Monday, September 11, 2023

Lazy river down the Big East in Muskoka

It's fun to kayak downstream when you are on the Big East River, the current does a lot of the work and you pass beautiful, sandy beaches and clean, tea-coloured water flowing out of Algonquin Park, winding through the forests of Muskoka near Huntsville, Ontario. 

The Big Bend in Arrowhead Provincial Park

We stay a few days and split the journey into two sections. Upstream from Arrowhead Provincial Park - putting in at the Williamsport Bridge where there is a small parking area and a trail down to the river. Then travelling down the river to Highway 11 passing by Arrowhead Provincial Park, and the Big Bend, at the halfway point. You really need two vehicles; One you can leave upstream and one you can load the kayaks in when you get downstream.

Pulling over to enjoy the sandy beaches
A cut off former Oxbow Lake remains as a sandy trail through the forest

The river follows the path of least resistance and changes the landscape over time. Sometimes the route of the river changes as the water charges against sand and rock, then breaches the banks and finds a new path. You see this a lot on this river. The top half has more of a drop then the bottom half, especially when it crosses Highway 11 and heads into a marshy, flatter and wider area.

Stubbs Falls

The creek running from Stubbs Falls into the Big East River

Not to far upstream of Highway 11 is a smaller tributary leading to Stubbs Falls, a pretty little waterfall, which you can also access from Arrowhead Park.

The second day we start at Highway 11 and kayak down the tributary until you hit the Muskoka River, then take a hard right and cross the large open water, ending at Hutcheson Park where we left the other vehicle in the downstream leg.

Sunday, September 03, 2023

Toronto Dragon Festival 2023

I love the dragons and dancing lions which are central to this festival taking place in Nathan Phillips Square over the Labour Day long weekend September 1-3, 2023. Besides the couple of giant dragons there is a square full of vendors and stages full of entertainment during the Toronto Dragon Festival which celebrates 3000 years of Chinese arts and culture - all with free admission.

You can check out the Asian food, live performances, lion and dragon dances as well as martial artist demonstrations. The featured lion dance competition is on Sunday, September 3 from 2 till 6pm.



From the festival's website; "To top last year’s stunning high poles acrobatic lion dance, along with the incredible Kung Fu masters, Walk-On-Water runway fashion show, TDF will present a multicultural performance including Canada’s Inuit throat-singing, Caribbean drumming, Philippine folk dances, not to mention a hundred food and merchandise booths that the Festival will gather for your local Toronto experience."



Saturday, September 02, 2023

Toronto Air Show 2023 @CIASToronto

The Canadian International Air Show (CIAS) signifies the closing weekend of the annual Canadian 
National Exhibition, so it's your last chance to go to the EX and also to watch the airs show for another year. Friday, September 1 was practice day, the balance of the weekend from Saturday to Monday, September 2 to 4, 2023 mark the show days with the aircraft taking to centre stage (the fireboat shooting out large quantities of lake water) from noon till 3:45pm. Photo at top from the 2022 Air Show.
Blue Angels - Fat Albert (US Marines)
Part of the Blue Angels acrobatic team


It is estimated that over 1.4 million people watch the show in Toronto every year and I think a few hundred thousand extra only hear the show or catch a peek of the planes through the office towers and condos. The show started in 1948, over what would become Pearson Airport but what was known as the Malton Airport, moving the next year to Exhibition Park. The CIAS name was adopted in 1955 and in 1956 the single day event became a two day airshow on the last two days of the CNE. In 1969 the two day show became the four day air show, then back down to three days in 1989 (not counting the practice day). You know which Canadian plane didn't end up in the show? It was the very famous Avro Arrow which was going to perform in 1958 but was cancelled due to weather.
Heritage Flight - F16 and Mustang

Search and Rescue (SAR) demonstration with the Griffon

2023 performers include the United States Navy Blue Angels, Canadian Forces Snowbirds, Blue Angels Fat Albert C-130T, CF-18 Demonstration Team, Gord Price & the Yak-50, Mike Tryggvason Extra 330, P-51 Mustang Heritage Flight, T-33, Trevor Rafferty Pitts 12, United States Air Force – F-16 Demo Team and the new addition to the show - Royal Canadian Air Force CH-147F Chinook. It's great to see two military jet teams - our Snowbirds and the US Blue Angels which first came to Toronto in 1956 flying Grumman F-9F's. The Snowbirds joined Toronto's show in 1972 and have been back every year since.

Here is the 2023 CIAS Air Show schedule.
Blue Angels – Fat Albert12:00
Blue Angels Team 1 – 612:10
Capt Aimee Fiedler – F-16 Demo12:50
Capt Fiedler / Jim Beasley-Heritage Flight13:08
Gordon Price – Yak 5013:20
Mike Tryggvason – Extra 30013:31
SAR Demo13:41
Trevor Rafferty – Pitts 1213:56
Ken Rieder – RV 814:05
Major Steve Pellerin CH-147 Chinook14:12
Capt Jesse Haggart-Smith – CF-18 Hornet14:25
CF-18/Heritage Flight14:43
Robert Mitchell – T-3314:47
Snowbirds14:55
Weather was perfect at the beginning of the show, then the clouds moved in and at around 3pm it started raining during the first performance of the weekend. I think the ceiling was reduced and some of the maneuvers might have been changed to accommodate the weather.

See more of the show after the jump.

Friday, September 01, 2023

Back at the EX 2023 @LetsGoToTheEX

You can't live anywhere near Toronto and miss out the excitement of the Canadian National Exhibition, so its siren call sends us back to experience the crowds - and we took advantage of the $11 tickets after 5pm on weekdays (Monday to Thursday evenings, except for Labour Day). Apparently the rest of Toronto was there on the night we went as well, crowds so big and lines so long and I almost forgot, booze and food are extremely expensive. Darn siren call.

Sparkling Symphony Fountain Show
A downside to going at night is that a lot of the events happen up to around 8pm. After that it's just about the rides, games, exhibitions, food and vendors. We did get a chance to check out the Sparkling Symphony Fountain Show at the waterfront behind the bandshell and across Lake Shore on the bailey bridge.
They have the old FLYER roller coaster sign

The best part of going at night is the lights and colours of the midway
See more photos of the EX after the jump.

Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Fall 2023 is coming fast

It's coming to the end of August 2023 and already we are seeing fall colours around the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). Officially September 23, 2023 is the first day of fall in the Northern Hemisphere. The Ontario Parks fall colour report shows 0% colour change for now but my eyes do not deceive me, it is starting! 

The change starts when daylight is reduced and the weather gets colder. From the Algonquin Provincial Park website on fall colours; "As the daylight length shortens, and temperatures grow cooler in autumn, trees slow and eventually halt their sugar making process of photosynthesis and begin to prepare for the dormant winter period. During this preparation for winter, trees extract the valued chemical components within their leaves, including the green chlorophyll, for re-use again next growing season (the following spring/summer). As these valued chemical components break down and get extracted from the leaf, underlying pigments get revealed. These now visible pigments (that were in the leaves all along, but hidden by the green chlorophyll) include the orange and yellow colours of pigments such as carotenes and xanthophylls. Red pigments, or anthocyanins, are believed to be specially formed late in the summer and protect sensitive leaves from bright sunlight during the chemical extraction process." We go from a peak of 15 hours, 27 minutes of summer sunlight to 12 hours, 11 minutes at the Autumn Equinox.

On August 18, 2023 the night time temperatures started to hit 14 degrees Celsius and below in Toronto. It seems to rain every second day in the Toronto area this year and while a large part of the world is suffering drought conditions we seem to be producing a record amount of rainfall in 2023. Normal peak fall colours in Ontario stretch from mid-September into October, moving from the north into southern Ontario as autumn progresses.
Big Bend lookout in Arrowhead Provincial Park

North of Toronto in the Muskoka area one of the best places to see the colour change is at Arrowhead Provincial Park and the Big Bend Lookout - which is also great to see year round!

Algonquin Park in Central Ontario is in peak fall colour at the end of September, early October.

Friday, August 18, 2023

Canadian International Air Show CIAS 2023 coming soon

The Toronto Air Show, known formally as the Canadian International Air Show (CIAS), will soon be flying over the city's down harbourfront in early September. Taking place at the tail end of the traditional end of summer celebration found at the Canadian National Exhibition which starts today in Exhibition Place - August 18 to September 4, 2023. CIAS will begin with a practice on Friday, September 1 from noon to 3:45pm and the actual Air Show will run September 2-4 from noon till 3:30pm over the Labour Day long weekend. These are some of the planes that performed in 2022.

The show will include the following aircraft; U.S. Navy Blue Angels, Canadian Forces Snowbirds, U.S.A.F. F-16 Demonstration Team, P-51 Mustang Heritage Flight and the Canadian Forces CF-18 Demonstration Team. Additional aircraft can be found on the airshow website with more performers to be announced in the coming weeks.


Watching warplanes fly in Hamilton

It's interesting to visit the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum on days when flights are scheduled, you get a chance to see some iconic aircraft taking to the skies from Hamilton Airport. You can even purchase flights in the planes - some are very expensive though (from $200 to $3,900 per seat), and you have to purchase a membership first. The museum is closed Mondays and Tuesdays.
The B-25 passes by the Harvard and Dakota planes on the way to the active runways
The Lancaster is receiving some tender loving care

Many Torontonians have see the famous Lancaster bomber flying over the city and back to Hamilton. Currently the bomber is going through some maintenance work and the museum is looking for donations towards the half a million dollar cost of the engine upgrades. From the museum's website, "Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum intends to fly the Lancaster well into the future and carry on with this important mission, but we need you to help us accomplish our worthy task. As we approach our 25th year of flight operations in 2013, we are at a point where the four mighty Packard Merlin 224 engines are nearing the end of their operating life and will need to be overhauled in a planned sequence. The Museum already has all the professional contacts in place with the two engine overhaul facilities that have the capability to overhaul these V12 engines. We will be able to operate the Lancaster throughout the planned overhaul sequence, but the costs of these engine overhauls and specialty work is significant."

Most flights are from Thursday to Sunday and can feature the following aircraft; Beechcraft Expeditor, Noorduyn Norseman, Fairchild Cornell, de Havilland Tiger Moth, de Havilland Canada Chipmunk, Douglas C-47 Dakota, Boeing Stearman, North American Harvard, Consolidated Canso, North American B-25 Mitchell and the Avro Lancaster. You can watch the planes start and take off from the observation deck of the museum or from the deck of the plane parking area, both are exciting to watch. Most planes also fly over the museum after takeoff. Hamilton is a working airfield and has a number of domestic and international flights that you can see from the observation deck.

The static displays, both inside and out on the outdoor parking area are worth checking out as well.


See more of the static displays after the jump.

Floating MAiZE art in Brookfield Place Toronto

The Allen Lambert Galleria in Brookfield Place continues to support art as the display of Floating MAiZE by Jean Shin hangs down near the Bay Street entrance. The art installation uses discarded materials in search of sustainability, taking plastic Mountain Dew bottles and making a new, artificial landscape hanging above visitors. Jean's art made me think of the environment and of having a drink.

From Brookfield's website, "Using cast-off or donated materials, I create large-scale sculptures that draw attention to everyday objects, often underscoring their circulation and cumulative effect upon our live environment. In the case of Floating MAiZE, the repurposed single-use plastic Mountain Dew bottles, once filled with soda containing corn syrup, illustrate the issues of corporate extraction and overconsumption, and the harmful effects of highly processed foods on our health. The sheer mass of plastic in Floating MAiZE encourages visitors to consider the failure of the beverage industry to take responsibility for the scale of plastic waste it generates, less than 9% of which is recycled, and this waste’s detrimental effects on the environment and our collective well-being."


Sunday, July 30, 2023

Toronto Foodville Afro-Caribbean Food Festival

There was a lot of entertainment and visitors in the relatively small space of Stackt Market on Bahturst Street during the Foodville Afro-Caribbean Food Festival on Saturday, July 29, 2023. This was a brand new cultural festival highlighting the food and music from Africa, Caribbean and Afro-Latin areas presented by Black Owned Toronto.

The lineup of entertainment included DJs, bands, dancing, live performances on 3 stages with soca, hip-hop, R&B, afrobeats and more along with food and vendors on site. Some of the excitement took place within the Blue Moon Brewery.
Some beautiful Carnival dancers in the square
Stackt Market is also a great place to visit with all the art type things, food, drink and entertainment.

Doors Open

Scarborough Bluffs

Pride

Redball

Beaches

Graffiti

Lake Ontario

Nathan Phillips Square

Transportation