Hanging out and Yonge and Dundas and trying to stay dry
Posts Tagged ‘puddles’
rainy day people
Posted: September 26, 2022 in locations, peopleTags: Dundas, families, hoodies, people, puddles, rain, rain coats, splashing, streetcars, TTC, umbrellas, walking, wet, Yonge Dundas Square, Yonge St.
February thaw
Posted: February 23, 2020 in locations, nature, peopleTags: bridge, ducks, Edwards Gardens, ice, melting, path, people, puddles, reading, sitting, snow, walking, water, Wilket Creek Park
This weekend saw the temperatures rise high enough draw people outside. A lot of the snow melted and there was hope in the air – hope that winter won’t last too much longer. This being Canada, winter can last as long as it wants!… And that’s often into April. In the meantime, it was great to enjoy the weekend.
below: A quiet sunny spot to sit
below: Taking selfies on the rocks at Edwards Gardens.
below: Watching the ducks on the partially frozen Wilket Creek.
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.
































































