Posts Tagged ‘muskoka chairs’
Canada Day on the waterfront
Posted: July 1, 2023 in locations, people, waterfrontTags: bicycle, bikes, boats, Canadian flag, condos, dogs, Emprire Sandy, ice cream, Kajama, Lake Ontario, Martin Goodman Trail, muskoka chairs, people, Queens Quay, sand, splash pad, sugar beach, sun tanning, walking, water, waterfront, yellow umbrellas
beach morning
Posted: August 23, 2019 in nature, waterfrontTags: beach, black eye susans, boats, clouds, daisies, dog, flowers, Kew Beach, Kew Gardens, Kew Williams, Lake Ontario, life guard, lobelia cardinalis, monarch butterfly, muskoka chairs, paddle boards, people, rocks, sane, sky, walking, water, zinnia
As August marches relentlessly along the daylight hours shrink. One advantage of the shorter days is that sunrise isn’t at a time that starts with the number 5. I’m not a morning person but I like to take morning pictures.
below: Pinkish sky as the sun rises.
below: There was an enormous flock of birds flying low over the water together. Can you see the swimmer?
below: Ready for the day
below: Reading on the beach… just after 7 a.m.
below: A group of women on their paddle boards (not quite so early. I had breakfast part way through my walk that morning).
below: Mother and son.
below: At 11:15 the life guards row to their stations.
below: Kew Williams house, now on the grounds of Kew Gardens. Kew Williams (1873-1956 ) built the house in 1902 on the grounds of what was then The Canadian Kew Gardens, a campground resort opened in 1879 by his parents, Joseph & Jane (nee Henry) Williams. Joseph Williams sold the house and 20 acre property to the City of Toronto in 1907. A year later the property became Kew Gardens.
The gardens are very well maintained. They are in full bloom at the moment and looking gorgeous. I will leave you with a few pictures of flowers, colourful ones to brighten your day.
below: A stalk of lobelia cardinalis grows among the black eyed susans.
below: A monarch butterfly finds a bright red flower.
below: A pink zinnia
below: Gaillardia pulchella, also known as firewheel or Indian blanket
below: Three white daisies growing with smaller orange flowers
rainy day walk by the waterfront
Posted: June 30, 2019 in nature, reflections, waterfrontTags: basketball, birds, boats, Canada geese, city, CN Tower, Coronation Park, Empire Sandy, flood, granite, H2O park, Lake Ontario, Little Norway Park, M.S. Kane, muskoka chairs, Ontario Place, puddles, Queens Quay West, rock, sailboats, sanbags, sand, swan, Trillium Park, water, yellow umbrellas
This has been a wet spring along the waterfront. Lake Ontario has been at its highest level in years. Earlier, I had posted some photos that I took of Woodbine, Kew and Balmy beaches and the high water levels there (blog post, “water logged”). The other day I visited the beaches and walkways at the other end of the city’s waterfront, from H2O beach to Ontario Place.
below: Flooding at H2O Beach
below: All that water makes for some colourful reflections!
below: Looking west towards the old Canada Malting Company silos as the dark clouds signal an approaching storm.
below: The Empire Sandy docked along with the tugboat, M.S. Kane
below: Toronto’s fire rescue boat, the William Lyon Mackenzie, docked beside Fire Station 334. It was built in 1964 and is named for Toronto’s first mayor.
below: Queens Quay at Spadina, looking west
below: A streetcar starts to head north on Spadina
below: Playing basketball in the rain.
below: An old blue canoe at Little Norway park. A training camp for the Norway’s Air Force was located here (SW corner of Queens Quay and Bathurst) during WW2. The large rock that you can see in the photo is a 3000 pound boulder brought from Norway in 1976 to be part of a permanent monument to the people who trained and served here. In 1986 the space became Little Norway Park.
below: Looking back towards downtown and the CN Tower from the western end of Queens Quay West.
below: Lots of big puddles at Coronation Park
below: Yellow flowerpot islands
below: Someone has tied a string of small Canadian flags to the railing at Coronation Park. Happy Canada Day weekend!
below: Toronto skyline from Trillium Park, from the green trees of Coronation Park on the left and past the CN Tower to Billy Bishop airport on the far left.
below: Large granite rock in Trillium Park
below: Ontario Place, where TSN was playing to no one.
below: Flooding by the marina at Ontario Place. In the foreground is what appears to be an electrical box.
below: The Canada geese have these Muskoka chairs to themselves.
below: From the northwest corner of Ontario Place, looking west over Lake Ontario towards Etobicoke and Mississauga
below: There was also flooding on Lakeshore Blvd.
below: Puddles in an almost empty parking lot, CNE grounds.
Ice Breakers 2018
Posted: February 10, 2018 in public art, waterfrontTags: bear, Bennet Marburger, black bamboo, CN Tower, Ensemble, eyes, H2O park, Ji Zhang, music, Music Garden, muskoka chairs, Peter Sampson, Queens Quay, red, red bear, Root Cabin, sculpture, Tanya Goertzen, Thena Tak, tree roots, waterfront, Waterfront BIA, wind chimes, winter fanfare, wood
Ice Breakers returned to the Toronto waterfront once again last month. In mid-January five interactive art installations were built along Queens Quay West between the Harbourfront Centre in the east and the Music Garden in the west.
below: Appropriate for a space called the Music Garden, is a large structure supporting many wind chimes. This is “Ensemble” by Joao Araujo Sousa and Joana Correia Silva of Portugal.
There are two installations in H2O Park.
below: On the west side of the park is “Winter Fanfare” by Thena Tak of Vancouver. It is made from painted layers of wood. After I had walked past this installation I happened to look back to see a group of boys using these wood forms as protection as they had a snow ball fight.
below: Also in H2O park is “Through the Eyes of the Bear”. This giant bear, or rather parts of a bear, is the creation of Tanya Goertzen of Calgary.
below: The large head of the bear is open at the back. With a little crouching you can go inside and look out through the bear’s eyes. It’s got a great view of the CN Tower!
below: Close to the Simcoe Wave Deck (at the bottom of Simcoe Street) is a structure called “Black Bamboo” that you can walk through. It was designed by Bennet Marburger and Ji Zhang of China.
below: Last is “Root Cabin”, a small hut constructed from large tree roots. The day that I walked past these Ice Breakers was early on when they weren’t quite complete. The roots were being arranged, like a puzzle being put together. The pink frame was being used as a guide and the plan was to remove it once the roots were in place. This installation was designed by Liz Wreford and Peter Sampson from Winnipeg.
For more information, Ice Breakers
These installations remain until the 25th of February.
laid back catching rays
Posted: June 8, 2017 in nature, people, waterfrontTags: beach, dog, flood, Kew Beach, Lake Ontario, lifeguard, muskoka chairs, people, reflections, sitting, sunshine, Woodbine Beach
Yesterday afternoon was perfect for a stroll along the boardwalk. I hadn’t been in that part of the city since the flooding occurred earlier in the spring. The lake levels are still high but that doesn’t prevent people from enjoying the sun and sand.
below: Party time behind the fence! This scene caught my eye because of the positioning of the chairs behind the fence (part of the beach is closed after the flooding). It wasn’t until I looked at the picture on my computer that I saw the LCBO bag between two of the chairs and the can of Palm Bay on one of arm rests.
below: The lifeguards are now manning some of the stations. Because of the flooding, there is a pool behind the lifeguard where there was once beach.
below: The remnants of sandbags ebb and flow with the waves. Grounded. Just enough sand to keep them from floating away.
below: The high water levels have encroached on the dog park.
below: Look! An aerial view of Stonehenge! LOL. And with that smile (I hope!)… and with sand between my toes and in my sandals, I’ll leave you for another day.
spring has sprung
Posted: May 12, 2016 in general Toronto, nature, waterfrontTags: blossoms, CN Tower, fake flowers, garden, leaves, muskoka chairs, outdoor, outdoors, plastic flowers, red chairs, spring, trees, urban, waterfront, wave deck, weather
There is time between winter and spring that is a dreary time of greyness and dullness. It is a time when the the snow is gone but nature hasn’t come out of hibernation. It is also a time best forgotten.
Luckily we don’t have to wait long.
… just a little longer ….
or if you can’t wait, there’s always plastic!
From the time the first spring flowers start to show
until the time they are in full bloom is usually only a matter of days.
Trees too soon show their colours. The yellows of the willow trees usually appear first.

Almost daily the trees are greener…
… or full of flowers.
And for another year we forget the last grey days of winter




































































































































