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Friday, June 3, 2016

Beyond Jane’s Walk and into 100in1 Day

So it is already almost a month from the official Jane’s Walk festival. How are you? Have you gone on tours/walks or discovered something new?
I learned something about fruit trees in the city and many efforts from many incredible people to make food more accessible, like Not Far From the Tree and Powery Project.
There are still more walks throughout the year, especially tomorrow, as part of 100in1day movement in Toronto.

100in1day
Poster for Toronto 100in1day June 4th

Launched in 2012 in Bogota, Columbia, 100in1 is a movement that encourage activation of 100 community-based innovations and ideas for social justice and change, all in one day. Thus 100 in 1 day, 100 actions intervention in one day.
The aim: for citizens to take active parts in building their dream city.
100in1day extended to over 10 cities worldwide.
In 2012, 100in1day launched in Bogotá, Columbia.
In 2013, the festival extended to: Cape Town, South Africa; San José, Costa Rica; Copenhagen, Denmark; Montreal, Canada; Santiago, Chile, El Salvador; Managua, Nicaragua; Malmö, Sweden and Kaluga, Russia.
In 2014, lead by Evergreen in part with United Way Toronto and York Region this celebration also included: Halifax, Toronto, and Vancouver, Canada.
In 2015, Lead by Evergreen, Hamilton, Ontario joined.
This year, in 2016, Edmonton, Alberta will also join in on the fun. [source: 100in1day Toronto]
For Toronto, this is the third year of participation. And the event is tomorrow June 4th.
There are more than 100 interventions around the city, including the Jane’s walks, laneway cleanup, art projects. bike projects, etc.
Evergreen Brickworks also host a range of events from environmental activities to art and civic engagement.
For me, this is a chance to explore the city and learn about communities living herer. Also, it is great weekend activities for families and groups.
Is this happening near you? If so, this is a great chance for a fun exploring day.

Let’s have a great day tomorrow.


Friday, May 6, 2016

Warm weekend - Recommendation: Jane's Walk

Weekend weather forecast: warm above 10C
Recommendation: Jane’s Walk

Google doodle for Jane Jacob 100th birthday, in celebration of Jane's Walk festival
(From: Google Doodle)
Today is Friday - the first day of Jane’s Walk festival. (Of course, there has been many walks throughout the week, leading up to this weekend).
All over the city, walks are being carried out. Today alone, there are 34 walks in Toronto, and a lot more in the GTA (more stats to come). 

All walks offer something exciting, something to learn about. And if I have superpower to manipulate time, I would love to go on all of them. But I don't, and it can be incredibly hard to choose between the walks.
Here are some of the amazing walks happening on tonight, and Saturday and Sunday, something for your exciting weekend. Find out more walks here.
And many others, ranging from serious historical/cultural walk to quirky/interesting aspects of the city. Really, it depends on what each person knows and wants to learn more about, so there is no best walk list, really.

Walks happening around Toronto (From: http://janeswalk.org/canada/toronto).


My personal list of exciting walks: 
  1. Being a nature-loving person, I can’t skip Dawn Chorus walk, even-though I have been on this walk previous year. The walk offers a kind of calming time that pull you into being present. If you are up to it, see you 5 a.m. on Saturday morning at High Park.
  2. The Rouge Park - another absolutely-must go walk. It is a lovely place, with winding trails through the wood, a National Urban park to boost. I imagine it will be quite lovely this time of the year, when there are greens but the leaves are not quite thick as to obscure too much view yet.. Excited? there are  different walks offered today, Saturday, and Sunday. So pick you day and enjoy outdoors time with your friends and family.
  3. Walk the line – a interesting project for linear park, There are two walks on this topic of linear park, one was today and the other on Sunday
  4. Finding your fruit goggles – again another urban gardening/farming/park, an absolutely enjoyable walk that I just have, more info later.
  5. Nightwalking & Secret Staircase – really, the name alone promising something thrilling and some goose-bump worthy moment. Different walks of this same theme are offered  Friday and Saturday, 11 p.m.
  6. The beltline and beyond – a 16km bike tour. Don’t be discourage by the distance, it manageable, and we stop often along the way for a little history and discussion, like bike lane and accessibility.
  7. “Unladylike” – 10 Women who shocked the 19thcentury Toronto - this sound way too cool to miss.
Is there Jane's Walk in your city? Have you gone on a walk or are planning to go on one? What is the topic and where is it? How is the experience? 
If not, tell me about an interesting piece about your neighborhood/city.
Share with me in the comment section.

-From Toronto.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Walk and discover your city- Jane's Walk May 6th, 7th, and 8th

May 6th, 7th and 8th is the date for Jane's Walk festival , where free city tour is being offered around the city, in the spirit of exploring and encouraging conversations. There are more than 150 walks scheduled in Toronto alone. In the spirit of the coming festival, I would like to share with you my thought on a recent reading.

When a Torontonian get asked about taking picture in his own downtown Toronto, here is what he wrote - "And what’s so bad about being a tourist? What is a tourist, anyway, but an explorer, a discoverer? Why should there be any negative connotations to behaviour that would be perfectly normal in a new place, just because it’s done in one’s own home? I think we could all benefit from acting like tourists in our own cities. For one thing, it keeps the place (and by extension, our lives) fresh and exciting. It makes you think about the place where you live instead of just inhabiting it."

This is an excerpt from a piece I just stumbled upon, written for Jane's Walk Blog, titled "A Tourist at Home"

The piece resonates with me...

Paris, Egypt, China, South East Asia, Cuba... As human, we travel a lot. Just count the number of blogs on backpacking, on traveling on a budget, on travel+volunteer. Yes, we travel far and wide. Yet there is one place we don't often travel or explore - our own home town. Not everyone know their own hometown very well.

While in a foreign place, we takes pictures of anything remotely interesting. But in our own home town, we don't usually notice and appreciate the beauty in the immediate surrounding, in our own home town (Sure we take pictures of our own outing, but often not of the locations, the quirks,and the beauty). Let alone getting to know the history, the culture of each place. We are too busy with life, work, and vacations.

Sunset on Harbourfront Skating Rink
I have lived here, in Toronto, for a while and also explored occasionally. But I have come to realize that there are a lot more to explore. Just last year, I discovered the Beltline trail and Evergreen Brick Works, thanks to Jane's Walk.

"The city is huge and full of stuff, and even if I ever got through all the things that are already here, there are always new things being added: new murals, new parks, new buildings. As far as I’m concerned, I’ll be playing tourist here forever.", the author wrote.

"So don’t be afraid to go out and explore your own hometown as if it were a foreign land. Your life will always be richer for the experience." I couldn't have put it better myself.

So go out and learn about where you live - there is always a story waiting to be told.

Monday, April 25, 2016

The Don Dialogue – bold, inspiring, and exciting


Just last week, I had the opportunity to volunteer at The Don Dialogue panel on April 21th and listen to inspiring panelists talking about changing the Don River watershed.
Super Park
A view of the River Valley Park, looking south from the Brickworks. 
(Brenda Webster Tweel with Felipe Avila, The Globe and Mail)
The aim of the panel was to discuss the future of the Don Valley River, the possibility of converging the space into a park, spanning from Pottery road (North of Bloor) all the way to Corktown Common at the mouth of Lake Ontario (details here). 

What striking and inspiring about this panel is the vision painted by Geoff Cape, CEO of Evergreen (Evergreen Brickworks locates just next to Don River Valley, on Bayview) and the panelists – including architechtures from USA, and City of Toronto managers. (details on speakers here)

What did I take away?

The thing I learn from this panel is the thousands of green spaces built and being built at this moment. In the US, there are Chicago’s project 606 (building public space with garden and bike trail on existing elevated railway) and Brooklyn Bridge Park (park space on piers, on the wasted old industrial space) – two I was most impressed with among many others.

Credit: The 606 Chicago
Brooklyn Bridge Park (credit: Urban Omnibus)

These projects not only re-purpose the old, wasted structure/ land, but also bring green spaces to urban city, giving people a community space, separate from the concrete and cement roads. It brings people in the heart of the city closer to nature.

For me, these are proofs of incredible things we can achieve. These are the basis for my renewed faith and hope in humanity, in the power to do good. The proofs that we can do anything, we can contribute positively to climate change, if we all put our mind to it.

It is now Toronto’s turn. The wheel is now in motion for a Don River Valley park, among others ideas and plans all over Don River, from north to south – a cable car, bike lanes, bike trails, connecting bridges, renaturalizing the mouth of Don River,… With all the inputs and proposals, now is the opportunity to reshape the Don River Valley space. What is needed is the input from passionate people, from all walks of life.


There is two coming events at Evergreen Brick Works about the Don Valley, a film screening of documentary Accidental Parkland on May 10th, and an ecological panel on May 25th. Registration is free at evergreen.ca

Learn more about Don River Valley Park, visit its website.
Watch Accidental Parkland trailer here

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Fresh Start

Hi myself,

It has been a while since I write anything on here. It is a constant problem of mine, a good writing habit.

Not that I have nothing to write about. I have tons of things I want to write down and share - adventures, pieces of knowledge, thoughts ....that I've collected. Someday I think - this is a good day to start. But... I did not.

It went on for a while... then...

I thought, to hell with a good day to start, any day is a good day. But... I still couldn't start. There were so many things, where do I begin?

So today I just want to get this feeling out. It is a way to start again.

I am participating in Start-A-Blog challenge from Live Your Legend. It is a good accountability strategy for myself. I hope this time, I stick to this and finally have a great blog running.

Happy Day