Friday, April 6, 2012

Is This The Canadian Dream?

Here's an article from Toronto Standard by Erene Stergiopoulos about our beautiful city and the amazing ways in which it changes and grows. And, of course, some of the people that celebrate it (including this project!).

http://www.torontostandard.com/the-sprawl/is-this-the-canadian-dream-scandanavia-erene-stergiopoulos-toronto

Saturday, February 25, 2012

the TTC





Photos by Elena Bilenky-Iourtaeva

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Year-long exposure of Toronto skyline

Check out this article in the Star! Hopefully it will inspire you photographers to capture the city through your own unique perspective.
Photo by Michael Chrisman

Friday, January 20, 2012

Folk Songs of Canada Now

Part of this project is telling stories. The means and media we use to do that are vast and varied, but good stories, whatever they may tell, inform our conceptions of our culture, of who we are. We need to explore our own stories in order to understand ourselves. We need to delve into our history and folklore, our songs and pictures, in order to get a sense of the spirit of the city around us. And, ultimately, knowing those stories may help us get a better sense of the world around us too.

This is a website devoted to Canadian folk songs: http://www.folksongsofcanadanow.com/. It features songs collected form across the country, all of which are available to download for free from the website. Hopefully it will inspire you to seek out all the wonderful stories in your own backyard. Or, better yet, to tell your own.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Riverdale Farm

Walking down the sloping path, through the barns and around the goat and sheep pens to the butterfly garden, I marvelled at my surroundings. Tamed and untamed mingled and a farm within a park within a city emerged. I felt my childhood notions of what a farm is supposed to be spring to reality before my eyes. Old farm implements covered over by ivy scattered here and there, low stone walls, children running about, happy animals crowing and clucking and bleating. Effortlessly, I let myself slip back in time and into a nursery rhyme. There are many places within the city that allow for contact with the past, but the illusion of being somewhen else is rarely so complete or convincing as it is on Riverdale Farm.

There is an overwhelming feeling of harmony that penetrates everything about Riverdale Farm. When we think of agriculture in its modern incarnation, we likely do not picture cows relaxing in the open air at the edges of a wooded area, shaded by maples and pines. Yet nothing in that picture seems out of place or odd, or unnatural. On the contrary, through it is all too easy to feel isolated from nature or even indifferent to it, places like this one remind us that humanity and nature are not separate entities. Riverdale Farm reminds us that, especially in cities like Toronto, magic and wonder can crop up in the most unexpected of places.

I saw a goat being milked, found out that even chickens have personalities, and spotted tadpoles. I witnessed six little pigs shove and jostle their way to the feeding trough at lunch time and then out to take a mud bath. there were onions and rhubarb and herbs and forget-me-nots, duck eggs and dandelions and waterfalls. I shared my lunch with a green-eyed black cat and made friends with a skittish lamb.

Riverdale Farm is a treasure, one that I took a regrettably long time to discover. It inspired me, made me eager to re-connect with my childhood conceptions of the world and, as always, to explore and unearth the other hidden wonders in this city.

Here is their website:

http://www.friendsofriverdalefarm.com/index.htm. It has directions to the farm by both car and the TTC, contact info, lists of programs and events like the weekly farmers market as well as a rather lovely photo gallery.


And by the way, the gift shop is in need of volunteers.

By C.G. Mesa Guzzo

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Dave Meslin: The antidote to apathy

A great, inspiring talk, not just for Torontonians, but for anyone and everyone. http://www.ted.com/talks/dave_meslin_the_antidote_to_apathy.html

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Twitter

We now have a Twitter account (hurray!). Please follow us. http://twitter.com/TOTravelers#

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Hogtown Ballet

Hogtown Syncopators (http://www.myspace.com/hogtownjazz) live at The Rex(http://www.therex.ca/) Provided some great background music for the ballet that is Queen Street West on a Friday afternoon.

Shot Feb. 4th 2011. C.G. Mesa Guzzo

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Ludy Dobri

Ludy Dobri (Good People) is a Lviv-based nu-folk band that collects and interprets traditional music from across Ukraine according to their eclectic tastes. Last summer they visited Toronto as part of the Organic Streetscape Project, a Canadian tour based around a collaboration between Canadian and Ukrainian musicians and artists that included exhibits and shows in several cities.
Stephanie Turenko had the opportunity to follow the band and document their experiences in Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto. The band loved playing in Kensingtom Market and was also able to play at the Gladstone hotel during Nuite Blanche and the Bloor Street West Ukrainian Festival.

-Information and photos provided by Stephanie Turenko