Aug 4, 2011

Caribbean Carnival (formerly "Caribana")



 "Saturday night’s shooting, in which one man was killed and two others wounded along the Caribbean Carnival parade route, is not the first instance of violence related to events of the festival, which used to be called Caribana", Toronto Star, Sunday July 31, 2011.


The Caribana festivals and parade have been a tourist attraction with sets the stage for a million people to enjoy.  It starts off inside the Ex and runs along Lakeshore Blvd and ending at Parkside.  Wild and beautifully colored costumes, charged and sometime comedic steelpan music (steel drums) and amazing food from oxtail (don't really like this!) to jerk chicken and rice and peas.  This is what the festival conveys.  


Over 44 years of celebrations, Toronto and other cities that host the Caribana have seen violence in the past years.  


Taken from the Toronto Star Library, Media Reports, Star Files
  July 31, 2005: Dwayne Taylor, 27, dies after a rival gang member fires two shots into Yonge-Dundas Square during a crowded Caribana celebration.


  July 31, 2003: A man is charged with criminal negligence causing bodily harm and firearms possession after his SUV rams another car during Caribana-related celebrations at Yonge and Gerrard Sts. He had run a red light while fleeing police.
  Aug. 2, 1997: Gary Newman, 22, is shot at point blank range amid a crowd of pre-Caribana revellers on Yonge St. Earlier, a man had been shot in the leg about a block away.
  Aug. 4, 1996: Two Buffalo men in town for Caribana are hit by a single bullet while walking near Yonge and Gould Sts.
  Aug. 3, 1996: Elrick Christian, 23, is shot and killed and three others, including a nurse visiting from Britain, are wounded during the Caribana parade. Three men are also arrested on weapons-related charges after a volley of shots are fired in Marilyn Bell Park, beside the parade route.
  Aug. 3, 1992: A man is stabbed twice in the back on Bay St. as crowds come off the ferry from Olympic Island where the Caribbean Music Festival was held.
  Aug. 1, 1992: An Oshawa man is shot amid the throngs watching the parade on Lake Shore Blvd. W. Police shut down the parade after two officers are assaulted.
  Aug. 5, 1985: A police officer is stabbed and another hit with a beer bottle as violence breaks out among a large crowd during Caribana celebrations on the Toronto Islands.
I believe in vigilance, in being aware of the company you keep, and in most importantly in intuition or instinct.  I also believe in taking chances and not believing everything that is told to me, especially by the media.  If I was to listen to the news, I would never leave my house on most days.  These celebrations are precious and few and although I didn't go or participate as I was asked to volunteer, I still think it's should be a welcomed event to Toronto and its just too bad that a few rotten apples, can sometimes cause some people hysteria or to look at the whole tree as spoiled.


Go Caribana, I'll try and catch you next year! 







Jul 26, 2011

Tommy Thompson Park Trail (Leslie Spit)

Once you reach the end of the trail at Lakeshore you can turn eastbound on the trail towards the Martin Goodman trail or you can veer right at Leslie street and follow the road straight down to the end.  There  you will see the opening to the Tommy Thompson Park Trail (or the "Leslie Spit as Torontonians call it). 

Who ever thought garbage could look so good? The Tommy Thompson Park Trail is a landfill site.  It is flourishing with an abundance of wild flowers and grassland covering what appears like rolling hills and valleys.  It is surrounded by the beautiful Lake Ontario.  As you can see the trail has a lot of beautiful scenery and there are many off road paths that take you to the waters edge.  Many secluded spots for exploring or having a lunch break.

At the peak of the 'spit' you will see an old lighthouse, called the 'Vicki Keith Point Lighthouse'.  (named after the Canadian swimmer, who swam across all 5 great lakes for charity in 1988).


The Tommy Thompson Park trail is open for cyclists, joggers, walkers, roller-bladers, and boaters on weekends and holidays.  During the week, it is bustling with dump trucks offloading and extending the park further.


I couldn't believe the number of birds that I saw, until I read up later and found out that the park is through one of the largest bird sanctuaries in Ontario. 


I love it here, next time I 'll come back with a pen and paper and just write. It's very peaceful and secluded and there's just so much you can take in and leave with.  



    
I remember when I was a little girl, my grandmother told me that she had been all around the world 4 times after my grandfather died.  She told me that Toronto was the most beautiful city in the world. I look back at all the trails and parks that I have been through in the past 5 months.  I honestly can't believe how much nature surround us 5 million people here.