
Here's the twister emerging from the clouds. Great picture.
TAGS:tornado, clouds, Fergus
Pictures of Toronto.




Not really a bar. Just a really cool site (I'm easily amused) that I came across for generating neon signs and a whole bunch of other stuff. It's called the Generator Blog. Check it out here. Also this cool site for generating code and icons for Technorati Tags - like the Blogger one below. Here. See ya!!
Another shot of the damage from Friday's storm. This bridge was picked up by the water and moved over 3 feet. Crap on top of the bridge was being carried by the water flowing OVER the bridge. First hole of the Club's 'short course' is in the background. Thornhill is a Stanley Thomson designed beauty. From the Blues it plays a modest 6562 yards, par 71. However, the course is tougher than it seems with narrow, treelined fairways, great elevation changes and few flat lies. 50 years ago the Canadian open was played at Thornhill.
More aftermath from a storm that came through Friday. Taken at Thornhill Country Club two days after the storm. One of the tributaries of the Don River flows through - and in this case - over Thornhill. Something like 80% of the traps are beyond repair and will need to be replaced. Normally, these traps are full of nice, white Bermuda sand. For those not feeling sorry for the Country Club types, the storm did plenty of damage to homes in the Thornhill area, most of it from flooding. In one case, 40 cars lost in an underground garage that flooded to the roof. Fore!!
It's not Times Square and it's brighter at night, but when it comes to beating the hell out of your consuming sensibilities, the corner of Dundas and Yonge is no slouch. Thank goodness true Canadian spirit remains intact - notice the can of Labatt's Blue under the LG sign. Party on dudes! This is one of the 'famous' corners in Toronto - although any intersection with Yonge Street is well known. All the streets in Toronto run either north-south or east west - which makes getting around pretty easy. Yonge Street is the most central of the north-south streets and therefore has the most stores, cars, bums, hookers, etc. The Subway runs under Yonge Street from Finch in North York (way the hell up there) to Union Station by the Lake. From there it loops back North a little further east. Shopping on Yonge Street includes anyting from the primo stores in the Eaton's Center to antique stores up near St. Clair to Canada's most shopped post yuppie, going on mid-life crisis outlet, Sporting Life.
One of a series of large scale advertisements hanging in the Eaton Center. This one for Tommy Hilfiger which would be sold in about half the shops in a mile radius of the mall.
Big storm in Toronto yesterday. All of the summer's rain came down in about 4 minutes. As a result lots of flooding, traffic mess, airport delays, etc. We got off light. Just the pool overflowed. Sort of not good for the neighbours down-yard of us but with all the water around they wouldn't have known it was us!

An almost empty Eaton Center, 10:30 am Friday. By noon this place is busy - by 3:00pm it's jammed. Tourist destination. Good shopping but nothing unique. Get all the same stores in most Canadian malls. Just big. Great people watching. Follow the skywalk at this end of the Eaton Center over to the Bay store - probably the best department store in Canada. 7 or 8 floors. Merchandise you can't get anywhere else and great prices, especially on weekends. Best of all if you don't like it, you can take it back.






Different architecture around Roy Thompson Hall. Hall is a performing arts center at King and Simcoe streets. Known for pretty good accoustics. Cost $52 million. It opened in 1982. Web site here.
Cool pedestrian bridge on Toronto's western waterfront. Supposedly, this is a picture of the same bridge!