Showing posts with label Heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heritage. Show all posts

Sunday, May 24, 2015

ONTARIO ADVENTURES



Hello
Our Canadian adventure continues...
We are enjoying the little grandsons, their cute sayings and sweet ways.
Sometimes we even think it would be nice to live here, and be part of the local scene.

This week we drove to another picturesque regional township, Westport on the Rideau Lakes.


A place of stylish Victorian houses, it has become a small tourist village, with fun shops - Like Rosie Yumski's, where I bought a few quality kitchen items as gifts.


Near the Marina, where yachts floated prettily..


a little spring bubbled up out of the grass, running into a pond.
Perhaps the fresh spring attracted the first settlers to this place.


We had fish and chips at this lovely old hotel, overlooking the lake...


and watching the geese..


Do you think I would eat Moose Tracks icecream?


Of course I did....
(only on holidays)

There was more shopping -
unexpectedly, on looking into a fashion shop, I found a perfect outfit for a summer wedding we will attend later in the year.
Taupe silk, made in Italy, and very reasonable price.
And it fitted perfectly.  
Then there was the decoy duck - a reminder of The Lake, destined to swim in our pool at home..




I love these old-fashioned fences in the farming countryside..
an historic design, but still popular, and attractive.


The lilac season is gorgeous.  Out in the country, we saw long hedges, heavy under a bounty of sweet-scented blossoms..


The little grandsons continue to amuse us.
We are enjoying school and day care pick-ups, putting Big Boy onto the yellow school bus, going to the barber, playing in the park, blowing bubbles, story times, and going to Tim Hortons for coffee and donuts.
The Little Boy is learning new words every day, and is also picking up a bit of French.  This is very cute, as he has begun to put the adjective after the noun in English too!  

We have spent time with the other grandparents, Grandpapa and Grandmama, who took us to a historic village, Upper Canada, which depicts a 19th century village in Ontario.





The village consists of many historic buildings, brought here during construction of the St Lawrence Seaway in 1958, when numerous communities were permanently flooded. The park was opened to the public in 1961. 


We have been to many heritage parks, in Australia and overseas, and this was one of the best.  The principal reason for this is the way they have made it a living museum, with costumed 'residents' in every building, telling us about their lives and trades.
There are three mills, still operational during the summer season:
a woollen mill, a flour mill and a sawmill.


The bakery bakes bread for the community, the cheese shop really does make and sell cheese, from the milk produced at the on-site farm.


The houses were beautifully furnished..

from the simple farmhouse, to the elegant doctor's residence.



Some of the wallpapers were absolutely gorgeous..


Of course, there was a dressmaker's house..




lots of quilts..




beautiful old stoves in every building..


and a big old oak tree.

Our drive home was along the riverside road on the Canadian side of the St Lawrence River...


looking across to the United States on the opposite bank.
We drove along there for about an hour, and my cell phone started receiving text messages, welcoming me to the US and offering mobile roaming rates!
Sorry guys, not this time..


Our daughter bought this sign at Westport...
memories of the sweet hummingbirds at the lake.

Soon we will be packing up, leaving our cosy bedroom under the steep roof of our daughter's century-old house, and saying sad goodbyes.
Then it is time for the long trek home, back to Australia.

Have a great week

xxxx






Friday, December 13, 2013

CHRISTMAS AND THE ANIMALS


Christmas: the season of hope and love, of giving thanks, celebrating with our family, friends and colleagues, of acknowledging those who touch our lives throughout the year, time to rest and reflect, and to remember the words:
Peace on Earth, and Goodwill to all men.



The perfect time to enjoy Heritage, an amazing work by Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang currently showing at Brisbane's GoMA (Gallery of Modern Art).
Ninety-nine life-size replicas of animals from around the globe, come  together in one place to drink from a beautiful blue pool.
A single drop of 'rain' intermittently falls, the resulting ripples the only disruption to this peaceful scene.


Giraffes and zebras, an elephant, monkeys, gazelles.
Kangaroos, tigers, pandas...
Enmity is put aside, violence is absent, as all drink the water essential to survival.


Heritage is, of course, an allegory.
It is about the bridging of cultures, about coming together, overcoming fear, and living in peace.




It is profoundly moving, causing gasps of wonder and astonishment as viewers enter the room.  We know in an instant that the animals we see would not, in many cases, associate in this way.  And we are shocked by the beauty of seeing them suddenly working together in harmony.





Cai has spent considerable time in Australia, where he has observed the diversity of our society, the debates about immigration which constantly circulate, and the history of Australia's indigenous population.
He has visited North Stradbroke Island, just off the coast near Brisbane, and was inspired by its lakes:

  


  The animals stand on pristine white sand around the enormous pool, which takes up an entire gallery space.
Heritage is a new work, commissioned especially for the exhibition Falling Back to Earth, and will be on show through to 11 May 2014. 

Not to be missed!!



Enjoy the Season!!

XXXX