I walked around the corner and down a small dead end lane and this is what I saw.
near St. Clair West
#jesuisCharlie Toronto version.
Rally & march, Sunday 11 January.
Nathan Phillips Square

Theo Van Gogh was a Dutch film producer, writer and actor. He helped create a short film depicting the mistreatment of Islamic women after which he received death threats. In November of 2004 he was murdered in Amsterdam.

There was also a group there with a large sign that said ‘Free all Political Prisoners in Iran’. A number of Iranian flags were being carried, but they were the flag with the lion in the center.
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Along Dundas St. West between Islington and Kipling there are a series of more than twenty murals that depict scenes from the history of the area.
In 1793, Simcoe’s Queen’s Rangers cut a route through the forest for Dundas Street. It was meant to serve both as a military route in case of war with the U.S. and as a route to increase settlement in the area. Settlement of what became the village of Islington began a few years later with the arrival of the Johnston family in 1808.
The first mural was a picture of the Methodist church painted on plywood. It no longer exists.
mural 2 – The Way We Were, part 1 by John Kuna, 2005.
Looking east along Dundas St. towards Cordova Ave in 1912. It includes Hopkins store and the Methodist church.
mural 3 – They Way We Were part 2, 1912, by John Kuna, 2006.
Because of the car that was parked next to it, I don’t have a good photo of the whole mural.
mural 4 – Timeline: Islington Then and Now, by John Kuna, 2006.
Showing Dunn’s store (NE corner of Dundas & Burnhamthorpe Cres) as well as the flowering catalpa trees that used to line the street (on the right in the picture)
mural 5 — Honouring Islington’s Volunteer Fire Brigade, by John Kuna, 2007.
Islington had its first motorized fire truck in 1931. In the 1940s and 1950s the volunteer firefighters would use water from the Mimico creek to flood part of Central Park, on the west side of the creek, to create a skating rink.
mural 6 – Riding the Radials, by John Kuna, 2007.
From 1917 to 1931 the old Guelph Radial Line (or Toronto Suburban Railway) ran close by this site. It was an electric rail line between Toronto and Guelph.
mural 7 – Briarly, Gone but not Forgotten, by John Kune, 2007.
Briarly, also known as Gunn House was built in 1840s. From 1870 to 1985 it was owned by the Montgomery family and their descendents.
mural 9 – Harold G. Shipp’s Firt High Flier, by John Kuna, 2008.
The story behind this mural: “In 1944 Harold Shipp convinced a Lancaster bomber pilot who ferried supplies from Toronto to England during the war, to fly over the school’s football field and drop hundreds of leaflets, a few of which could be traded for tickets to the school dance. Unfortunately, a rogue wind scattered the leaflets across the Chinese market gardens near Montgomery’s Inn. In the ensuing mayhem, excited football fans frantic to secure a winning ticket, stormed the field and trampled the carefully tended cabbages”
mural 10 – Portraits from our Past by Sarah Collard, 2008.
Inspired by pictures taken in the early 1900’s. “These include: Apple Packers at Bigham family orchards, Rathburn and Martingrove ~1917; Sunday Afternoon, a scene showing the family of famous Islington photographer Walter Moorhouse on their veranda at 34 MacPherson Ave. (now Aberfoyle); Islington’s First Car, a 1917 Chevrolet owned by the Appleby family; and the Village Shoemaker, Mr. Nelson in the 20th century.”
mural 11 – Mimico Creek in Fall, ca 1920, by John Kuna, 2008.
Looking north towards the Dundas Street bridge.
Gordon’s Dairy, by John Kuna, 2008.
mural 13 – The Old Swimming Hole by June Kuna, 2009.
Swimmers at the mill pond.
mural 14 – The Pub with no Beer, by June Kuna, 2009.
A scene from the Prohibition Era in the late 1920’s. Men collecting empty pop bottles from outside the Islington Hotel.
mural 15, Faith of Our Fathers, part 2, by John Kuna
mural 16 – The Manse Committee by John Kuna 2010
The Prodigy, by John Kuna, 2011
A satellite branch of the Royal Conservatory of Music was located in this building from the 1950s through the 1980s.
mural 19 – Aftermath by John Kuna, 2011.
After Hurricane Hazel on 15 Oct 1854, most of Islington Golf Course and the low lying areas around Mimico Creek were flooded.
mural 20 – Ontario Gothic, by John Kuna, 2011
mural 21 – Toboggan Hill, by John Kuna, 2011
Fishing in Mimico Creek, by John Kuna, 2012,
with Riding the Radials seen in the background.
The Faces of Islington, by John Kuna, 2013
the mural with no sign
more information – village of Islington murals website
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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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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Since my walking is still limited and I have time on my hands, I have been sorting and editing older photos.
Back on New Years day I went to Sunnyside Park to watch the annual Polar Bear Dip. Some of the photos that I took that day are now at: http://www.asiwalktoronto.com/lightbox_polar.html
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