Sunday 1 June 2014

Crown Point Field Trip

Below is a short article that will be printed in our fledgling neighbourhood newspaper called  The Point.  It was a lot of fun to write and to prepare for.  Hoping to instill some community love and care into the little city slickers...
    
 
 
Crown Point Field trip.
 My kids are mad that we did not buy my parents’ farm last year.  “You can’t have good memories without a farm”, they reasoned.  “How about the time I sent the four of you to Gage Park to scavenge for fall leaves and ginko nuts and you came back smelling of vomit and I laughed?” came my reply.  They remained unconvinced (they’re playing on my guilt at raising city kids) and so we set out on a deliberate mission to fabricate urban memories, right here in our neighbourhood. 

     It was one afternoon and as many different experiences as we could pack into four hours, kind of like the Crown Point version of the Grade 8 trip to Ottawa.  First stop, the The Bounty Hunter, where we chose the nerdy comic book paraphernalia that we would buy for Pops on Father’s Day and make definite plans for blowing future allowance money.  Next, to The Orange Tree women’s consignment store where the kids conspired to choose the gown that mom would try on to pose for an ipod picture.   The owner was very tactful in suggesting that the dress was rather generous for my proportions and gave me several other options, four sizes smaller, that would better suit.  Continuing on, we halted again on the sidewalk in front of the Quality Bakery just to store up in our nostrils, the smell of fresh baking.   Going inside, we bought a loaf of rye and each kid chose a fancy cookie.  We were told that the bread was made with the same recipe that the former owner, a Polish survivor of the holocaust, had passed on to the current woman who owns the bakery.  Our appetites piqued, we stopped for  some sliced carrots which my seven year old was insanely proud to have packed herself along with other provisions.  She even brought a roll of toilet paper, preparing for every eventuality, which made me think that I should just hand the reigns to her in running this family.  We’d all be more assiduously looked after.  This was confirmed in my mind when we were 2 whole minutes away from our snack spot and seemed to be lacking a certain five year old.  I was relieved to find her in the care of the statue across from Fabricland, completely un-kidnapped.  One more runway photoshoot  at  the Edit vintage clothing store, a stop at Earl’s Court Gallery to read about the giant whalebone sculpture, and we were back on our bikes making our way toward the escarpment. 

     You may have received, in your mailbox ,a homemade award saying something like  “We-like-your-garden” most likely if your lawn has a lot of whirligigs.  That was us.  And after the judging, we headed for the woods across the street from the tennis courts at Gage Park.  After all that dress shopping the boys needed to do some serious whacking of things with sticks and we focused our effort on the invasive garlic mustard growing by the sweet trail we discovered.   Then, a game of catch, some guerrilla flower planting in public places and we were on our way home.

      I think we made the most of our lack of pigs and corn fields that day and as your kids languish in the  summer blahs, maybe you could sally forth and try very hard to enjoy yourselves with your own list of Crown Point field trip ideas, farmless as you may be.
 
 

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