Monday, June 14, 2021

Vaccinated folk may need boosters

The most recent info on vaccination vs. recovery from a bout with COVID-19 may indicate that those who get vaccinated after overcoming an infection with COVID-19 may not require booster shots. Those who get the recommended two shots some weeks apart, but who were never infected, may require boosters at some point in the future. The take away here is that those who have recovered from COVID-19 may still benefit from getting one vaccination.

But today we are not all that concerned with boosters. The drive is still to get everyone vaccinated. It is beginning to seem like every drugstore in London has become a vaccination clinic carrying the COVID-19 vaccine. Appointments are recommended but many folk have been successful with the walk-in approach.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Patio umbrellas do duty on balconies


I cannot recall patio umbrellas being used on the balconies of high rise apartments when I was a boy. Today one is seeing these shade-givers appearing more and more on building balconies around the city.

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Partnering with capitalism

I have relatives who like to divide the world into right and left, into conservatives and liberals. They get all agitated at the idea of progressives. Me? I like to go with what works.

When the vaccines for COVID-19 were announced, the drugstore chains in Canada stepped up and said that they could do a first-rate job of delivering the vaccine to the public. Many of the drugstores in Canada already offer the annual flu shot.

My wife and I got our first shot of the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine at an Ontario government run clinic held in a large building at the fairgrounds back in mid April. We had no complaints but we needed an appointment and there was a substantial wait time for many people. The wait time for the second dose seemed downright unreasonable. We were not slated for our second dose until early August. A wait of almost four months!

Enter capitalism and our Canadian, privately run drugstores. Granted the amount of vaccine has increased greatly and that is a big part of why wait times are down but it does not explain away all the delays. No matter which government run operation we called, whether in London or a nearby town, my wife and I could not get a shot before July.

Then we heard from a friend who simply walked into a drugstore, inquired about getting vaccinated and was vaccinated before she left the drugstore. Wow!

My wife called a neighbourhood drugstore. The first place, a Shoppers Drug Mart, was giving out the Moderna vaccine. My wife and I were given the Pfizer for our first shot. No problem, we were told. The other Shoppers Drug Mart in our area had the Pfizer. We were given the telephone number, we called and less than 48 hours later both my wife and I had our second shot. It is not even the middle of June. Not bad.

The immediate cost of the vaccinations, nothing. Our provincial health care system is covering all costs. Whether one gets the shot at a government run clinic or a privately run drugstore, the cost is covered. The successful partnering between governments and businesses to quickly deliver vaccine in Canada is an example of doing what is best, doing what is most efficient and not worrying about the political optics. 

The last figures that I saw showed Canada almost tied with Israel for the highest number of vaccinations per 100 residents. Canada was just ahead of the United Kingdom but was well ahead of the United States.

Friday, June 11, 2021

Thousands walk to protest Islamophobia

A speeding vehicle used as a lethal weapon left four members of a London Muslim family dead and the nine-year-old son in the hospital with serious injuries.

A memorial at the family's mosque attracted more than ten thousand Londoners rallying to show support for the local Muslim community. A walk Friday night attracted thousands stretching more than a kilometre down the route of the walk. Many of the walkers wore covid-19 masks as they walked. 

One goal of the night was to raise money to fight Islamophobia in London and to give financial aid to the boy left injured. At this time, the donations are already nearing the million dollar mark.

Thursday, June 10, 2021

Is Jennifer Johnston right? Think Consequences

Jennifer Johnston, an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Western New Mexico University, raises some important issues with her paper titled Mass Shooting and the Media Contagion Effect. Johnson recommends that the media refrain from publishing photos, writings, personal likes and dislikes, family, work, and school history of the suspect in mass killings. Doing this would save lives according to Johnston.

One reader responded to one of the paper's tweets promoting their coverage by showing a picture of the accused and asking: Does LFP have the courage . . . to stop posting happy, smiling images of a known terrorist alongside garbage sympathy pieces? No, because they’re hacks.

Another reader thanked the above Twitter poster and tweeted: I've been trying to say the same on Facebook but they've been closing comment threads on related articles instead of accepting any responsibility for their sympathy pieces.

I worked in the media for more than three decades. Since retiring I have been amazed and saddened at the lack of responsibility shown by reporters who make obvious errors in judgment or get important facts wrong.

In a Canadian Journal of Communication (CJC) article discussing media coverage and of acts of terrorism, the author writes that journalists wish to introduce a fresh new dimension to their stories, as if these stories were not dramatic enough. What is required is accountability: thinking about the consequences of reporting.

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

The young girl left a her mark on the city

A London Muslim family was struck Sunday by a speeding truck. The father, mother, grandmother and 15-year-old daughter were all killed. The nine year old son is in the hospital with serious but reportedly non life threatening injuries. The police have the driver in custody and are treating the incident as a hate crime.

While the teenage daughter was attending elementary school, she painted a mural in the basement of the London Islamic School. the young girl designed, sketched the preliminary art and painted the mural. It will now be a part of her legacy, said a school official.

Principal Asad Choudhary said after the girl finished the artwork, he thanked her. She responded saying, "I need to thank you, because you're giving me an opportunity to leave a legacy for a place I love so much."

The names of the victims are not in this sad post as the remaining family members have requested that the victim names not be published. And no photo is being run of the memorials that have sprung up at the corner where the family was run down as I do not want to give too much attention to the deed. For the same reason the coward who drove the truck will remain unnamed in this post.

Monday, June 7, 2021

Is this from the Nut House?

 

At one time in London there was a shop that sold nuts, salted nuts, chocolate coated nuts, candied nuts. The nuts came in bags and boxes. There were peanuts, almonds, Brazil, pistachio, cashew . . . 

And there were customers. Lots and lots of customers. Why a place like the Nut House disappears is a puzzle. Did the owners move away? Did they die and the estate closed the shop? But the big question today is this: Is the Nut House sign, enamel on steel, possibly the last remnant, the last solid memory, of that wonderful, delightful, place that was for so many Londoners more of a destination than a shop

Sunday, June 6, 2021

Chipmunks: not wild wild animals

The chipmunks in the cities are quite naturally tame. The little rodents know people pose little danger to them. but the question I have is do chipmunks pose a danger to humans, to us, to my granddaughters?

The chipmunks scurrying about our yard seem very healthy. Hey, they eat well. They find lots of seeds under the backyard bird feeder. But looks can be deceiving. They might not be as healthy as they look.

The Ontario government warns that feeding chipmunks right out of one's hand may expose one to lyme disease ticks or salmonella bacteria or even some once-unheard-of-in-this-area kinds of parasites.

If the kids want to try this again, it may be best if they wear a pair of gardening gloves. My wife insists that we wear gardening gloves when working in our gardens in the soil. Now that I know about the parasites that chipmunks and other wild animals can spread in their feces, I'm not arguing with her. She's right. Gardening gloves are important.

Saturday, June 5, 2021

Siting is important

 


How a building is sited in a city is important. This apartment building in the western part of London absolutely dominates the view when heading east on one of the city's main traffic arteries. It appears to be foreboding, massive hulk of a building towering over the green forest canopy.

It is a pity this building isn't prettier. Sadly, it is just plain, big and plain. It doesn't even have the dramatic look of yesterday's in look -- brutalism.

Brutalist buildings are characterized by a massive, monolithic and 'blocky' appearance with a rigid geometric style and large-scale use of poured concrete. This apartment building answers many of the demands but come up short when it comes to style. This building is not stylish.

Both the French and the Brits experimented with brutalist apartment buildings decades ago back in the last century. Some have been demolished using the implosion technique. Some are still in use. But some are being updated and upgraded and flipped to the upscale side of life. Brutalist apartment building were originally designed to house the proletariat.

Many brutalist apartment buildings have been used to represent the future gone sadly awry. Think of the Hunger Games. A major set in that film is a brutalist apartment complex on the outskirts of Paris. No films crews are to be found outside the brutally plain London, Ontario, apartment building.

The Huffington Post did a feature on the apartment complex featured in the Hunger Games.

Thursday, June 3, 2021

Having a dog means exercise no matter the weather

 


My doctors tell me having a dog is good for one's health. I think it may be the exercise that caring for a dog  entails. Despite the weather, dogs have to be walked. In the middle of winter snow storm, my neighbours are out walking their pets. And today, in the middle of the heaviest rainfall in months, the sidewalks were filled with folk out walk their dogs.

Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Crazy Horse Memorial, South Dakota

Celebrating travel is the featured topic for the start of June. With the pandemic hopefully wrapping up as more and more people get vaccinated, places like the Crazy Horse Memorial in the Black Hills of southwestern South Dakota will again be open to visitors.

Before the arrival of covid-19, two 10K walks from the base of the mountain to the top were held annually. If it goes off as planned, the spring walk will be held this weekend. The fall walk is slated for Sunday, September 26. In 2010, I made the hike and documented the day in pictures.

But there is more to do at the Crazy Horse site than just view the sculpture under construction and you can discover all by clicking the link.

According to the info posted by the Crazy Horse Memorial, Crazy Horse or Tasunke Witco was a member of the Oglala Lakota. Born around 1840, his world was one of clashing cultures with land a big point of contention. Native ways were threatened and oppressed and Crazy Horse responded to his people's plight. Not yet 40, a soldier shot Crazy Horse on September 5, 1877, at Fort Robinson, Nebraska.

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

About 175 acres of farmland taken out of service daily in Ontario

 


It looks like it was a simply farm operation located between London and the once nearby town of Lambeth. Today the boarded up farm home and the abandoned farm are inside the city limits as it the town of Lambeth.

In Ontario it is claimed that something in the order of 175 acres of farmland are taken out of service every day. Homes, apartments, strip malls, parking lots and streets replace the crops.

As another poster to this group pointed out recently, the population explosion seems to be fading, birth rates are falling and the need for a lot of new homes and apartments may be coming to an end. The loss of farmland to growing cities may become a feature of the past.

Monday, May 31, 2021

Strathroy City Hall almost hits century mark

 

The current town hall in Strathroy, Ontario  is the fourth for the town. This most recent city hall building was erected in 1928 at a cost of $34, 323. And that was not even a depression number. Makes one wonder what it would have cost if built just four years later.

When its was built, the architectural style was described as combining beauty with utility, reminiscent of a New England style of architecture not found elsewhere in the province. Personally, I think it is no where near as grand as the city halls found in New England and elsewhere in the States.

On the other hand, it does seem to have met the utility demands, being it is still in use today. In a few short years it will be a hundred years old and getting a century of use from any municipal building is awfully good.

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Today it's just another home


A photographer with whom I once worked at the daily newspaper in London retired to Strathroy. This beautiful home is located just a few doors down from where my friend lives. I took this picture from my friend's driveway.

It didn't take much searching to discover something on the Web about this large, striking home. The following is from The Strathroy Historical Society Facebook site.

This stately mansion was built by Cyris Bixel in 1889. Cyris moved to Canada from Germany with his father, Matthew and the rest of the Bixel family in 1874. On moving to Strathroy, the Bixels founded the Bixel Brewery and from the size of the home Cyris built it is clear that the brewery was a success.

The home originally had 14 “very large” rooms. There was a drawing room, sitting room, dining room, kitchen, Pantry, china and cutlery room, conservatory, library, front foyer, two bedrooms, and a servant’s bedroom plus two bathrooms. It is surprising that such a large home originally  had only three bedrooms.

After Cyris died in 1895, his wife Emily married Duncan Campbell Ross who went on to become a member of Parliament for the area. In 1922 when Ross was made an Elgin County court judge, he and Emily moved from the grand home but the mansion stayed in the family until 1957. When the place was sold in 1957, the new owners made some changes to home's layout. For instance, the home gained an additional bedroom.

Saturday, May 29, 2021

Practical, maybe, but no architectural gem

The new post office in Strathroy looks like so many other post offices in Ontario. The new post office is as ordinary and plain as the former post office was extraordinary and beautiful. The old post office was an architectural gem.

That said, I have had more packages of goods purchased online mailed to me in the past two years than I had in all the previous years of my life. Until relatively recently, other than at Christmas, I simply never mailed a package nor had one mailed to me. I can understand why Canada Post closed so many of its offices both large and small.

But, maybe Canada Post moved too fast. Today I get shirts sent to me directly from L.L. Bean and when I bought a replacement computer the other day I had it mailed to me from the Hewlett Packard offices in Mississauga, outside Toronto, and using Canada Post software I tracked its progress as it wended its way to my home over the course of two days.

I have never used Amazon and I rarely use Fed Ex. When I buy stuff online it usually comes via Canada Post. I wonder if the newish, smaller Canada Post offices will prove to be too small for the increased traffic.

Friday, May 28, 2021

The Old Strathroy Post Office

 

The old Strathroy post office was built in 1889. Although there is still a post office in town, and close to the old one as a matter of fact, the heritage post office with its visually wonderful clock tower is now a restaurant and hotel with eight luxury suites. You can read about it and see more pictures by clicking the LINK.

With covid-19 making shopping in person impossible at times, I am finding I have had to buy a lot online and have it delivered using, you guessed it, the post office. Seems funny that as postal demands increase, the post offices we are left using are much smaller and less spacious than the original post offices that dotted the province. 

If the original, large post offices had been maintained, it is quite possible the old, heritage buildings would be finding their second wind today.

Thursday, May 27, 2021

Tape stops caterpillars

 


Masking tape girdles many trees in Southwestern Ontario. It seems the gypsy moth caterpillars are particularly abundant this year. According to many authorities, such as the experts at the University of Wisconsin/Madison, used correctly, bands of tape can reduce the number of caterpillars attacking residential trees.

The university claims homeowners can reduce the number of gypsy moth caterpillars in invading a homeowner's trees by putting up barrier bands of masking tape before the caterpillars start to hatch in mid-May. Caterpillars crawling up the trees get mired down in the tape bands coated with petroleum jelly and die. The bands also keep caterpillars from migrating to other trees or from climbing back up if they fall off the tree (surprisingly common!).

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Windmills are big in Ontario

 

From some angles, the electricity generating windmills on the edge of the new subdivision in Strathroy, Ontario, seem to visually dominate the neighbourhood. Under some weather conditions it would not be surprising if the sound of windmills also made the windmills impossible to ignore. Some people contend the noise emitted from these huge installations can be quite irritating, especially to those used to the quiet of the countryside.

But it is not only working windmills that are raising questions. The huge, fiberglass blades are especially difficult to recycle when they are decommissioned on reaching the end of their 25-year
working lives. Disposing of them in a green manner is a problem. Burying them isn't green and
recycling poses s number of problems.

In Rotterdam the problem has been put off for another day as retired blades are put to new, very imaginative, uses. 

The Dutch city has a 1,200sq m children's playground called Wikado, with a slide tower, tunnels, ramps, and slides made from five discarded wind turbine blades.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Ontario's Largest Chain of Cannabis Stores

 

I don't smoke. No cigarettes or other stuff for me. So, after taking a picture of the True North Cannabis Company store in Strathroy, about twenty minutes west of London, I searched the Internet to learn more and I did learn more.The store is part of chain of recreational cannabis retailers.

Apparently four stores opened in March alone, some forty more stores are in the planning stage and the owners of the chain are dreaming of more. One has to wonder what these folk are smoking.

Monday, May 24, 2021

For a 2nd year Victoria Day fireworks cancelled

 

Before the covid-19 pandemic brought almost everything to a grinding halt, the Fanshawe Optimist Club of North London teamed with the Fanshawe Conservation Area to present one of the largest fireworks displays in Southwestern Ontario. 

Traditionally the Victoria Day event gets underway at dusk. This year, with the province of Ontario still in lock-down mode, the fireworks didn't get underway at all.

If you were wondering what Victoria Day celebrates, the answer is right there in the name itself: the birth of Queen Victoria who was born on May 24 back in 1819. In the middle of her reign Victoria Day was declared a holiday by the Canadian federal government in 1845. After the Queen's death in 1901 Canada’s parliament officially declared the holiday Victoria Day. Today the birthday celebration/holiday is only celebrated in Canada and Scotland.

 
Oh, I have a confession, my dramatic shot is complements of Photoshop. I put together a number of shots from a Fanshawe fireworks display from some years ago.

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Pick-up and delivery only

 

Covid-19 has put a lot of stores under stress, especially those selling non-essential goods. Neither the Canadian nor provincial government see toy stores as place selling essential goods. Young children with birthdays would dispute this decision as well as a lot of parents.

Toys R Us and its companion store Babies R Us are among the stores that can only move merchandise by mail or by bringing the customer's purchase to the customer's car parked in a designated spot in front of the store. 

Find the toy online, order it and pay for it using PayPal, a credit card or a debit card and the product will be delivered within seven days. No charge for delivery. Not quick enough? If the product is in stock in the local store, customers can pick up their purchase that day. 

Even though many folk in Ontario have now been had the first of their two vaccinations, and the men bringing the goods to the parked cars are most likely also vaccinated, plus the entire process takes place outside, masks are worn by both the store employees and by the customers waiting patiently in their cars.

It's funny. Wearing masks has become so much an expected part of normal interactions between people that continuing to wear masks just seems the right thing to do.

Friday, May 21, 2021

Covid-19 benefited some workers

 

Not everyone suffered financially when covid-19 trimmed the economy, closing hotels and shuttering restaurants without a solid take-out business. Vacations cost money. Dining out is expensive. Even simply shopping for needed day to day stuff like clothing, became next to impossible during the severest covid-19 shutdowns.

So, who did well during these tough times? Home improvement companies. Oh, at first the jobs dried up but that didn't last. After a few months, Canadians cooped up in their homes but still managing to work full-time, found themselves flush with unspent money. Soon Canadians were starting home reno projects put on pause because of covid-19 and even starting some that had not been planned at all.

Canadians are not alone. American home owners are reportedly also spending more than ever on their homes. The reno business made a great recovery in 2020 but in 2021 it has grown red hot. Need a new front door? Order it today and it will be installed some months in the future.

The pandemic has meant big business for the home improvement business.

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Does this look like dinner to a rabbit?

Flower gardens and rabbits don't get along, at least from the viewpoint of the gardener. In fact, rabbits can be a problem for home owners and their plants. Period. The rabbits girdle young trees during the winter, removing all the bark circling the bottom of a small, growing tree. Hostas appear to be delicious. Rabbits will eat budding hostas right to the ground and the rabbits will come back for seconds as the hostas attempt to recover.

Seeking a solution, some neighbours have place live traps around their property. Trapped rabbits are taken for long car rides and released miles some miles away deep in farm country. No idea how the farmers feel about this solution.

Me, I'm looking at colourful foliage plants. I've noticed that my palace purple, also known as coral bells, seems to be ignored by the rabbits, groundhogs and other wildlife paying a short visit to my yard. The plant at the top of the post was sighted in a local garden centre. Although I didn't buy it, I did pick up some other plants sporting very colourful foliage. Now, to see if these plants attract or deter the hungry wildlife stopping by for a quick snack.

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

There's a close bond between Canada and the Netherlands


The tulip gardens in Springbank Park and the new benches are but symbols of the close bond that has existed between Canada and the Netherlands since the Second World War.

Veterans Affairs Canada posted the following: "The Dutch people have never forgotten our brave soldiers’ efforts to free their country after years of harsh German occupation during the Second World War." 

More than 6,000 Canadian soldiers were killed, wounded or taken prisoner fighting to liberate the Netherlands.

The Liberation of the Netherlands (LINK)

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Another gift to London from the Dutch

Apparently, Canadian soldiers, especially a detachment from London, Ontario, played a big role in the liberation of the Netherlands at the end of the Second World War in 1945. Fully 76 years after the event, the Dutch Canadian Society of London and District is still finding ways to say thank you.

I believe the tulip beds in Springbank were a gift from the Dutch Canadian group. When the tulips are in bloom each spring, many Londoners make a point of stopping by the park to check out the colourful display.

This year there are benches especially designed for the tulip bed area in the park. A neighbour thought so much of the pretty benches that she stopped by my home to tell me about them. Tomorrow I'll run two images of the benches.

The amount of new housing is amazing

 

London is growing. And London is not alone. Pick a town in southwestern Ontario and you will find a town growing by, as they say, leaps and bounds. And that amazing growth rate extends right across North America.

As farmland disappears under new housing and all that accompanies that growth -- streets, shopping districts, schools and even parks -- one must ask, how long can this pace be maintained?

Many of us, old enough to recall peach orchards and other crops now gone or disappearing from the province, worry about what crop or crops will be eliminated next. Peaches, once grown but on the edge of town and canned in one of the numerous canning plants that once dotted the countryside, now come from Greece or Australia.

Monday, May 17, 2021

A unique townhouse development

 

This townhouse complex is somewhat unique in London. I can't say I'm familiar with the whole city but I personally do not know of another neighbourhood quite like this one. With tree floors, these places are not designed with seniors in mind. Too many stairs. And the single car garages further restrict the market that these units appeal to.

What these places do share with many other recent developments in London is that these are clearly high density.

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Yard decoration


This was a car stopper. Seeing this concrete column with a sculpture of a horse trying to squeeze its way out, had me braking to a stop in order to take a closer look. I immediately saw it was not alone. There were possible a dozen other columns, all with realistic sculptures poking out.

These were clearly lawn ornaments -- somewhat sophisticated lawn ornaments. These were not the usual garden gnomes with pointed hats. One column I could understand. A couple, one on each side of the driveway might work. But a dozen scattered about the yard seemed a little much. Was this a display of items for sale? If it was, was this legal in a residential neighbourhood?

Saturday, May 15, 2021

Higher Density Development

 

Just a few short years ago, this was rich farmland. Some of the best in Canada thanks to the long, for Canada, growing season. Now, it's an expanding Northwest London suburb. The apartments and the townhouses raise the overall density per square kilometre of the area to the density  demanded today by city planners.

Friday, May 14, 2021

Dandelions are going to seed

It seems winter just left. It did. And the plants began to flower just the other day. Again, they did. And now, the flowers, like the dandelions in almost everyone's lawn, are going to seed. Talk about speedy, focused action. 

Maybe, just maybe, it is time to think of dandelions as food, salad greens, and not as weeds. If you can't kill 'em, maybe the answer is eat 'em. Or, if you are into dandelion wine, maybe we should drink 'em.

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Dandelions are numerous and poison-free


Dandelions were once hated. Parks and other open, grass-covered spaces were almost devoid of the bright yellow flowers. Today dandelions are everywhere. Parks are filled with thousands and thousands of the bright, yellow blooms. Yet, for the most part, dandelions are still hated.

So, what changed to make the weed so common? The loss of poison control  of weeds. Poisons are out today and so dandelions are enjoying a de facto welcome. In Ontario, 2-4-D is essentially illegal. It is no longer used in parks or sold in stores. Round-up is also difficult to come by in Ontario although it is legal for some purposes.

When I was kid, I was warned not to pick the dandelions growing in the park. They might be contaminated with herbicide. I guess this is one other thing that has changed. Kids now pick dandelions without fear. And these young kids are growing up in a world where dandelions are so common that my guess is that the day is coming when the bright, yellow blossoms will be welcome and the oh-so-common weed will no longer be hated.

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

A sliver of forest in a suburban jungle

When I moved to London Warbler Woods it was a large wooded area on the southwest edge of the city. When a suburban development was proposed for the area, a massive movement to save the trees was started. Although it failed to save all the trees, or even the majority of the forest, the development was stopped before all sign of the wood disappeared.

Some years later the land on the other side of the woods was developed. Today Warbler Woods is but a sliver of forested land situated between two big subdivisions. The remaining land gives one a window into the look of the area before sewers, streets, sidewalks and homes filled valleys and flattened hills.

It may be small but it still lays claim to accolades for being a remaining wilderness area in the middle of an urban area. One spring when I stopped by with my granddaughters to hike into the woods on a Trillium hunt, some hikers warned us to stay together. They had spotted a small pack of coyotes in the forest. Not surprising as deer and rabbits frequent the area.

With covid-19, the area is more popular than ever. Hiking in the woods is one area where one can go maskless and this is oh-so-important to some folk.

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

A friendly lady directed me to a lovely grouping

I didn't find these but was directed to them. Warbler Woods attracts lots of folk. Many of the hikers come in family groups. One of the hikers on learning why I was in the woods, took a moment to direct to this lovely grouping of three trilliums popping out below an insect carved log. Gosh, it's good to meet good people. It puts a positive to spin on one's world.

Monday, May 10, 2021

Is anyone building apartments like these today?

 


Detroit once had a lot of wonderful Art Deco apartment buildings. I'm sure Detroit is not alone. My guess is many of the once outrageously successful cities in the northern half of the United States, had blocks featuring beautiful 1920s apartment buildings. I found examples of beautiful, abandoned apartment blocks in many other areas of the United States as well.

Some of these, at least in Detroit, are being saved. But that is not the point of this post. When I went to art school in the mid '60s, these apartments were already falling on tough times. I had student friends who lived in these buildings.

Why are we not building apartments that look like these today? I can speak from experience. These were good places to live and they were located in what was at that time good, walkable neighbourhoods.

One thing that made these apartments walkable were the apartments themselves. These places added atmosphere to a neighbourhood. The entrances were often spectacular. No simple glass entries for these buildings.

And the interiors were as grand as the exteriors. Inlaid tiles, curved staircases, brass elevators and lots of stained glass.


 

The shot of the lobby shows, I believe, the abandoned Henery Apartments in Stockton, California.

Sadly, many of these wonderful buildings have been destroyed by suspicious late-night fires.


London, Ontario, has saved some old apartments but London never had any as grand as the ones that once graced many large American cities. Today, London is striving to create beautiful, walkable neighbourhoods. The huge apartments hardly visually improve the neighbourhoods in which these massive structures are located.

I wonder why there is no money to be made salvaging some of the beautiful features of old, abandoned apartment buildings and selling these heritage construction materials to be included in new structures.

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Canadian health care

I'm a Canadian but I have to confess I don't have a perfect handle on our health care system. It is complex and it can be confusing. And being that Canadians hear a lot of the misplaced, error-prone criticism that fills the American airwaves, we get even more confused from being exposed to all the bunkum being bandied about.

The other day I had to go for treatment for my aging, sun-damaged skin. The medical centre I went to is privately owned. In fact, the vast majority of medical centres and hospitals in Canada are privately owned and operated.

The centre in the west end of London is but one in a small chain of medical centre located in various locations across the city. From the looks of this latest addition to the chain, it appears the centres are successful. In fact, the company website promises investment opportunities will soon be offered.

What I do know it that Canadians have a single-payer medical care system. I pay the government in a manner similar to paying premiums to an insurance company. For medical treatements that are covered by our system, and not everything is covered, the government pays the cost.

If my skin treatments are for precancerous skin blemishes, the treatment cost is covered. My skin blemishes discovered during this visit were harmless, purely cosmetic. I paid $45 for the removal.

Does the Canadian system work? Yes, but it has problems and these problems seem to be growing. Health care is expensive.

How does the Canadian system compare to the U.S. system. I really cannot say. There are a lot of conflicting claims. All I can say for sure is that the rare time I had a health care issue treated both in the States and in Canada, the Canadian system finished in first place. But it was not a crushing defeat for the American system. It was a plodding, slow system, Canada's, matched against a speedy, hare, the American system.

The deciding factor was my insurance company. It balked at paying for adequate treatment. I got the minimum of care and was discharged before the excellent U.S. doctors could treat me fully. In Canada, slowly running up a big bill was not a problem but time was a problem. 

The Americans would have been fast if they had been free to give me all the tests necessary but no pay, no treatment. The Canadian doctors were much slower, they had less equipment and so a patient had to be patience. But paying the bills as the mounted in Canada was never in question and over a period of time all necessary tests were done and the cause of my heart condition determined and a pacemaker/ICD inserted in my chest.

The takeaway? If I were a millionaire or had very good insurance at a price I could afford, I'd take the American system. I'm not a millionaire and I have relatives in the States who pay far more for health insurance than I could at my age and with my reduced income in retirement. I could not afford their health insurance premiums. And so, I am happy to have the Canadian system.

Saturday, May 8, 2021

Not freezing temperatures nor heavy snowfall harmed the robins

 

Neither snow nor rain nor cold nor gloom of night stays a robin from the full completion of its parental duties.

I recently ran an image showing the tough life of a robin parent-to-be risks encountering in Ontario. Both the bird, sitting on its eggs, and the nest itself were under a deep blanket of snow. I openly wondered if the eggs would hatch. I was concerned. On the plus side, it appeared the two robin parents were taking turns tending the nest.

My nephew, Paul, assured me that the robin parents would succeed and the eggs would hatch. He told me to relax. He was right. It appears three eggs have hatched and today the robins were busy finding and feeding earth worms to their squawking brood.

Friday, May 7, 2021

Ontario's provincial flower grows wild

The trillium is the provincial flower of Ontario. The pretty, white three-petalled flower grows wild across the southern part of the province. Many of the wild wooded areas in the Byron suburb of London are home to thousands of trilliums. It is no surprise that a few have taken root on the hill behind our suburban home.

Thursday, May 6, 2021

Neighbourhood asparagus stand opens Friday

 

The little asparagus farm has been in operation for decades. So long in fact, that the asparagus sold there is somewhat unique. Most of the asparagus plants grown in Ontario are hybrids developed at Guelph University an hour east of London. The Greenland asparagus predates most of the hybrid plants grown on Ontario farms.

A few years ago a type of rust destroyed the Ontario asparagus crop. The Greenland farm was one of the few stands selling locally grown spears. The rust rippled through the mono culture found almost everywhere in the province but it didn't affect the older asparagus variety grown in the London suburb.

Today, Guelph University is bragging about a new hybrid it has developed. Apparently this was a tough spring. It was both very warm early on and then there was a late freeze accompanied by a blanket of snow. The Guelph hybrids stood up well to the extreme weather. 

It is interesting to note that the old, heritage variety grown on the Greenland farm had done just fine this spring. I had an early sample and the crop came through the extreme weather just fine.

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Last year's plants are today's plants too


My wife and I wanted to visit a local garden centre. It was closed thanks to the covid-19 shutdown. And so last year's plants, the hardy perennial ones like these primulas, are becoming this year's plants as well.

I've been asked a few questions about these flowers. I discovered the following: The primula, also known as the common primrose, is native to western and southern Europe, northwest Africa and parts of southwest Asia. It is not native to North America.

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

The 2021 Census forms arrived yesterday


 

Running a city is tough. Running a country is even tougher. Yesterday, we got our 2021 Census forms. The numbers the form supplies makes the government's task a little easier. The info is kept private and not open to public view for something in the order of 92 years. 

And how does the government get the info? Do participants use the mail? Not necessarily.  If one likes, the forms can be submitted using a unique identification number and sent directly to the government from one's home computer.

Monday, May 3, 2021

Daffodils are not just bright yellow flowers

It's a daffodil and it isn't yellow.This may not surprise you but it took me by surprise. Hey, I'm not a horticulturist. My only contact with daffodils is the annual Canadian Cancer Society Daffodil Campaign. There are daffodil window stickers, daffodil lapel pins and daffodil pens. And all are, to the best of my knowledge, yellow.

So where were these rare(?) daffodils growing. Uh, I'm embarrassed to admit it but these beautiful, non-yellow daffodils were in my wife's garden a few feet from our large kitchen window. O.K. I'm not all that observant either.

Sunday, May 2, 2021

Warm spring sunshine begs to be enjoyed

It was cold yesterday. It rained last night and it continued into the morning. But the warm, spring sun broke through the clouds come afternoon. This lady found the perfect spot to enjoy the warm rays of spring sunshine: a chair outside Starbucks.