The story revolves around Ralphie, an unexpected border collie mascot at Gabriel's Creek Golf Course, which is off the beaten path and unlisted. Chris Collins discovers this hidden gem while seeking a final round of golf, guided by old road signs. Their meeting suggests a deeper connection, hinting at themes of destiny and the bonds between humans and animals. The narrative explores the significance of this unique course and the impact it has on Chris's life.
The paintings executed by Kurt Jackson (b.1961) do not reveal his day-to-day
working practice. Behind his finished canvases are hundreds of sketchbooks
borne out of his continual routine of making drawings, marks, notes, poems and
scribbles. This book, newly available in paperback, examines the importance of
the sketchbook to Jackson.
Toronto garden writer Alan Jackson has come up with a home-grown solution for high-density gardening suited to the Canadian climate. SMG is a controlled, condensed method of growing herbs and vegetables. It involves raised, often boxed-in beds that can be set up in optimal locations on your property and features soil and nutrients customised for the plants you're growing. This book is on the leading edge of the trend among Canadians to seek direct access to fresh and diverse vegetables. Be sure to include this handy, how-to book in your gardening library.
Toronto is not only Canada's economic capital, but it also has one of the most diverse populations and has been classified as one of the world's most livable cities. But Toronto's past and present are full of weird facts and tidbits from the truly trivial to the seriously strange: * The name ''Toronto'' first appeared on a French map as ''Lac de Taranteau,'' derived from the Iroquois word tkaronto. * Today, Yorkville is a trendy downtown shopping area but it was once a cemetery for those who could not afford a church burial; the cemetery was removed in the 1870s, but human remains keep turning up at every modern-day Yorkville construction project. * The land on which Toronto was built was purchased from the Mississauga First Nation band for a few hundred British pounds, 2000 gun flints, two dozen each of kettles and hats, all the hand mirrors they could carry and 100 gallons of excellent navy rum. * Olympic sculler Ned Hanlan got in lots of midnight practice rowing crates of whisky for his bootlegger dad. * William Davies, whose pork-processing company earned Toronto the nickname ''Hogtown,'' died after being butted by a goat. * The abandoned Queen Street underground streetcar station is a location for the latest remake of the slasher movie Nightmare on Elm Street. * And many more fascinating facts.
Nation builders, titans of industry and great thinkers; brilliant writers, movie stars and sports heroes; dirty scoundrels, pirates and hooligans--from the famous and infamous to the nearly forgotten, the great and not-so-great alike have marked Canada's
Break the law in Ontario, and you might be fined or imprisoned, but some of the province's most peculiar laws may just leave you scratching your * In early southern Ontario, stealing a soldier's socks was punishable by death * If you let your lawn grow over 3.8 centimetres high in London, city workers will mow it and leave you with the bill * It's illegal in Guelph to water your lawn during a rainstorm or to allow sprinkler water to run off your lawn and onto the street in front of your home * In 1802, released convicts had only eight days to hightail it out of Ontario, under the threat of death * Up until the early 1970s, licensees of taverns and beer halls were required to provide separate drinking rooms for ''ladies and escorts'' * Plus more strange and surprising laws from Canada's most populous province.
A dictionary that contains around 750 entries offering information on every
important graphic designer, movement, agency, practice and publication from
1840 onwards. It presents definitions, from technical minutiae of typography
to computer-aided design and printing.