When I was a boy in the early '50s, one would not have encountered a lawn statue like this one displayed with the Canadian flag. For one thing, the maple leaf flag was not the Canadian flag until 1965.
Friday, July 16, 2021
Love the juxtaposition of statue and flags
Thursday, July 15, 2021
10,000 Steps?
Are these Canadian Geese out for a morning stroll in order to meet the 10,000 footsteps-a-day goal? If they are, I am sure the folk in this neigbourhood are hoping the geese take all their steps in a straight line. Geese are not welcome in residential neighbourhoods. Nothing messes up an area's sidewalks and lawns like a flock of geese. Yuck!
Wednesday, July 14, 2021
Is this a special lily?
Are these lilies special? They certainly are beautiful. These lilies also came from the lily fields now plowed under with the retirement of the couple who ran the lily operation. If you'd like to know more here is a link to an earlier post: A colourful, beautiful memory.
Tuesday, July 13, 2021
Parking where the lawn once was
Many urban critics love to point out how the car has shaped and modified the suburban home. Home after home has yielded half or more of the front lawn to the car. A paved driveway replaces grass for a big chunk of many a suburban front yard. And then there are the garages. Many of these jut out a metre or more in front of each home on the suburban street. There is even a name for this style of home building: the garage forward look.
What these critics ignore is that the car has also reshaped our older, heritage neighbourhoods. And just like in the suburbs, a paved spot for the family car or cars claims a big part of the front yard. In fact, the narrow lots in older neighbourhoods demands that occasionally the entire front yard must be given over to the car.
Monday, July 12, 2021
July Theme Day: Tools
Sunday, July 11, 2021
Twins are not new
One often reads criticisms of the homes in new developments. A big one is that homes can look alike. So? I can point to quite a number of neighbourhoods through out London where sometimes six or more homes have been built all the same: cookie cutter homes.
Yesterday I featured two homes that were quite similar. Today I am posting two twin homes in the same neighbourhood. There are lots of things to criticize when it comes to new homes, and I have to admit that in recent years popping up similar homes side by side and row after row takes the building of similar homes to an arguably ridiculous extreme, but the idea of building identical twin homes is not new. And sometimes, as in the past, it worked.
Saturday, July 10, 2021
A century-plus-ten home in North London
These two homes sit side by side in North London. They look quite similar at first glance. It makes one wonder if the homes shared the same builder. The home on the left is a heritage home with plaque beside the front door. It declares that the home dates from 1911 and that its first owner was Alfred Ironside who farmed some acreage outside London and then moved into the city to work as a cattle dealer.