Saturday, May 13, 2023

Crank

 Linking up with Marg at The Intrepid Reader

May 2023 - Toronto ON


Check out the coffee selections - Morning Glory, fifth Gear, Cranky Pants, Crank It Up and Get Cranked.


Saturday morning started with a Coronation breakfast of rashers, black pudding and fried egg as I skimmed the stories about the coronation. I am not interested in Charles and Camilla, I just like to see the pomp and ceremony and of course, the fashion. Canada was well represented.


Saturday and I thought I was going to do laundry, but we couldn't get the door to the laundry open. John tried everything to no avail. I put a request for help to our handy handyman. UPDATE He is very busy so I decided on Tuesday to get a locksmith. First I asked the office for a recommendation.

Handle off, oiled, took door hinges off, it won't budge.

Sunday was a lazy day as usual. 

Monday Mural was taken last week.



John had golf at noon. 

I was on my laptop when these feet appeared for window cleaning.



I headed out around 12:30 and totally changed my plans and went to Yonge and Dundas to find a new mural.
Found in my wanderings.


Yet another condo, I can't remember what was on this corner.


I found this on Urban Toronto.



And the plan is...


And you have to laugh!



Back on the ground at College Park.


Normally you cannot see the etchings on this bridge at Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson).



This historical panorama includes 14 portraits: Margaret Atwood, John Candy, Leonard Cohen, Viola Desmond, Chief Dan George, Wayne Gretzky, Yousuf Karsh, k.d. lang, Marshall McLuhan, Oscar Peterson, Mary Pickford, Buffy Sainte-Marie, David Suzuki, and Pierre Elliott Trudeau.


The G. Raymond Chang School of Continuing Education is the school responsible for continuing education at Toronto Metropolitan University.

The school is named for the late G. Raymond Chang, OC, third Chancellor of Toronto Metropolitan University (known at the time as Ryerson University) and Director of CI Financial.

The building incorporates the façade of the O'Keefe Building, the administrative headquarters for O’Keefe Breweries, in 1939. O’Keefe House was designed by the architectural firm of Chapman and Oxley, a firm that produced some very fine Beaux-Arts and Moderne buildings in Toronto in the ’20s and ’30s. The construction of O’Keefe House represents a corporate re-investment in the Canadian brewing industry after several decades of prohibition. The site was used for beer brewing since the early days of Toronto. 



Starting May 1, 2023, all vehicle traffic is being diverted off Queen Street from Bay Street to Yonge Street and from Yonge Street to Victoria Street for an estimated four and a half years – an important step forward in the construction of Ontario Line’s future Queen Station.
What a mess! Drivers are not happy. Streetcars are diverting along Dundas St.


I lost an opal out of my Australian bracelet a week ago, I also had two other pieces of jewelry that needed fixing. It used to be that you could find lots of jewelers along Yonge St. but now it is fast food, restaurants and condos. I did find one though and left the three pieces to be mended.

T for Tuesday was from last week's trip to the Gardiner.


John took the car in to have the piece that was making all that noise replaced. While he was at that end of town he went to a new gluten-free bakery. He said the cheese bread is delicious. The loaves and slices are a good size too.


I had a class booked at the AGO, Artistic Dots but I just wasn't feeling it. I headed out anyway, was waiting for the streetcar and one flew right by me! Another one came and I took it to Peter St. and then walked as traffic was heavy.

I saw the class gathering and thought, nope, they look boring! I wandered around by myself instead.



I took in some of the temporary exhibits.

In 2000, Tillmans was the first photographer and first non-British artist to receive the Turner Prize, an award given annually by Tate in London. In recent years, Tillmans has been more directly involved in political activism. In tandem with his ongoing Truth Study Center project (begun in 2005), he has created posters for the anti-Brexit campaign in Britain and in response to right-wing populism in Germany. Fragile, a major touring solo exhibition of the artist’s work, opened in 2018 at the Musée d’Art Contemporain et Multimédias in Kinshasa, with the final stop taking place at Art Twenty One and CCA, Lagos in 2022.







I do love this piece!



Look at that lace!



Walking to our shuttle bus stop.


I came across another gaping hole. I used to work in a building right behind that skinny white one (TIFF headquarters) that we watched being built. So I walked along here every workday.


Press gobbledygook!

Forma presents unparalleled architecture and interior design to create a world-class condominium masterpiece. Standing 73 and 84 storeys tall at the nexus of the entertainment and financial districts in Toronto, Forma will be Frank Gehry’s tallest residential towers, offering breathtaking views, bespoke suite finishes, elevated lifestyle amenities and services, wellness spaces, entertainment lounges, creative coworking spaces and an outdoor terrace to call home.
From the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, to the Walt Disney Concert Hall in LA, visionary architect Frank Gehry has changed the course of architecture and design on a global scale. Now, he is coming home to Toronto with Forma. Gehry’s tallest creation in the world, devoted to the city where he was born.


Wednesday I left at 10:30 to see tulips!

More than 11,000 tulips have been planted in the heart of Toronto's Financial District in Arnell Plaza at Bay Adelaide Centre. On May 10 and 11, 2023, the vibrant garden will open and you can stroll through the flowers and even pick your own.

Simply grab a pair of scissors and cut your selection, $5 donation to the Daily Food Bank for 6 tulips.





I stopped here for their "spicy" southern chicken. The chicken was good, but not outstanding and there certainly wasn't any spice!




I took a stroll up to City Hall. The Brains are back! Click here to see 2023 Brains and links to previous years' exhibits.
 




Hazy skies and dramatic red sunsets will be a common sight in Ontario this week, thanks to the almost 150 wildfires currently raging across Alberta and B.C. — a disaster that has forced tens of thousands from their homes in Western Canada.



Thursday was more tulips as we drove to Fenwick to see their tulip fields. Fenwick is in the heart of Niagara Wineries.










We had some Dutch pancakes.



On the way home we stopped at a fruit stand and got honey crisp apples ($17), field tomatoes ($4) and asparagus ($6).

We also stopped in Grimsby to see the Painted Ladies. Unfortunately, there wasn't any parking and there were a lot of cars parked in front of the houses.













Since my handyman wasn't available until Tuesday, my cleaning lady suggested her husband could fix my locked laundry door. He came with his nephew and they jimmied it open. YAY!
The soap dispenser drawer wasn't closed completely and the handle had gotten latched under it.



Friday I met my BFF and we headed to lunch at Buster's for lobster rolls (again) and a good chin wag.

COOKING

Saturday - appetizer night - breaded GF shrimp, arancino. Italian sausage. We never buy prepared frozen food AND now I know why we don't. The shrimp were small and the breading was awful. The arancino - was tasteless and I'm not sure where the rice was.






Sunday - Mexican for a late Cinco de Mayo - guacamole, chimichurri, fajitas flank steak

Monday oven-fried chicken quarters, roast potatoes and carrots

Tuesday frozen Libretto pizza



Wednesday hamburger stew

Thursday pork chops and oven-baked balsamic and parmesan asparagus.

Friday steak, broccoli and garlic bread.

WATCHING

I watched a mini-series In the Dark through the Library Hoopla app. I reached my monthly borrowing limit, maybe I'll "borrow" John's account.

We watched the 3 part series Citadel.

We're caught up in the Jeopardy Masters series.

I am watching a series, The Tailor. This Turkish series feels old-school soap.  I am enjoying it.
Terzi, or The Tailor, is a Turkish series that follows a young man named Peyami and his best friend, Dimitri. They have been friends since school and label each other as blood brothers as adults. Peyami has a grand fashion atelier in Istanbul, whereas Dimitri looks like the sort to waste his parents’ money and exploit his privilege. Dimitri has a fiance who curiously disappears one day, so he begins to go mad over finding her. In the meantime, Peyami has his own secrets regarding his family

READING




I gave up on Echoland, just too slow.

I really enjoyed The Lost Girl, although the ending may be a little far-fetched.
The narrative blends fact and fiction, including storylines from the past and the present,
The storyline is based on the unfolding of the November 2015 Paris terrorist attacks.

I also started Dark Music and am enjoying it.
Inspired by Sherlock Holmes, an exhilarating new thriller from the bestselling author of The Girl in the Spider's Web--a murder investigation in which two unlikely allies race to uncover a shadowy international conspiracy.




15 comments:

  1. What a busy week!

    I especially liked the painted ladies. Like you I enjoyed the history or the coronation, the cultural artifacts, the tradition.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I really wish we could have walked around the Painted Ladies, but they are in a circle and there was no parking.

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  2. Toronto is such an enticing city. My daughter claims that she is going to live there one day...when she becomes a famous YouTube star (she is drop dead serious when she says this.) We'll see. The fires are scary. Isn't it very early for wild fires? Stay safe.

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  3. I have had those little Dutch pancakes.

    The write up for those two towers reminds me of a term I've used derisively for a similar line of work- marketing chimps.

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  4. Loved your picture of Grange Park and St George Church. My son lived in an apt next door about 10 yrs ago. I used to stand on his balcony and just stare at the view which was all the way to the Rogers Ctr and the water. I liked the old Grange Park better than the new version. I read your blog often. I enjoy reading about Toronto. Your city has so much to offer. We always enjoy our visits. You were very near us when you visited St Martins last year. I love the Grange Pk area. So close to downtown, Rogers Ctr, Kensington Market, entertainment district etc.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I like that area too, there are so many interesting buildings.

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  5. I'm so glad you are able to get out and about again and share all the amazing sights with us. I especially loved the mural and the Painted Ladies.

    And, oh my, those tulips! I thought tulips were the most beautiful flowers when I was little. We never see them here. I guess it's too hot.

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  6. It's fun seeing the architecture of Toronto through your posts, even as it changes. And the tulips! Such a vibrant sign of spring.
    I like takes on Sherlock Holmes, so I'm adding Dark Music to my list. My most recent "inspired by Sherlock Holmes" read is The Affair of the Mysterious Letter by Alexis Hall -- I plan to post that review next month.

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  7. Those tulips!!! Gorgeous. Hey, tulip can be my Wordle word tomorrow :-) I have Dark Places on my list now and look forward to that. Will check out the two books you mentioned. I am so late linking with Sunday Salon today!

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  8. I'll have a cup of Cranky Pants coffee, please!

    Glad to hear the laundry room situation was easily fixed with a strategic jimmy!

    Apartment & Condo prices here are outrageous, too. I would really like to know what do these people do for a living that can afford to live in them? And how are there so many people who CAN afford to live in them?

    Love the two pictures from when you wandered by yourself. The old building with pink trees out front and the owl mural.

    Love the tulips, dutch pancakes trailer, and the idiomatic attic cartoon!

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  9. Is that 155k for just a parking space? That’s more than what’s left on my mortgage!
    Glad you got the laundry door open finally, was the handle the issue or had the wood just swollen with the weather?
    Thanks for sharing your city as always.

    Wishing you a great reading week

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, just for the parking spot!!!!! The handle got wedged under the soap dispenser tray, it wasn't closed properly.

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