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Jamie Bell / Latest Videos
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Jumper : The movie
출발 비디오 여행...Jamie bell jumper
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Hallam Foe arbeitet im Hotel
mit anderen Augen. Andere sehen sie durch ein Fernglas......Hallam Foe Kino Edinburgh Film Schottland Jamie Bell Sophia Myles Koffer Hotel Arbeit Szene
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Hallam Foe über den Dächern von Edinburgh
anderen Augen. Andere sehen sie durch ein Fernglas......Hallam Foe Kino Edinburgh Film Schottland Franz Ferdinand Jamie Bell Sophia Myles England Dach Uhr
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Toronto - Ireland Park at the foot of Bathhurst Street
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
View Video
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Toronto - Air Show Cyling through Little India
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
View Video
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Toronto - Ireland Park with view of downtown
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - High Park Maple Leaf
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Billy Elliot
Billy (Jamie Bell) is a young boy living in a state of poverty. His father (Gary Lewis) and older brother (Jamie Draven), are miners during the UK miners' strike (1984--1985).
Billy's father is an admirer of real life world boxing champion Ken Buchanan, and hopes that Billy would become a champion boxer. Billy, however, is more interested in music, a passion he inherited from his late mother.
Billy is taken to the boxing gym by his father, but he finds out that he doesn't really like the sport, and has no real talent for it. Part of the boxing gym is used by a ballet class because their usual studio in the basement of the sports center is being used as a soup kitchen for the striking miners. He is drawn in by the dance instructor (Julie Walters), and with her help, secretly starts taking ballet class.
As a consequence of Billy's brother being arrested, he had missed an important audition for the Royal Ballet School. His dance instructor goes to the house to tell his father about the missed opportunity. Billy's father and brother, being men of their times, and fearing that Billy will be seen as a "poof" become outraged at the idea of him becoming a professional ballet dancer.
Once having seen Billy dance however, his father realizes that ballet is his future. He has to pawn the family's last memories of Billy's mother to take him to an audition in London himself. Billy is accepted and moves to London on his own at age 11 to attend the school.
The movie concludes with a scene that takes place years later, where his father and brother arrive at the ballet. The film ends as the older and more mature Billy (dancer/actor Adam Cooper) takes the stage to perform the lead in Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake.
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Toronto- Air Show - Gerrard Street near Woodbine Avenue
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
View Video
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Toronto - Air Show - Cycling on College Street
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
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Toronto - Air Show 2007 - Gerrard Street West to Bay
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
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Toronto - Air Show - Adventure Playground in High Park
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
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Toronto - Canada Malting Company
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Toronto Music Garden - CN Tower
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Scottish Highland Cattle in High Park Zoo
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
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Toronto - Wedding at Toronto Music Garden
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Cycling down to Grenadier Pond
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Air Show - Crowd watching by Ontario Place
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Cycling in High Park
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Watching the Air Show
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Air show - F16 Fighter jet
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Art Deco beauty: the Tip Top Tailor Building
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Air Show - Arrival at Sunnyside Beach
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html .
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Toronto - Riding through High Park neighbourhood
This video clip was taken on September 1, 2007 during my cycling trip to see the Canadian International Airshow which is always held on Labour Day weekend. I started in Toronto's east end, cycled in on Gerrard Street through the colourful neighbourhoods of Little India and Toronto's eastern Chinatown, both of which feature ethnic cuisine, vegetable, fruit and retail stores. Then I crossed the Don Valley Parkway and cycled by Regent Park, a public housing development from the 1950s and 1960s which has experienced significant social problems in the last few decades. A portion of Regent Park has been demolished to make way for a brand-new mixed housing development that will include low-income housing as well as middle-income housing. Right across the street from Regent Park is Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood that was originally settled by Irish immigrants that started to be settled as early as the late 1840s after a wave of poor immigrants left Ireland due to the Irish potato famine. These poor residents grew cabbage in their front yards, hence the name Cabbagetown. In the last few decades Cabbagetown has become increasingly popular and has seen extensive gentrification. I cycled through the relatively poor downtown east side to the intersection of Gerrard and Yonge; Yonge Street is the east-west dividing line in Toronto and used to be the longest street in the world. I then continued west on College Street, past Queen's Park and the University of Toronto to the intersection of College and Dundas, the northern end of Toronto's Chinatown. Further west I reached Little Italy, one of Toronto's most popular entertainment areas, where the streets were block off for the Fiera festival. All the restauranteurs and merchants were still setting up shop around noon time, although the streets were already starting to get busy. I continued west on College Street to the beautiful High Park residential neighbourhood between Roncesvalles and Keele Street, and then headed into Toronto's largest urban park - High Park. I visited the Jamie Bell Adventure Playground, took inventory of the animals in the High Park Zoo (e.g. Yaks, Western Highland Cattle, peacocks, emus, lamas, and a whole family of Bisons including two young Bison offspring) and then headed to the central plateau of High Park that features beautiful views over the Maple Leaf next to Grenadier Pond and offers culinary treats to the visitors at the Grenadier Restaurant. Overhead I could already hear the supersonic boom of the jet fighters that were doing mid-air acrobatics as part of the Canadian International Air Show, an annual Labour Day event. To see the planes I cycled down to Toronto's waterfront and relaxed for a while in the sand at Sunnyside Beach, watching a parade of airplanes from different eras perform all sorts of aerobatics. I then continued further east towards Ontario Place where tens of thousands of people had set up camp to watch the Air Show. The Canadian National Exhibition was in full swing as well. I made may way east, and on my way towards Harbourfront I stopped at the historic Tiptop Tailors Building, a former garment factory turned recently into a loft condominium conversion - an Art Deco jewel with beautiful ornamentation. Further east, at the foot of Bathhurst Street, next to the abandoned Canada Malting Plant, I stumbled across Ireland Park, a memorial to 38,000 Irish immigrants who fled Ireland during the Potato Famine of 1847 to escape extreme conditions of hunger and settle in a new continent. The scultpures in this park provide a gripping depiction of these emigrants' experiences. Figures such as the Orphan Boy and The Apprehensive Man illustrate the horrors of this period. The park itself is a symbol of Canadian-Irish collaboration. My last stop on my nearly 50 km cycling tour was the Toronto Music Garden, a beautiful stretch of greenery in the concrete jungle of Harbourfront that offers a welcome respite from the city's condo towers. I safely made it home after a nice ride through Toronto's Eastern Beaches.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm and my Austrian travel articles will be published in the next few weeks.
Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
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