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Road Trip, With Indulgences 5 comments

There is something in the blood about autumn in Ontario. The weather turns from hot to nippy pretty quickly. The air gets crisp and demanding in the nose. We rural transplants to urban settings yearn for opportunities to get out to the country where evidence of change is everywhere.

This past weekend offered just such an opportunity as J and I drove north to a special cottage birthday visit with ragdoll’s mom. It was a surprise and the look on RM's face when she got out of the car was worth every moment of the quite long drive north.

But I'm skipping ahead … first came the drive north on a sunny Friday with blue skies, puffy white clouds, still green rolling hills and trees of every colour dotting the wooded landscapes and roadways. The endless rolling countryside of Southern Ontario, in this case north up Highway 6 from Guelph almost all the way to Tobermory, is – for me – a sure-fire way to calm my mind and re-charge my batteries. It is all I can do not to stop the car every 100 metres or so and look at a farm, or admire the view, talk to some sheep, or just take in the landscape. We'd never get there if I had my way.

The small towns along the way are equally picturesque … Fergus … Arthur … Mount Forest … Kenilworth … Chatsworth … some of them have magnificent stone buildings on the main "drag" (as my Mom would have said) and beautiful Southern Ontario brick (both red and yellow) homes on the side streets, with tall maples, pines and cedars surrounding. There is usually water – a river,a creek, a small pond or resevoir – that one drives by, or over. The entry into downtown Guelph, over the bridge from the University, is just about the prettiest "gateway" to a downtown there is. Well, except for the small matter of that strip mall to the east and the muffler shop to the west. And the fact that the intersection is almost ALWAYS torn up in construction … but I digress.

Each of these towns features one or more Chinese food restaurants (Cantonese) which lay at the root of my occasional yearnings for really good, but really bad, Cantonese Chinese food.  Almost every small town in Ontario of a population of more than 500 people will have a Chinese restaurant, including every small town near the farm where I grew up. This Wikipedia entry talks about the phenomenon of the rural Chinese restaurant belonging to Western Canada, but it is totally present in EVERY small town in Ontario, as well.

You can keep your chicken balls, egg rolls and fried rice … all I'm really interested in is any main dish that features bean sprouts. Love 'em. We stopped at one such place for lunch on Friday and I indulged my bean sprout yearnings.


This wasn't really what I had in mind, but it tasted better than it looks. I'm not used to chow mein it looking quite so … red … or having so many egg noodles. The bean sprouts were fresh, crunchy and slightly undercooked, which was perfect.

Also somewhere along Highway 6, I spotted this beauty and felt compelled to swing back to capture her for posterity.


I like how someone has replaced the hub caps with really shiny ones, but hasn't gone any further than that! 🙂


The drive carried on in this rolling, up/down, curvy, picturesque way for 4.5 hours until we found the cottage, near Dyer's Bay. This was our view.


I wrote about this shirt in a blog entry about gender a while back. It is a bit big on me now, but still cosy.

Freddie enjoyed exploring completely new territory and never ever tires of looking for dead fish on the beach – so she can roll in them, of course!

The night sky, around midnight Friday, totally blew us away and is almost impossible to describe. Just as you think your eyes have adjusted to the dark, this band of diamonds, some seemingly closer than others, appears. Then, as your eyes adjust to that reality, you notice that the entire sky is encrusted with twinkling, sparkling light. You just can't take it all in … almost overwhelming.

We went for a walk on Saturday, mid-day, along the shore road and then the "beach". Georgian Bay is not known for its sandy beaches. Instead, it offers miles and miles of rocky, pebbled beaches that have a odd seductive beauty to them. 

Love this patio / fire pit. I can so see sitting out here with guitars, friends, and laughter.

The four of us had a lovely 24 hours together. I brought my mini-guitar and we sang songs together for hours. We ate all the things we weren't supposed to … like bacon, sausage, cheese, bread and ice cream. 🙂 I think I was more indulgent this 24 hours than I was over my birthday! In any case, I think we celebrated ragdoll’s mom's birthday in a special and memorable way, and that was the desired outcome. I just wish we could have stayed longer, but life makes strong demands sometimes.

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West Is No Longer Where You Think It Is Click Here To Comment!

A few months back, I wrote some flippant bit that suggested that I have an excellent sense of direction. While I still believe this to be true, as this has always been true in the past, I have gotten lost (sort of) on my way to work three times in the past month. In a part of the world I know very very well. Let me explain.

I live in Toronto … I work, a few days a week anyway, in Guelph. Note Handy Reference Map below.

Now, Guelph is not visible on this map. It is about 10 minutes drive further … er … left, past Campbellville on the 401.

Toronto to Guelph. Assuming (and perhaps I shouldn't) that north is where you expect it to be, Guelph is pretty much due west of Toronto, right?

I was at a business networking thing about six weeks ago, meeting perfect strangers and making chit chat. I was out in Guelph for this shindig and it isn't unusual at these things for talk to float around to where do you live and where do you work. The fellow that I was speaking with that day said, helpfully, "Oh – I know a shortcut from Toronto to Guelph – I do it all the time." This is where my trouble began.

I was led into short-cut temptation by my revulsion for the Gardiner/427/Airport route which is the route any rational person would assume is the natural way to get from downtown Toronto to Guelph. I find that, between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., people driving on the 427 have some kind of auto-lobotomy on the on-ramp and lose all their driving inhibitions. I hate it. So I was all ears when offered an alternative.

"It is easy," the devil man said. "Stay on the Gardiner/QEW to Winston Churchill, then just duck over to the 403 from Upper Middle Rd. Take 403 to 407 and you hit the 401 just before Milton … no more airport, and 20 minutes saved in rush hour by being in free flowing traffic."

Brilliant!!

Although I could visualize this easily (because, remember, I'm good at this spacial relationship stuff …), I did take the trouble to look this up on a real map and, lo and behold, it did seem to make sense. It looks good, right?

I tried this out the first time early in the a.m. on my way to Guelph. I missed the Upper Middle Road Turn off, but other than that I made it to the 403 from Burnhamthorpe Rd. Herein lies the root of this problem. Confronted with the choice of "403 West" or "403 East", remembering that I am heading WEST to Guelph, and that I haven't finished my first coffee just yet, I selected for my viewing pleasure that day "403 West".

Wrong.

You see, the designers of this highway assume that everyone travels from the very easternmost point to Hamilton which, in truth, is more south than west. But now I'm splitting hairs, I suppose. In any case, if you get on the 403 in Oakville and you select "West", you are actually travelling SOUTH EAST towards Hamilton.

I did manage to figure this out in fairly short order, cleverly noting that I was driving into the sunrise, not away from it.

So I exited, crossed over, and headed back in the direction from whence I came. Next, I was offered the choice of selecting "407 West" or 407 East". They don't give you much time to decide and it is pretty confusing, especially since the choice that would really be best ("407 North to 401") doesn't exist. I took a deep breath and selected "407 West" – mostly because "407 East" just sounded stupid since I am going to GUELPH for heaven's sake – and promptly found myself trundling back off (south east) towards Hamilton again.

I am ashamed to say that I repeated some version of this two more times before I started to recite the following to myself.

Morning – QEW to 403 EAST to 407 EAST to 401 WEST …. don't fight it … drive EAST to Guelph.
Afternoon – 401 East to 407 WEST to 403 WEST to QEW … don't fight it … drive WEST to Toronto.

The happy ending … now that I'm getting lost less frequently, the stress of the whole 427/airport lunacy is not missed. It is a very leisurely drive as long as I'm not arguing with myself about which direction I should be driving in.

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