Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Black apartment pops viewed against blue sky

Scanning London from a spot in the south end of town, near Wharncliffe Rd. and Base Line, a black-painted apartment building immediately catches one's eye. It is big, black and dramatic today but one must wonder what it will look like in a few years hence. Black paint has a reputation for fading.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Automobile Dealers Short on New Cars

 

It was time for the annual fall tire change. Summer tires off and snow tires on. While the service department makes the switch, folk usually stroll about the showroom looking at the new cars, sitting in them and dreaming not of a seasonal tire change but of a complete change of cars.

But there was no dreaming today as the dealership showroom was completely devoid of new cars. There's a chip shortage, you know. And new cars need numerous electronic chips to function. 

The floor was not totally bare, the dealer had a 1960s era VW Beetle on display. Today it was memories wandering the showroom conjured up and then only in the oldest, most senior of clients. I had a robin-egg blue memory haunt me while I was there.

Monday, November 22, 2021

Art, not brown paper, covers windows of empty store

When businesses go under, brown paper often goes up on all the exterior windows. It looks as if this company has found a more attractive answer: art. The empty store offers a leasing opportunity and I, or one, like the positive approach.

Sunday, November 21, 2021

Memories of Hyde Park are fading

Some time ago, the village of Hyde Park sat at the corner of Hyde Park Road and Gainsborough Rd. Not today. The village was annexed by London and very few of the original structures remain.

One building that dodged the demolition bullet, a white, wood frame farm home with a large, front port, has found that its luck has run out. It sits empty, its windows boarded up, patiently awaiting the arrival of the demolition crew.

Saturday, November 20, 2021

Voting still out on value of pulse oximeters

Friday, November 19, 2021

Is this art?

About to download today's image, I looked at the camera back and noticed a button had been touched and a multitude of older images were being displayed. A friend using an older model smart phone took a picture of the camera monitor.

I have to say that with a more up-to-date smart phone delivering pictures with a greater tonal range and a bigger file, this could be art. What do you think?

Longevity like real estate can hinge on location

How long one lives is influenced by a number of factors. Genes, of course, play a big and commanding role but where one was born also carries a lot of weight. Folks living in Hong Kong often live to 85. If you were born in Switzerland, knock a year off the average age at departure to put Switzerland in 4th place in the global rating.

Run a finger down the column listing countries and their position in the longevity sweepstakes, move past Italy, Spain, Iceland, Sweden and France and assorted other countries and when you reach the 16th place you have reached the entry for Canada. A Canadian at birth can hope to see almost 83 years-of-age.

Run your eye down the column all the way to the 46th entry and you find the United States. The low rating for the States is correct but many would argue it does not reflect the reality facing many seniors living in the U.S. Childbirth death rates are high in the States and too many people die early thanks to gun violence. Healthcare and longevity are actually better in the States than the numbers indicate.

Still, for many people, health care in the senior years is more available in many places when compared to the United States. Take a simple thing like prescription drugs. In Ontario, Canada, a senior pays for the first hundred dollars of prescription drugs annually. After that, the cost is only $4.11 for each prescription.

I've known folk living in the States, admittedly not all that well off, who had to pick and choose between prescriptions when it came to having their prescriptions filled.

For seniors anywhere in the world, it can be tough when it comes to maintaining good health. But I look at the ratings and it is pretty clear that many other places around the world are quite possibly doing things better than we are in North America. Hey, 16th position doesn't come with a lot of bragging rights. And what can one say about 46th?