I love this performance of Old Bunch of Keys by Chicken Train. These guys really cook. Found this on the YouTube machine posted by Dean Barber.
I love this performance of Old Bunch of Keys by Chicken Train. These guys really cook. Found this on the YouTube machine posted by Dean Barber.
In my travels this weekend I stopped in at Ontario Gas BBQ. My friends might think this is odd behaviour for me since I don’t own a gas or propane grilling unit, but in fact this place also sells an amazing selection of equipment and fuel for the charcoal bbq fanatic as well.
In fact they have an entire room dedicated to charcoals of the world. You might say charcoal is charcoal, right? There is even a website dedicated to charcoal reviews. I’ve tried a few different ones over the years, and I’ll say some charcoals might be better for slow bbq and others might be better for when you need very hot heat – there are definite differences in density of various charcoals available for the bbq freak. As well, some charcoals tend to arrive at the store in bigger chunks while others come all smashed up. I find bigger chunks give me the kind of air flow I want for hot grilling. Overall though, I’m not too fussy. I usually buy Maple Leaf charcoal, a quality Canadian brand, and it serves me very well.
I should say that I have nothing against cooking with gas grills. I know lots of people like them a lot, especially those swanky units with the side burners and bun warmers and who knows what else, and they’re very satisfied with the results they get. If it works for you, great. Go for it. If I’m going to cook outside though, I want the results I can get with real charcoal (and I’m not talking about those weird pre-fabricated briquets. What’s in those things?).
Do you cook outdoors?
We came across this sign the other day at the edge of a parking area at the intersection of two highways. I’m trying to imagine people pulling up and dumping their junk in the ravine. Do people really do that? I’m betting the folks who put up the sign had been dealing with that kind of behaviour for some time.
Good training session for Georgie today. We worked on all kinds of things from basic walking, sits, downs, walking near another dog, sitting beside a strange dog, “touch” for two feet up on a platform, “up” for all the way up on the platform, stay on the platform, sit there while I go through the door first, and also some work on taking treats very gently.
It is as much training for us as it is for the dogs. We have to learn to give a command once and expect it to happen, to be clearer – really black and white – about what we expect – and to have the discipline to be consistent.
Next lesson in three weeks. For now we have homework.
Sad to hear of the passing of singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester. RIP.
We had the pleasure of attending one of his wonderful performances at Hugh’s Room here in Toronto a few years back. He sure had a way with a song.
As you know friends, I like all kinds of folk music, but some days I just need a little ukulele rock ‘n’ roll.
Here are some tunes perfo.rmed by Gus and Fin from Scotland. Let’s start with Judy is a Punk. And follow that up with Surfin’ Bird, I wanna be your boyfriend, and I wanna be Sedated.
There, that’s better.
If not, it’s about time I did. He’s got a lot happening if you ask me. Here is Pokey Lafarge with his very hot band performing Sadie Green…
and how about Going back to Arkansas, featuring Dom Flemons, who you may know from the original line-up of the Carolina Chocolate Drops…
…and finally a solo performance of one of his own tunes, Josephine
There’s a house coming down on Lake Promenade, just west of 27th Street. I wonder what’s going to go up in its place? Will it be a giant monster home – there are some – or perhaps they’ll try to cram a couple tall skinny houses there, dividing the property and squeezing every last greasy buck they can from the land.
Here in Long Branch we’re witnessing a lot of change right now. Lots of homeowners who have been here for 40, 50, 60 years are moving to condos or retirement homes, or for some it is the last stop. Land values have been rising quickly – we couldn’t afford to buy our house if we were looking for a place to live today, that’s for sure.
In quite a few cases, developers are grabbing up the properties, severing the lots, trashing the old and building two houses on a lot that previously held one. Ours is an eclectic neighbourhood with big and small homes. Some are original cottages from the days when Long Branch was cottage country to Torontonians. There are other homes that are tremendously opulent.
No doubt plenty of older homes around here need to be refreshed somehow or another. No doubt also the neighbourhood is changing. How should it change? How should that be decided. What’s happening in many cases is developers are deciding. I see quite a number of examples now where they have bought the land and applied to the Committee of Adjustment to sever it. If they fail there, they go to the Ontario Municipal Board and try again there. I think our community should have more say in the future of our neighbourhood. The Committee of Adjustment/OMB process is simply no way to plan the future of a community.
I became involved in an argument in front of the OMB last year. We appealed a Committee of Adjustment decision to allow a severance on our street to the Board. I led the charge representing a loosely knit group of folks living in the immediate area. Our argument was that any change should respect the character of the neighbourhood – that’s in the official plan. So what does that mean? Around here it seems there is not one neighbourhood but a dozen or more micro-neighbourhoods. The character changes from street to street and different parts of the streets around here all have their own character. I think if you’re going to measure character, the benchmark should be everything within sight of the property in question. In this case, the developer’s experts argued that South Long Branch is the neighbourhood so all use within that broader definition is OK anywhere in the area. I think that’s just wrong, but the adjudicator with the Board ruled in favour of the developer.
I sought advice and help from my Councillor, who was unresponsive. I even emailed the mayor, expecting he would come down here like the cavalry to assist, but no. His office sent a form response and that was the last I heard. For sure in the upcoming municipal and provincial elections I will be supporting candidates who care about how our community is redeveloped and are willing to do something about it – if I can find some. The OMB liaison officer told me they encouraged lay people to get involved, but it soon became clear that it is the land of lawyers, and I was made to feel foolish and inadequate because I did not know the procedural ins and outs. I left feeling like I would never participate in that process again.
Meanwhile, I have no idea what is going to replace the house that just got ripped down. Time will tell.
I just want to give my friends out there an early head’s up – I have a painting exhibition opening up in about 3 weeks – the afternoon of Saturday April 26 is the opening reception. It’s at Yumart, at 101 Spadina in Toronto on the second floor. The show is called Paintings from the Lost Forest. It features predominantly new works completed in 2014, along with a couple paintings from last year and as well, a few blasts from the past.
The painting pictured here is a small oil painting, just 12″X9″ called Trailhead. It’s a piece I’ve worked on for a very long time, and completed early in the year.
Closer to the exhibition, I’ll post again about the show and send emails out to my contacts as well. In recent years, I haven’t showed often, so for those of you who have been asking how my painting is going, here’s a chance to see a number of paintings up in a gallery environment.
Here are some photos from our adventure today in Jarvis Ontario, at the delightfully chaotic Nice Old Stuff, where you’re apt to find just about anything.