25 Sept 2013

Topiary Horse


Location: The garden by Simpson House, Riverdale Farm
Date photo taken: 5 June 2013

Topiary figures are whimsical and wonderful additions to parks and open spaces, but you rarely see them these days. One of the reasons for this is that they are time-consuming to construct and maintain. This horse, formed by carefully training English ivy around a metal form, was created over the winter in the High Park greenhouses by a City of Toronto gardener then moved to Riverdale Farm in the spring, where it currently sits gazing at the barn.

18 Sept 2013

Bell Box - Emily Harrison


Location: Birchcliff Avenue at Kingston Road
Date photo taken: 9 September 2013
Image #5 in the Bellbox Series

This mural, painted by Emily Harrison, is part of the "re-greening" of Birch Cliff. The Birch Cliff Community Mural Project is using murals both large and small in their efforts to beautify the area and engage the community. Working with Mural Routes, they received a grant allowing them to paint three mural projects this summer, including this Bell Box. If you see it in person, be sure to walk around it - it's painted on both sides.

11 Sept 2013

Yellow Fish


Location: Langley Street
Date photo taken: 4 September 2013

Yellow fish like this one can be found painted on curbs all over the city. They are a key component of a program called Yellow Fish Road developed by Trout Unlimited Canada in 1991 to raise awareness about water pollution entering local water systems through storm drains like these. Water entering street grates like these generally flows through a series of tunnels and then emptys directly into the lake (although Toronto has undertaken some interesting projects to help add some filtering steps). Unlike water from houses, it is not usually treated before entering the lake so it is important to realize that anything washed into it, like detergent from washing your car, or salt put on your sidewalk, is going to affect the ecosystem into which it ultimately flows.

The Yellow Fish Road program engages youth, educating them about the effects of storm water run-off and then enlisting them to paint the fish on curbs and distribute literature to nearby homes. The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority is a partner in this program. If you want to involve your school class or youth group in this activity, you can submit an application through the TRCA website. It also makes a great team building exercise for corporate groups.

4 Sept 2013

Central Tech Gnome


Location: Above the western entrance to Central Technical School, Bathurst & Harbord
Date photo taken: 11 July 2013
Image 1 in the Figures Series

This figure is one of two that sits above the main entrance on the west side of the Toronto District School Board's Central Technical School. The two figures together represent the two sides of the school's curriculum. This one in cap and gown, reading a book, represents the academic side. The other, in work clothes, holding a hammer and chisel, represents the technical side. They were not included in the original design for the building but were instead, according to a history of the school, a gift by the Scottish stonemasons who worked on the construction.