Monday, October 21, 2019
An NPO ski hill needs community support
Boler Mountain, the ski hill in London, Ontario, is run as a not-for-profit organization. It qualifies as an NPO because it was organized for, and it is operated solely for, recreation. Earning shareholders a return on their investment is not one of its goal. Improving the city by providing pleasure for residents is what Boler does and does well.
Years ago I sailed on Lake Huron and a fellow with a large yacht docked near mine was one of the original creator of Boler Mountain. Irish Ferguson was a very successful businessman and he and his friends used their business acumen to successfully create a ski hill for the city. Irish was a man who lived life fully and well. Boler Mountain with its downhill skiing is not the only recreational pursuit that bears his mark in the London area. Irish is one of my personal heroes.
As can be seen by the family name adorning the chairlift, there are lots of folk working to keep the dream of Irish Ferguson and his friends going. When I take my granddaughters to the hill to ski, I see signs everywhere that make it abundantly clear it takes a lot of community-minded folk to keep the Boler Mountain NPO going. I doff my hat, uh, my toque, to these generous people.
Sunday, October 20, 2019
Boler Mountain: a not-for-profit ski hill
The chair lifts are still and the open slopes are quiet but thoughts of skiing are in the air at Boler Mountain, London, Ontario. How do I know? Two of my granddaughters ski at Boler. To ensure they are in the classes they wanted, I signed them up and paid all fees weeks ago. It is now mid-October and if you are just starting to think about skiing, you may already be too late for some classes.
If the hill looks small, it's because it is. The vertical drop at Boler is greater than I thought but it is still only 207-feet at its highest. It seems as if no sooner are you up than you are down. For this reason, Boler has excellent chair lifts to keep lift lines as short as possible. People come to ski, not to line-up. And Boler does its best to deliver.
The best thing about Boler is its location. It is smack dab in the city's west end suburb: Byron. Boler is but minutes from my home. To take my grandkids to a ski hill of any size, I'd have to drive three hours to Blue Mountain. That's a long time for a little kid to patiently sit in the back seat of a small car. We've discussed Blue Mountain but at their age instant gratification wins.
Come to think about, when I consider the ages of the skiiers I see using the little hill, it is pretty clear instant gratification is a strong pull for lots of us.
Saturday, October 19, 2019
A dream home embarking on a new adventure
It's an elegant home and a few days after taking this picture a for sale sign went up. It's the end of an era for this home. The couple who had lived here, raised a family here and grew old together here have both departed. It must be time to tie up lose ends for the family and to hand the home over to new owners with new dreams.
On a court overlooking the west end of the city, this home stands proudly in a dream location. The perfect home in the perfect location for nurturing fresh, new, perfect dreams.
Friday, October 18, 2019
Do I live on a woonerf?
This London cul-de-sac is a perfect living yard: woonerf. |
It was almost a decade ago that one of the coolest words in urban planning circles was woonerf. According to the local London paper, a woonerf was Dutch for naked street. I preferred an alternate translation: living street.
Woonerfs were streets designed, or redesigned, to force drivers to slow down as they shared the road with cyclists, pedestrians and children. There was no clear division between traffic and pedestrian rights of way in properly designed woonerfs.
Reading this gave me a crazy thought. Maybe I was living on a woonerf. Have North American suburbanites been enjoying their own form of woonerfs for years: Courts, crescents, places and culs-de-sac?
Traffic and kids share my suburban court. |
These remind me of the court directly above mine and linked to my court by a well-used walkway. (I featured it earlier in the month.)
The first woonerf was in the City of Delft, Netherlands, back in the '60s. In the following decade, the Dutch government set design standards and passed traffic laws regulating woonerfs.
I feel some suburban courts come quite close to meeting the Dutch goals.
Thursday, October 17, 2019
Curved streets keep traffic moving slowly
London, Ontario, is considering a speed limit of 40 km/h in residential areas. I find that with the curved streets in my 1980s suburb, I rarely drive faster than 40 km/h. Traffic control was one of the main reason for choosing a street layout other than the more traditional grid layout with parallel streets with numerous right-angle intersections. It seems to have worked, at least where I live in the southwest of the city.
Wednesday, October 16, 2019
Sand Mountain at Apple Land Station
There are more things to do at Apple Land Station than just pick apples. One of the other activities that excited my granddaughters was the sand mountain. It is said it took 500 dump truck loads of sand to build the huge mound on the grounds of the apple orchard just east of London, Ontario. Kids are encouraged to climb it, roll down it or crawl through the tunnels.
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Apple Land Station
It is mid October. It is time to get the apples off the trees and into storage. Some varieties will last for six months when stored in a cool, dark, humidity-controlled room. The last apples from this fall's crop may still be good come mid April of next year.
But apples are not just good for eating. They are also good for picking. Yes, picking apples can be fun. Pick-your-own apple orchards are not as common as they once were but they do still exist. Apple Land Station attracts thousands of Londoners every fall to pick apples, explore two corn mazes, climb a sand "mountain", visit farm animals or simply shop. Fresh baked apple pies are a big seller.
Literally tens of thousands of area folk, often parents with their children, visit Apple Land Station each fall. There are approximately 17 varieties of apples available. Whether you like your apples tart, sweet or tasting of a hint of brown sugar, Apple Land Station has the variety for you.
I must confess: I'd never heard of Apple Land Station. Sunday, my grandchildren introduced me to the place, a place they had visited on school trips.
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