One house in the city.
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Tarps, ropes and metal cradles.
Lovingly and carefully stored boats, asleep for the winter awaiting spring and the start of a new sailing season. Canada, where the sailing season is short.
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Although snow and ice are an integral part of a Canadian winter, it is always interesting to find them in different settings. For example, icicles forming along the seams in the hull of a boat that is up for the winter.
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With many thanks to Stephen for giving me access to the yacht club for a few minutes this afternoon!
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Playing with lights, colours, and reflections at Brookfield Place.
Bay St., south of Wellington

From the bottom up, Allen Lambert Galleria, the 6 storey atrium of Brookfield Place, designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava.
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And now the lights are purple…. The lights change colours after a few minutes – purples, reds, greens, and blues.
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I didn’t see the electrical outlet when I took this photo. I was just attracted to the tiny squares of light by my feet.
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One cold Saturday evening, during a snowstorm, in downtown Toronto
Snow, lots of blowing snow!
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It wouldn’t be a Toronto street unless there was construction on it somewhere, even on the snowiest nights.
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With the shorter days of December come the lights of Christmas to brighten the longer hours of darkness.
The photos below were all taken in St. James Park.

Spots of colour contrast with the plain grey of the bare tree branches against the grey late afternoon sky.
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at least along Queen Street West……
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The suitman mural is on a railway underpass on Dupont St., just west of Lansdowne Ave. It covers the walls on both sides of the street.
It was first painted and funded with $2000 received from the City of Toronto’s Clean and Beautiful program. But after Rob Ford was elected mayor and began his “clean up” campaign, it was painted over with dull grey paint. Rather silly considering that Joel Richardson was paid by the city to paint it in the first place. Late in October 2011 it was replaced with a similar mural. It took six weeks to repaint, 25 gallons of paint and 100 large cans of spray paint.
Most of the photos taken were taken on 30 November 2013. Some photos are from a two years previous and they are marked as such.
The picture on the south side depicts business men lined up to form mathematical equation.

The eastern part of the equation. That’s not a check mark on the right of the photo, it’s part of a long division sign.
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This photo was taken from across the street – looking through the concrete pillars that support the railway bridge.
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This is one of the photos that was taken two years ago. I have included it for comparison purposes as the man wearing the gas mask is no longer part of the mural. Instead, three sitting women have been added at the bottom of the letter X. The next picture shows this part of the mural as it looks now.
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To the west of the train tracks. Note the absence of the man with the gas mask and the addition of the three women.
“And do thy duty even if it be humble, rather than another’s even if it be great. To die in one’s duty is LIFE: to live in another’s is death.” [quote from the Bhagavad Gita, a 700 verse scripture that part of the Hindi epic ‘Mahabharata’]
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“This at least would be the case in a society where things were left to follow their natural course, where there was perfect liberty, and where there was perfect FREE both to choose what occupation we thought proper and to change it as we thought PROPER. THE whole of the advantages and disadvantages of different employments of labour stock, must in the same neighbourhood, be either perfectly equal or continually tending to equality” [quote from “Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith]
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More information on this mural: http://joelrichardson.com/2011/10/
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1655 Dupont Street, a large red brick building that once housed the Viceroy Rubber Company factory. Now it is Planet Storage with over 10,000 square feet of self-storage space.
The building, now designated as a heritage building, has had it’s structure preserved although some of the lower storey windows have been boarded up. The east side of the building backs onto the Toronto Railpath and it has been decorated with graffiti at ground level. An old storage tank at the southeast corner of the building has been painted bright green to match the Planet Storage logo.
Viceroy still makes hockey pucks and other rubber items but at a newer plant on Weston Road, under the name of Allied Viceroy.
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Anti Rob Ford protest
A cold but clear November afternoon at Nathan Phillips Square.
people, signs, cameras, writing, chanting, speeches, media.
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View of the crowd from part way up the steps just before they moved towards the front door of City Hall.
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Writing on the wall, about 12:40. I am not sure when the writing started, but when I first got to Nathan Phillips Square there wasn’t too much on the wall yet.
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A little bit later, a few more words on the wall as well as on the ground. Sashay away! Fraud Nation. No to Drugs. Harper + Ford = Corruption. Help yourself & help Toronto, Step Down.
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Protesters, spectators and photographers. There were a lot of photographers! A lot of media, print, radio and television, were there too. Newstalk 1010 (where the Ford brothers had their radio show) had at least one person walking around with a microphone.
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#savetoronto #topoli #robford
With thanks to the Starbucks at Queen and Victoria where I was able to park myself and my laptop while I put this blog together. Wifi and an electrical outlet for the price of a tall coffee, can’t beat it.