adma
Superstar
my Panoramio account[/URL]:
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Yeah, one of the truly unsung bridge landmarks in Toronto: the original 1930s concrete arches of the QEW over Etobicoke Creek, now swamped by widening add-ons but still very much there...
my Panoramio account[/URL]:
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next time you make that trip, cross yonge at ramsden park at take crescent road over the subway line, then take an immediate right turn and head down the stairs down to the rosedale ravineOver the subway tracks and down Aylmer Avenue:
^Now you're just rubbing in the fact I never heard of lostrivers.ca until now
The formal bike trail you encountered at the northerly end of your journey is proposed to be extended all the way south to the bike trail at the Forks. (where the East Don, West Don and Taylor Creek Meet, and existing bike trails follow the latter two, and the lower Don)
I'm mixed on this, as I appreciate the access by bike it will offer, and how it completes a major link in the bike trail system; but it will certainly make Charles Sauriol busier and a little less....wild.
****
Deer are present here, as in most of the valley systems in Toronto area.
Sadly, a couple of years back, I found one killed by a cross-bow. Never know what genius' with whom you share your valley.
once again, nice tour, evcco
you do seem to have a tendency to photograph the "urban" in the wilderness -- the flotsam and jetsam, the junk, the detritus
Check out vanishingpoint.ca if you havent already.
Interesting - at first I thought this was the same photographer I posted about a while back:
http://urbantoronto.ca/forum/showthread.php/17775-Urban-Wilderness!?p=598432#post598432
I wonder how many sewer photographers are running around out there, under our feet?
I'd love to get inside some of these pipes, but I'm afraid I'd be a bit too claustrophobic...and stenchophobic!
so, have you read any of charles sauriol's books?
In your recent photos, just north of Lawrence, on the east side of the Don, there are a few large storm sewers. Some 30 or so years ago I made the trip up one of them. Quite a ways in as well. We came to an end at a large underground interceptor. It was only recently I discovered where we ended up thanks to streetview!
It's not as bad as one would expect down there. I am still also very amazed that we took such a casual approach to burying things.




