that there is bound to be repetition! If you are interested in more pictures, you can always search all posts in this this blog for “Junction”… or for whatever you want for that matter!