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photosofsuburbia · 9 months
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Newstead, Nottinghamshire
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atlasandacamera · 8 months
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Joe's Wood is a secluded spot between Hucknall and Newstead Village in Nottinghamshire. If you can find it, you'll be the only person there other than perhaps a fisherman. Read more.
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the-vinyl-review · 4 years
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Metallica Master of Puppets, 1986.
1986 was a year that would change Metallica forever. A year of tragic loss and finally commercial success. Master of Puppets would chart at 29 on the US Billboard 200, considerably higher than their two previous albums and received universal acclaim.
In Sweden while touring their tour bus slid and toppled throwing Bassist Cliff Burton through a window then crushing him. It’s something the band would never get over, frustrations and anger over Burtons loss would later be taken out on incoming Bassist Jason Newstead. Everyone has a best album, I have three at number 1 that I just can’t choose between & this is one of them, the others being The Kinks ‘The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society 1968 & Genesis ‘Nursery Cryme’ 1971.
The first song Battery opens with layered acoustic guitars before fast pace and raw thrash pump out from the four piece with a solo that keeps the pace nicely with the rest of the song. At just over 5 minutes you’d think it would be a mixed up mess all crammed into such a short space of time? Of course not it’s Metallica what can’t they do. This song shows you the intent for the rest of the album. Named after Battery street in San Francisco where the band used to play the clubs in the early days just shows what those days still meant to them, the memories and the energy they must of got because energy is the theme here and that’s what you get.
Master of Puppets, well what can you say about this song? It has everything. I was always taken by the quieter mid section with Kirk & James interlinking before Lars comes in, it’s something special. Metallica always have a great chug to their music and with the main riff it’s high intensity. The song is about drugs and how they control you, the drugs and control being the master and you being the Puppet. It’s unforgettable from the first to the last.
The Thing that should not be is about a monster from H.P Lovecraft. Welcome home (Sanitarium) is slightly softer much like Fade to Black on Ride the Lightning (1984) both being the Ballard’s of each album Sanitarium is about a Mental Asylum and the degradation of the human mind. The lyrics are profound and chilling with Kirk inserting lovely riffs in between each section with the song building towards a climactic metal assault. From here the theme of the album moves towards War heard in Disposable Hero’s.
Orion is the one, when I play this I think of Cliff, like Pulling Teeth or For Whom the Bell Tolls where he especially shines but this piece of music is a masterpiece that keeps building with a wonderful solo then quietens to become space like in the mid section with Cliffs beautiful sounding bass then added with walling guitars it brings a tear to my eye. This is what music is all about! The song then picks up again and brings a spectacular ending with Kirks solo onslaught with guitar/Bass chugging along with Lar’s drums. Damage inc brings the album to a close in frantic fast fashion with a mean guitar piece in the middle then a crazy Hammet solo, with James put his all into the vocals. What better way to end the album than how it started.
This is the best Heavy Metal album of all time but then I’d put Metallica’s first 5 albums in the top 10 best metal albums, it’s just how much I love them. Best album of all time? Of course, why can’t it be? And I’m not alone in my thinking. They are a band that has overcome loss, alcoholism & their own personal demons and are still on top nearly 40 years after forming. You don’t hear of a metal band being one of the biggest selling bands of all time apart from Metallica, clearly they transcend the shackles of just Metal or Thrash and appeal to the masses.
I saw them at Twickenham last summer, one of the many time I have had the pleasure. A friend asked me ‘have they still got it’? Oh yeah Metallica have still got it! They never lost it.
Album Cover 10/10
Music 10/10
Record Quality 8/10
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thecyclopsnugget · 4 years
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The quiet village of Stones Corner
Day 1: 3rd Jan 2020
Found a place called the Stones Corner Village the day before. My mind went like: Okay, let’s take a walk at the viellegee (that’s me being hard to impress).
Fine, the sign looks kind of cute. *still not impressed*
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Found this alley at the site of a cafe. Looks very hipster-y. I’m slightly impressed but I have seen this somewhere else.
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Had my late breakfast at a roadside restaurant called the 5 Borough. I ordered a glass of Rose´ with chicken tacos. The chicken in the tacos was nice. 
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The view was nice, but I only went there because I got a 30% off coupon from this AMAZING APP #$@#%$^!
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Not ads, I just want to share that if you’re in Brisbane or Australia, check out Eat Club. They offered free coupon up for grab daily! It’s a good way to get you to explore new places and save your wallet a little. The deals usually go around 20%-30%, sometimes it goes to 50%! I know!!! (and it’s a free to use)
pssss, here’s me at 11am and feeling slightly drunk thanks to my low tolerance to alcohol.
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Then things started to change when I found this cafe. It’s called 63 cafe, quite popular in here but this particularly has super nice outdoor dining area. Good WiFi.
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And they give water to your dog!
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And free bottled water!!! Okay I have over reacted a little.
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Then I went shooping. The street is filled with thrift shops. (Okay, there are four in exact). Personally, I enjoyed Vinnies and Salvos a little more. Found these gems. I like it, I got it. (it’s 5 & 2 dollars each btw)
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I ended up spending my whole afternoon there, especially at the cafe where I cracked open my laptop and did some *secret pro##ct*. 
Lastly, stopped by their library for a bit.
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I love how small and cozy there.
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Here’s me trying to get a nice view.
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At last, I am impressed. Very impressed by this viellegee. 
Note: I am confused, even though Stones Corner and Greenslopes are on the list, but on the address, Stones Corner is part of Greenslopes. Anyway, I’ll just checked off Stones Corner for this time. Which means more works for me, yeah! 
189 Locations: The List
Acacia Ridge
Albion
Alderley
Algester
Anstead
Archerfield
Ascot
Ashgrove
Aspley
Auchenflower
Bald Hills
Balmoral
Banks Creek
Banyo
Bardon
Bellbowrie
Belmont
Boondall
Bowen Hills
Bracken Ridge
Bridgeman Downs
Brighton
Brisbane Airport
Brisbane City
Brookfield
Bulimba
Burbank
Calamvale
Camp Hill
Cannon Hill
Carina
Carina Heights
Carindale
Carseldine
Chandler
Chapel Hill
Chelmer
Chermside
Chermside West
Chuwar
Clayfield
Coopers Plains
Coorparoo
Corinda
Darra
Deagon
Doolandella
Drewvale
Durack
Dutton Park
Eagle Farm
East Brisbane
Eight Mile Plains
Ellen Grove
England Creek
Enoggera
Enoggera Reservoir
Everton Park
Fairfield
Ferny Grove
Fig Tree Pocket
Fitzgibbon
Forest Lake
Fortitude Valley
Gaythorne
Geebung
Gordon Park
Graceville
Grange
Greenslopes
Gumdale
Hamilton
Hawthorne
Heathwood
Hemmant
Hendra
Herston
Highgate Hill
Holland Park
Holland Park West
Inala
Indooroopilly
Jamboree Heights
Jindalee
Kalinga
Kangaroo Point
Karana Downs
Karawatha
Kedron
Kelvin Grove
Kenmore
Kenmore Hills
Keperra
Kholo
Kuraby
Lake Manchester
Larapinta
Lota
Lutwyche
Lytton
Macgregor
Mackenzie
Manly
Manly West
Mansfield
McDowall
Middle Park
Milton
Mitchelton
Moggill
Moorooka
Morningside
Mt Coot-tha
Mt Crosby
Mt Gravatt
Mt Gravatt East
Mt Ommaney
Murarrie
Nathan
New Farm
Newmarket
Newstead
Norman Park
Northgate
Nudgee
Nudgee Beach
Nundah
Oxley
Paddington
Pallara
Parkinson
Petrie Terrace
Pinjarra Hills
Pinkenba
Port of Brisbane
Pullenvale
Ransome
Red Hill
Richlands
Riverhills
Robertson
Rochedale
Rocklea
Runcorn
Salisbury
Sandgate
Seven Hills
Seventeen Mile Rocks
Sherwood
Shorncliffe
Sinnamon Park
South Brisbane
Spring Hill
St Lucia
Stafford
Stafford Heights
Stones Corner 
Stretton
Summer
Sunnybank
Sunnybank Hills
Taigum
Taringa
Tarragindi
Teneriffe
Tennyson
The Gap
Tingalpa
Toowong
Upper Brookfield
Upper Kedron
Upper Mt Gravatt
Virginia
Wacol
Wakerley
Wavell Heights
West End
Westlake
Willawong
Wilston
Windsor
Wishart
Woolloongabba
Wooloowin
Wynnum
Wynnum West
Yeerongpilly
Yeronga
Zillmere
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Gothic England Travel Itinerary, Part II: the North
Once you tire of the city life, a heroine may wish to see the delights of the country. As such, Miss A will take you to the north of England, where you can walk and hike the countryside, as well visit various literary landmarks. Miss A presents the Gothic England Travel Itinerary, Part II: the North!
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The North
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Newstead Abbey
The ancestral home of Lord Byron is found on your way north, just past Nottingham. While Byron himself may have been a cad of the highest degree, his impact on the literary scene is undeniable. Pay tribute to the Gothic, rather than the man, by visiting Newstead Abbey, with its gorgeous Gothic exterior and beautiful gardens. It’s the perfect place for a picnic! It’s free to visit the grounds, but entrance to the house will cost you £8.
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Brontë Parsonage Museum
Next up on the journey is another literary spot: the Brontë Parsonage Museum. The parsonage was the lifelong home of the Brontë sisters, authors of Gothic greats such as Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, and Agnes Grey. On display at the museum are letters and manuscripts written by the sisters and their family, as well as the writing desk that Charlotte Brontë worked at. Visiting the parsonage will give heroines great insight to the Brontës’ lives and inspirations, as the parsonage looks over rolling and chilling landscapes and hedgerows. It costs £8.50 to visit the museum, but the haunting unease of the lives of the Brontës is free.
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Fountains Abbey
Just to the north-east of the Brontë Parsonage, on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales, is Fountains Abbey. Nearly a thousand years old, the Abbey is a perfect dream for Gothic heroines: crumbling Gothic architecture with dungeons and sprawling lawns, surrounded by an ominous forest, and best of all? It’s haunted, of course! Fountains Abbey is everything Catherine Morland dreamed of, but now any heroine can go to explore. Having been there myself long ago, I can tell you that it is sublime. But old stone chambers are chilly, so bring a sweater or jacket! It is a bit steeper than the other places to visit, at £15, but this grants access to the entire property, including the abbey, water gardens, and the also very haunted Fountains Hall estate.
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York Minister
In the ancient city of York, just south of the North York Moors, is an incredible testament to the beauty and structure of Gothic architecture. It took two and a half centuries to build, and the result is literally divine, with a stunning chapter house and spires, and beautiful stained glass. Of course, on the spookier side of things there is also the undercroft and crypt, where the archbishops are buried. There is a museum in the undercroft as well, showing the history of York Minister, from the Roman period through the Anglo-Saxons and Normans into the Modern Age. For standard admittance to York Minister it is £10, but for £15 one can go up to the towers for the finest view of the city of York. Miss A also suggests taking the Hidden Tour, which shows you the traces left behind by various revisions throughout history. It costs £20. Of course, if you don’t wish to pay, you can always join the regular Sunday service.
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Whitby
Crossing through the beautiful and wild North York Moors, one will reach one of the most famous Gothic destinations: Whitby. This small coastal village may appear unassuming, but it was one of the famous locations from Dracula. Whitby Abbey, with its beautiful Gothic ruins, looks right over the channel - perfect for feeling the chill sea breeze in your hair. Once you return to town, the town offers up attractions for the Dracula-loving tourist: the Dracula Experience, the Museum of Victorian Science, and the Bats and Broomsticks Inn. While the Dracula Experience is reportedly a bit of a disappointment, the Museum of Victorian Science offers a delightful spectacle of mad science. Perhaps you’ll even find Dr. Seward lurking around a corner? Lastly, Bats and Broomsticks Inn caters to the Gothic-inclined with their Victorian decor, matched with gargoyles, bats, and spiderweb headboards. Treat yourself to a spooky night! Whitby Abbey is £7.60, the Dracula Experience is £3, and the Museum of Victorian Science booked by appointment only. Bats and Broomsticks starts at approximately $85 USD per night - a splurge, if you’re willing.
Whitby also hosts the Whitby Goth Weekends, two yearly festivals in late April and October when goths flock to the town for music and socializing - if you happen to be in town at these times, join the fun!
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Rydal Mount
Heading west to the beautiful Lake District, we find the home of another one of the Romantics, though less scandalous and dark than the Lake Geneva gang. William Wordsworth was one of the first, along with Samuel Taylor Coleridge. As Byron, Polidori, the Shelleys, and Clairmont were defined by their circle at Lake Geneva, Wordsworth, Coleridge, and other of the circle became known as the Lake Poets because of their locale. Rydal Mount is now a museum dedicated to the life and works of Wordsworth and the Lake Poets, and can be visited for £7.50, which includes access to the incredible gardens. The nearby Dove Cottage is also worth a visit for heroines who are fans of the early Romantics.
Other places of interest in Northern England: Dunstanburgh Castle, Lindisfarne Castle, Beamish Living Museum, Hadrian’s Wall, Durham Castle and Cathedral, Muncaster Castle, Castlerigg Stone Circle, Lakeland Bird of Prey Centre, Alnwick Castle, North York Moors, Yorkshire Dales
Our final installment of the Gothic England itinerary will be posted next week. The end of the road: Southern England!
Where would you like to go in Northern England?
Your doting
Miss A
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rivercitykidd-blog · 4 years
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Firstly,
what better way to introduce Indigenous culture within mainstream society, then to reconstruct native infrastructure makings that were once used in that exact same location? The Turrbal tribe that often journeyed along Southeast Queensland (Hamilton, Eagle Farm, Newstead, Ascot…) camped alongside the riverine in small huts. O’Rourke writes in a researched article, "Their huts are built of long slender wattles, both ends of which are stuck in the ground, so as to form an arch about three feet and a half or four feet high […] strongly interwoven with rude-wicker-work, […]  covered with tea-tree (melaleuca armillaris) bark, in such a manner as to be quite impervious of to the rain; […] capable of containing from ten to twelve people." (2013, p. 861.). Used to primarily shelter, the implementation of these huts can be utilized to conduct a revenue of sort for hospitality serving traditional ‘bush-tucker recipes. Considering its beneficial make being; waterproof, large, environmentally friendly and culturally considerate. Talk about diversity, having this attraction can draw a crowd of people either familiar to it and regaining a sense of belonging or new to it, therefore building an informative and interesting perspective of Indigenous huts.
O’Rourke, T. (2013). Aboriginal Camps and “Villages” in Southeast Queensland. Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand 30, Open, 20, 851-863.
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kdhume · 7 years
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Happy Indigenous Peoples' Day to   
Berkeley, California    Santa Cruz, California    Minneapolis, Minnesota    Seattle, Washington    Grand Rapids, Minnesota    Minnesota State University, Mankato    St. Paul, Minnesota    Albuquerque, New Mexico    Portland, Oregon    Traverse City, Michigan    Akron/Newstead, New York    Olympia, Washington    Village of Lewiston, New York    Anadarko, Oklahoma    Carrboro, North Carolina    Belfast, Maine    San Fernando, California    Alpena, Michigan    Bexar County, Texas    Denver, Colorado    State of Minnesota    State of Vermont    University of Utah    Brown University    Cornell University    Syracuse University    Ann Arbor, Michigan    Spokane, Washington    Bainbridge Island, Washington    East Lansing, Michigan    Santa Fe, New Mexico    Phoenix, Arizona    State of Alaska    Ypsilanti, Michigan    Durango, Colorado    Asheville, North Carolina    Eugene, Oregon    Cambridge, Massachusetts    Boulder, Colorado    Harpers Ferry, West Virginia    Lawrence, Kansas    Amherst, Massachusetts    Northampton, Massachusetts
And especially the cities who adopted it this year:  
 Austin, Texas    Bangor, Maine    Brunswick, Maine    Burbank, California    Davenport, Iowa    Durham, New Hampshire    Iowa City, Iowa    Ithaca, New York    Johnson County, Iowa    Long Beach, California    Los Angeles, California    Los Angeles County, California    Moscow, Idaho    Norman, Oklahoma    Oberlin, Ohio    Orono, Maine    Portland, Maine    Salt Lake City, Utah    San Luis Obispo, California    Tulsa, Oklahoma     Tahlequah, Oklahoma    Watsonville, California    Nashville, Tennessee
I look forward to the day the rest of the country joins us, both in this small symbolic observance, and in larger, more practical acts of solidarity.
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sciencespies · 5 years
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For Indigenous Peoples’ Day, a Rethinking of How We Celebrate American History
https://sciencespies.com/history/for-indigenous-peoples-day-a-rethinking-of-how-we-celebrate-american-history/
For Indigenous Peoples’ Day, a Rethinking of How We Celebrate American History
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Smithsonian Voices National Museum of the American Indian
Indigenous Peoples’ Day: Rethinking How We Celebrate American History
October 11th, 2019, 4:00PM / BY Dennis W. Zotigh and Renee Gokey
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Johns Hopkins University observed Indigenous Peoples’ Day for the first time in 2018. “The culture around Columbus and how Natives are viewed is slowly changing,” Indigenous Students at Hopkins (ISH) president Tyra Andrews said that day. “It’s really important, especially for the younger generations.” Organized by ISH and the university’s Office of Multicultural Affairs, the commemoration included a campus powwow and an evening presentation by Victoria O’Keefe (Cherokee and Seminole of Oklahoma), assistant professor in the Center for American Indian Health at the Bloomberg School of Public Health. (Photo courtesy of Tom Jefferson Jr.)
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“The most American thing about America is American Indians.” —Paul Chaat Smith (Comanche)
The first documented observance of Columbus Day in the United States took place in New York City in 1792, on the 300th anniversary of Columbus’s landfall in the Western Hemisphere. The holiday originated as an annual celebration of Italian–American heritage in San Francisco in 1869. In 1934, at the request of the Knights of Columbus and New York City’s Italian community, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt declared the first national observance of Columbus Day. President Roosevelt and the U.S. Congress made October 12 a national holiday three years later. In 1972 President Richard Nixon signed a proclamation making the official date of the holiday the second Monday in October.
Generations of Native people, however, throughout the Western Hemisphere have protested Columbus Day. In the forefront of their minds is the fact the colonial takeovers of the Americas, starting with Columbus, led to the deaths of millions of Native people and the forced assimilation of survivors.
In 1977 participants at the United Nations International Conference on Discrimination against Indigenous Populations in the Americas proposed that Indigenous Peoples’ Day replace Columbus Day. Indigenous Peoples’ Day recognizes that Native people are the first inhabitants of the Americas, including the lands that later became the United States of America. And it urges Americans to rethink history.
The movement to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples’ Day or Native American Day has gained momentum and spread to states, cities, and towns across the United States. The first state to rename Columbus Day was South Dakota in 1990. Hawai’i has also changed the name of its October 12 holiday to Discovers’ Day, in honor of the Polynesian navigators who peopled the islands. Berkeley, California, became the first city to make the change in 1992, when the city council renamed Columbus Day as Indigenous Peoples’ Day. In 2015 an estimated 6,000 Native people and their supporters gathered at Randall’s Island, New York, to recognize the survival of the Indigenous peoples of the Western Hemisphere. The demonstration’s success and the worldwide media attention it attracted planted the seeds for creating an Indigenous Peoples’ Day in New York City. This year the nation’s capital passed a resolution to change the holiday to Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Universities and schools across the country are also observing the new commemoration.
The following states and the District of Columbia now observe Native American or Indigenous Peoples’ Day, in place of or in addition to Columbus Day:
▪︎ Alabama ▪︎ Alaska ▪︎ District of Columbia ▪︎ Hawai’i ▪︎ Idaho ▪︎ Maine ▪︎ Minnesota ▪︎ New Mexico ▪︎ North Carolina ▪︎ Oklahoma ▪︎ Oregon ▪︎ South Dakota ▪︎ Vermont ���︎ Wisconsin
Smaller jurisdictions have often led the way, including:
▪︎ Anchorage, Alaska ▪︎ Flagstaff and Phoenix, Arizona ▪︎ Eureka Springs, Arkansas ▪︎ Berkeley, Burbank, Long Beach, Los Angeles, San Fernando, San Francisco, San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz, South Lake Tahoe, and Watsonville, California ▪︎ Aspen, Boulder, Denver, and Durango, Colorado ▪︎ Bridgeport and West Hartford, Connecticut ▪︎ South Fulton, Georgia ▪︎ Boise and Moscow, Idaho ▪︎ Evanston and Oak Park, Illinois ▪︎ Bloomington, Indiana ▪︎ Davenport, Iowa City, Tama, and Toledo, Iowa ▪︎ Lawrence and Wichita, Kansas ▪︎ Berea, Brodhead, Burnside, Corbin, Crab Orchard, Frankfort, Harrodsburg, Hopkinsville, Junction City, Lancaster, Liberty, Livingston, London, Louisville, Mt. Vernon, Perryville, Prestonsburg, Richmond, Russell Springs, Science Hill, Somerset, Springfield, Stanford, and Taylorsville, Kentucky ▪︎ Bangor, Bar Harbor, Belfast, Brunswick, Gouldsboro, Orono, Portland, and Starks, Maine ▪︎ Amherst, Brookline, Cambridge, Great Barrington, Northampton, and Somerville, Massachusetts ▪︎ Alpena, Ann Arbor, Detroit, East Lansing, Ferndale, Traverse City, and Ypsilanti, Michigan ▪︎ Bemidji, Cook County, Grand Marais, Grand Rapids, Mankato, Minneapolis, Moorehead, St. Paul, and Red Wing, Minnesota ▪︎ Kansas City and St. Louis, Missouri ▪︎ Bozeman and Helena, Montana ▪︎ Lincoln, Nebraska ▪︎ Reno, Nevada ▪︎ Durham, New Hampshire ▪︎ Newark and Princeton, New Jersey ▪︎ Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico ▪︎ Akron, Ithaca, Newstead, Rochester, the Village of Lewiston, and Woodstock, New York ▪︎ Asheville, Burlington, Carrboro, Hillsborough, and Kernersville, North Carolina ▪︎ Fargo, Grand Forks, North Dakota ▪︎ Columbus, Cincinnati, and Oberlin, Ohio ▪︎ Anadarko, El Reno, Lawton, Norman, Oklahoma City, Okmulgee, Tahlequah, and Tulsa, Oklahoma ▪︎ Corvallis, Eugene, and Portland, Oregon ▪︎ Lancaster and Sharpsburg, Pennsylvania ▪︎ Austin, Bexar County, Dallas, and San Antonio, Texas ▪︎ Nashville, Tennessee ▪︎ Salt Lake City, Utah ▪︎ Alexandria, Charlottesville, Falls Church, and Richmond, Virginia ▪︎ Bainbridge Island, Olympia, Pullman, Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma, and Yakima, Washington ▪︎ Harpers Ferry, West Virginia ▪︎ Eau Claire, La Crosse, Madison, Marathon Country, and Wasau, Wisconsin
Even so, mythology about Columbus and the “discovery” of the Americas continues to be many American children’s first classroom lesson about encountering different cultures, ethnicities, and peoples. Teaching more accurate and complete narratives and differing perspectives is key to our society’s rethinking its history. Recently, the museum has hosted Indigenous Peoples’ Curriculum Days and Teach-Ins at the beginning of the school year in Washington and New York. Teaching for Change, a Washington-based national education organization, and the museum’s Education Office work with teachers of students from kindergarten through 12th grade in sessions that range from student activism to defend the environment or abolish Columbus Day; to skills such as critical literacy, art, and facilitated dialogue; to inquiry-based lessons available through the museum’s online education initiative Native Knowledge 360°.
In 2018 Sarah Shear, assistant professor of Social Studies Education at Penn State University–Altoona, gave the keynote presentation, based on research on U.S. history standards from all 50 states and the District of Columbia. In 2015, Dr. Shear and her collaborators Ryan T. Knowles, Gregory J. Soden, and Antonio J. Castro published data showing that 87 percent of the references to Native Americans in U.S. curricula are in the context of American history before 1900. “The narrative presented in U.S. history standards,” they write, “when analyzed with a critical eye, directed students to see Indigenous Peoples as a long since forgotten episode in the country’s development.” Shear and her colleaguse see serious implications in the way the United States teaches its history:
When one looks at the larger picture painted by the quantitative data, it is easy to argue that the narrative of U.S. history is painfully one sided in its telling of the American narrative, especially with regard to Indigenous Peoples’ experiences. . . .
The qualitative findings further illuminate a Euro-American narrative that reinstitutes the marginalization of Indigenous cultures and knowledge. Indigenous Peoples are left in the shadows of Euro-America’s destiny, while the cooperation and conflict model provides justification for the eventual termination of Indigenous Peoples from the American landscape and historical narrative. Finally, a tone of detachment, especially with long lists of legal and political terms, dismisses the humanity of Indigenous cultures and experiences in the United States.
This year, the co-editors of An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States—librarian and educator Dr. Debbie Reese (Nambé Owingeh) and historian Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz—headlined workshops in Washington and New York. Reese, founder of the highly respected resource American Indians in Children’s Literature, describe their work on An Indigenous People’s History as shining bright lights on historic episodes that are left out of most books. “As much as we could,” Reese says, “we wanted to give readers the kind of information that’s known within Native families, communities, and nations. We believe that it is vital that all citizens of the United States know more about the people whom we regard, as a society, as being heroic. There are different points of view.”
Things are changing. On Monday, October 14, states, cities, towns, counties, community groups, churches, universities, schools, and other institutions will observe Indigenous Peoples’ Day or Native American Day with activities that raise awareness of the rich history, culture, and traditions of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. They will do so thanks to Native people, their supporters, and others who have gathered for decades and continue to gather now at prayer vigils, powwows, symposiums, concerts, lectures, rallies, and classrooms to help America rethink American history.
Renee Gokey (Eastern Shawnee/Sac and Fox/Miami) is an education specialist at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.
Dennis W. Zotigh (Kiowa/San Juan Pueblo/Santee Dakota Indian) is a member of the Kiowa Gourd Clan and San Juan Pueblo Winter Clan and a descendant of Sitting Bear and No Retreat, both principal war chiefs of the Kiowas. Dennis works as a writer and cultural specialist at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.
This post was originally published on October 7, 2018. It has been updated for Indigenous People’s Day 2019.
#History
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easytravelpw-blog · 5 years
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Full text write on https://easy-travel.pw/hotel-review-coco-reef-resort-bermuda/hotels/
Hotel Review: Coco Reef Resort, Bermuda
Coco Reef Bermuda sits on one of the island’s loveliest stretches of beach and combines an imposing entrance and lobby with great coastal views from practically every room. The lobby has been designed by the hotel owner John Jefferis who has collected antique mirrors, plinths and chandeliers to create a breath-taking entrance to this intimate hotel. Surprising touches include the Library, available for private hire, decorated in dark red, with ornate mirrors, candelabra, and even has a mock open fire.
One finds Coco Reef Bermuda just a few miles and a 30 minute taxi ride from the international airport. The attractions of the capital Hamilton are 10 minutes away and include duty free shopping, restaurants, bars and a marina.
Who for
Guests include couples from the USA and UK looking for peace and quiet and old-fashioned service and style. Families also enjoy the safe aspect of the resort and the beach front location.
Service
Staff are pleasant and friendly with a personal touch. This is an intimate resort with a cosy, casual vibe.
Rooms
Coco Reef has 64 rooms, all with great views and decorated in pretty floral pastels with a colonial feel. The higher ones have a sea view, the lower storey rooms face the beach. All feature king size beds, sofas, flat screen TV, coffee machines, fridge, private balconies or patios and well-equipped bathrooms.
Food & Drink
Dining options include Café Coco and the Mediterranean style Tamara’s Terrace with views out to the famous South Shore. Dishes range from fresh rockfish and crab risotto to ribs and steak. The La Vista bar overlooks the ocean and serves Bermuda classic cocktails such as Rum Swizzle and Dark n’ Stormy. Light snacks and nibbles are available from the bar. Exclusive private dining experiences are available in the Library and Bermudaz rooms.
Facilities
There is a freshwater swimming pool and tennis courts in the gardens. As well as the ocean front beach, there is a 220 metre elevated private beach. Cycle hire and snorkelling can be arranged through the front desk. Guests at Coco Reef can enjoy a free round of golf at nearby The Newstead Belmont Hills Golf Course.
Local activities
Although Bermuda is a small island of only 21 square miles, there is plenty to see and do, from its lovely coastline to its busy capital and historic towns and villages. Scuba divers love exploring over 300 wrecks – the island has more shipwrecks per square mile than anywhere else in the Atlantic. The Botanical Gardens are two miles from the hotel. There is no car rental on the island, but mopeds are available for hire and the bus to and from town runs regularly.
See also: What is there to see and do in Bermuda
What is there to see and do in Bermuda
Rates
From $260 per night for an ocean view room.
Value for money
Coco Reef represents exceptional value for money in a region which is often over-priced.
Family friendly
Yes. Inter connecting rooms are available for families.
Wi-Fi available
Yes, it’s free and available in rooms and throughout the resort.
Nearest airport
Bermuda’s L.F.Wade international airport is a short drive away.
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REVIEW OVERVIEW TripAdvisor (780 reviews) Booking (93 reviews) SUMMARY
“Coco Reef represents exceptional value for money in a region which is often over-priced.” ~ Judith Baker
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Featured Listings 12th October 2018
Featured MLS Listings - 12th October 2018
Some of the top featured listings that we've picked out from the Toronto MLS - as of Friday 12th October 2018.
Street and TownMLS CodeLink 236 Butterfly Lane, OakvilleW4274485236 Butterfly Lane, Oakville 65 King St, TorontoW427451565 King St, Toronto 102 Bond Cres, Richmond HillN4274535102 Bond Cres, Richmond Hill 1 Tiana Crt, VaughanN42744951 Tiana Crt, Vaughan 1966 Dufferin St, TorontoW42743831966 Dufferin St, Toronto 942 Boyer Blvd, MississaugaW4274397942 Boyer Blvd, Mississauga 40 N Pickett Cres, Richmond HillN427438440 N Pickett Cres, Richmond Hill 133 Valleycreek Dr, BramptonW4274285133 Valleycreek Dr, Brampton 51 Saybrook Ave, TorontoW427422551 Saybrook Ave, Toronto 9 Goderich Dr Lot 285, BramptonW42741439 Goderich Dr Lot 285, Brampton 27 Alex Black Way, VaughanN427414427 Alex Black Way, Vaughan 39 Chayna Cres, VaughanN427424239 Chayna Cres, Vaughan 58 Hambly Ave, KingN427419658 Hambly Ave, King 47 Windemere Rd, HamiltonX427406547 Windemere Rd, Hamilton 13521 Hwy 7, Halton HillsW427386713521 Hwy 7, Halton Hills 34A Raven Rd, TorontoW427391234A Raven Rd, Toronto 24 Cumberland Dr, MississaugaW427386124 Cumberland Dr, Mississauga 233 Overton Pl, OakvilleW4273803233 Overton Pl, Oakville 4031 Erindale Station Rd, MississaugaW42737474031 Erindale Station Rd, Mississauga 30 Gracewell Rd, MarkhamN427412030 Gracewell Rd, Markham 7 Kellogg Cres, Richmond HillN42738807 Kellogg Cres, Richmond Hill 63A Puccini Dr, Richmond HillN427412563A Puccini Dr, Richmond Hill 34 Lancer Dr, VaughanN427389334 Lancer Dr, Vaughan 70 Sunrise Ridge Tr, Whitchurch StouffvilleN427409770 Sunrise Ridge Tr, Whitchurch Stouffville Ptlt 23 Isa Crt, VaughanN4274015Ptlt 23 Isa Crt, Vaughan 10 Patriot Crt, MarkhamN427383210 Patriot Crt, Markham 36 Skyline Tr, KingN427377536 Skyline Tr, King 88 Eagles Landing Rd, VaughanN427410488 Eagles Landing Rd, Vaughan Lot B Andy Cres, VaughanN4274001Lot B Andy Cres, Vaughan 200 Borealis Ave, AuroraN4273829200 Borealis Ave, Aurora 27 Midland Ave, TorontoE427404727 Midland Ave, Toronto 7 Strathmore Blvd, TorontoE42739547 Strathmore Blvd, Toronto 8 Holborne Ave, TorontoE42737928 Holborne Ave, Toronto 47 Redwillow Dr, TorontoC427390047 Redwillow Dr, Toronto 2043 Bloomfield Dr, OakvilleW42734882043 Bloomfield Dr, Oakville 65 Laws St, TorontoW427360365 Laws St, Toronto 22 Templar St, BramptonW427322922 Templar St, Brampton 300 Tower Hill Rd, Richmond HillN4273356300 Tower Hill Rd, Richmond Hill 212 Franklin Ave, TorontoW4273253212 Franklin Ave, Toronto 6673 Lisgar Dr, MississaugaW42734866673 Lisgar Dr, Mississauga 122 Stormont Tr, VaughanN4273499122 Stormont Tr, Vaughan 285 Pitfield Rd, TorontoE4273423285 Pitfield Rd, Toronto 1067 Bradbury Chse, MississaugaW42734841067 Bradbury Chse, Mississauga 122 N Park Dr, Whitchurch StouffvilleN4273664122 N Park Dr, Whitchurch Stouffville 81 Bridgepointe Crt, AuroraN427357681 Bridgepointe Crt, Aurora 3256 Larry Cres, OakvilleW42732243256 Larry Cres, Oakville 52 Norman Dr, KingN427334552 Norman Dr, King 151 Kingslynn Dr, KingN4273219151 Kingslynn Dr, King 18 Eveningside Rd, MarkhamN427341918 Eveningside Rd, Markham 77 Galbraith Ave, TorontoE427356777 Galbraith Ave, Toronto 104 Olde Bayview Ave, Richmond HillN4273239104 Olde Bayview Ave, Richmond Hill 217A Leslie St, TorontoE4273320217A Leslie St, Toronto 5493 1 Side Rd, MiltonW42733765493 1 Side Rd, Milton 8 Brookgreene Cres, Richmond HillN42737058 Brookgreene Cres, Richmond Hill 66 Allison Ann Way, VaughanN427347366 Allison Ann Way, Vaughan 103 Filippazzo Rd, VaughanN4273526103 Filippazzo Rd, Vaughan 3538 Palgrave Rd, MississaugaW42734613538 Palgrave Rd, Mississauga 43 Marsh St, Richmond HillN427338143 Marsh St, Richmond Hill 184 Woodsworth Rd, TorontoC4273568184 Woodsworth Rd, Toronto 2 Cormorant Cres, VaughanN42734462 Cormorant Cres, Vaughan 17 Sandalwood Pl, TorontoC427330117 Sandalwood Pl, Toronto 25 Sandwood Dr, VaughanN427342525 Sandwood Dr, Vaughan 2063 Salvator Blvd, OakvilleW42730412063 Salvator Blvd, Oakville 93 Celestine Dr, TorontoW427309293 Celestine Dr, Toronto 801 Prest Way, NewmarketN4273163801 Prest Way, Newmarket 16 Bittersweet St, MarkhamN427307416 Bittersweet St, Markham 192 Glenmanor Way, VaughanN4273088192 Glenmanor Way, Vaughan 3 Nichols Blvd, MarkhamN42730433 Nichols Blvd, Markham 47 Innisbrook Cres, MarkhamN427305847 Innisbrook Cres, Markham 49 Heritage Estates Rd, VaughanN427301449 Heritage Estates Rd, Vaughan 6 Sawgrass Ave, Richmond HillN42730136 Sawgrass Ave, Richmond Hill 58 Laskin Dr, VaughanN427297858 Laskin Dr, Vaughan 134 Pinegrove Ave, TorontoE4273101134 Pinegrove Ave, Toronto 1349 Creekside Dr, OakvilleW42728711349 Creekside Dr, Oakville 39 Guthrie Ave, TorontoW427296739 Guthrie Ave, Toronto 37 W Sunnylea Ave, TorontoW427293137 W Sunnylea Ave, Toronto 80 Crawford St, MarkhamN427285680 Crawford St, Markham 40 Glen Cameron Rd, MarkhamN427290040 Glen Cameron Rd, Markham 52 Glen Cameron Rd, MarkhamN427290152 Glen Cameron Rd, Markham 135B E Finch Ave, TorontoC4272929135B E Finch Ave, Toronto 187 Withrow Ave, TorontoE4272962187 Withrow Ave, Toronto 12 Orchard Dr, HamiltonX427265512 Orchard Dr, Hamilton 1236 Tyandaga Park Dr, BurlingtonW42728271236 Tyandaga Park Dr, Burlington 231 Beta St, TorontoW4272819231 Beta St, Toronto 30 W Asterwind Cres, BramptonW427283530 W Asterwind Cres, Brampton 15195 The Gore Rd, CaledonW427277815195 The Gore Rd, Caledon 5098 Nishga Crt, MississaugaW42725915098 Nishga Crt, Mississauga 771 Indian Rd, TorontoW4272607771 Indian Rd, Toronto 1008 Ceremonial Dr, MississaugaW42727231008 Ceremonial Dr, Mississauga 1136 Streambank Dr, MississaugaW42726051136 Streambank Dr, Mississauga 5 Twenty Sixth St, TorontoW42726195 Twenty Sixth St, Toronto 3123 Carding Mill Tr, OakvilleW42726733123 Carding Mill Tr, Oakville 53 Ridge Rd, UxbridgeN427271553 Ridge Rd, Uxbridge 214 Lori Ave, Whitchurch StouffvilleN4272623214 Lori Ave, Whitchurch Stouffville Lot 11 Hesperus Rd, VaughanN4272794Lot 11 Hesperus Rd, Vaughan 31 Lilly Valley Cres, KingN427259731 Lilly Valley Cres, King 53 Spring Gate Blvd, VaughanN427279753 Spring Gate Blvd, Vaughan 80 Hastings Ave, TorontoE427272880 Hastings Ave, Toronto 518 Main St, TorontoE4272850518 Main St, Toronto 78 Dalmation Cres, TorontoE427283678 Dalmation Cres, Toronto 77 Boulderbrook Dr, TorontoE427285477 Boulderbrook Dr, Toronto 1420 Radcliffe Blvd, MississaugaW42725471420 Radcliffe Blvd, Mississauga 34 Bonnieview Crt, BramptonW427246734 Bonnieview Crt, Brampton 54 Bansbury Circ, BramptonW427239554 Bansbury Circ, Brampton 13 Richland Cres, BramptonW427257513 Richland Cres, Brampton 3175 Turnstone Cres, MississaugaW42724203175 Turnstone Cres, Mississauga 8 Quintette Clse, BramptonW42722368 Quintette Clse, Brampton 4247 Anworld Pl, MississaugaW42721754247 Anworld Pl, Mississauga 179 Hallmark Ave, TorontoW4272068179 Hallmark Ave, Toronto 5 El Dorado St, Richmond HillN42722655 El Dorado St, Richmond Hill 1 Gaudette St, MarkhamN42724351 Gaudette St, Markham 49 Laskin Dr, VaughanN427232049 Laskin Dr, Vaughan 51 Misty Moor Dr, Richmond HillN427220451 Misty Moor Dr, Richmond Hill 34 William Bartlett Dr, MarkhamN427247634 William Bartlett Dr, Markham 55 Springfield Way, VaughanN427229755 Springfield Way, Vaughan 104 Smoothwater Terr, MarkhamN4272518104 Smoothwater Terr, Markham 60 Patton St, KingN427228560 Patton St, King 4 Arthur Hall Dr, East GwillimburyN42722564 Arthur Hall Dr, East Gwillimbury 14 Kentbridge Way, VaughanN427238214 Kentbridge Way, Vaughan 31 Redmond Dr, VaughanN427246431 Redmond Dr, Vaughan 20 Warvet Cres, TorontoE427249520 Warvet Cres, Toronto 155 Meadowvale Rd, TorontoE4272195155 Meadowvale Rd, Toronto 225 Waverley Rd, TorontoE4272341225 Waverley Rd, Toronto 84 Woodbine Ave, TorontoE427210784 Woodbine Ave, Toronto 3 Nobert Rd, TorontoE42721453 Nobert Rd, Toronto 55B Benlamond Ave, TorontoE427215855B Benlamond Ave, Toronto 195 Bingham Ave, TorontoE4272192195 Bingham Ave, Toronto 13 Oswald Cres, TorontoC427209913 Oswald Cres, Toronto 61 Brownlow Ave, TorontoC427209561 Brownlow Ave, Toronto 3 Byng Ave, TorontoW42719963 Byng Ave, Toronto 238 Garden Ave, TorontoW4271708238 Garden Ave, Toronto 25 Alexander St, TorontoW427173325 Alexander St, Toronto 32 Triller Ave, TorontoW427195632 Triller Ave, Toronto 31 West Village Dr, CaledonW427177631 West Village Dr, Caledon 299 Eaton St, Halton HillsW4272004299 Eaton St, Halton Hills 1 Keith Ave, TorontoW42716981 Keith Ave, Toronto 3345 Timeless Dr, OakvilleW42718663345 Timeless Dr, Oakville 4768 W King St, CaledonW42719004768 W King St, Caledon 15 Newstead Rd, TorontoW427181715 Newstead Rd, Toronto 4163 Lakeshore Rd, BurlingtonW42719494163 Lakeshore Rd, Burlington 376 Delaware Ave, BurlingtonW4239911376 Delaware Ave, Burlington 137 Longwater Chse, MarkhamN4271666137 Longwater Chse, Markham 70 Kiloran Ave, VaughanN427172770 Kiloran Ave, Vaughan 19 Duggan St, AuroraN427198019 Duggan St, Aurora 596 Grand Trunk Ave, VaughanN4271945596 Grand Trunk Ave, Vaughan 3543 Garrard Rd, WhitbyE42718003543 Garrard Rd, Whitby 32 Phenix Dr, TorontoE427184732 Phenix Dr, Toronto 59 Snow Ridge Crt, OshawaE427182259 Snow Ridge Crt, Oshawa 85 Mill St, AjaxE427182385 Mill St, Ajax 6 Beswick Park Crt, TorontoE42718136 Beswick Park Crt, Toronto 232 First Ave, TorontoE4271625232 First Ave, Toronto 187 Arlington Ave, TorontoC4271751187 Arlington Ave, Toronto 93 Freemont St, VaughanN427159693 Freemont St, Vaughan 12 Stowe Crt, BramptonW427144012 Stowe Crt, Brampton 525 Lynett Cres, Richmond HillN4271461525 Lynett Cres, Richmond Hill 7 Maplehyrn Ave, East GwillimburyN42715557 Maplehyrn Ave, East Gwillimbury 23 Glenburn Ave, TorontoE427152723 Glenburn Ave, Toronto 1851 Fellen Pl, MississaugaW42714141851 Fellen Pl, Mississauga 84 Professor Day Dr Bradford, West GwillimburyX427134084 Professor Day Dr Bradford, West Gwillimbury 1265 Roundwood Cres, OakvilleW42714261265 Roundwood Cres, Oakville 79 Twenty Fifth St, TorontoW427133579 Twenty Fifth St, Toronto 5121 Bayfield Cres, BurlingtonW42713245121 Bayfield Cres, Burlington 9 N Pine Ave, MississaugaW42712169 N Pine Ave, Mississauga 451 Rimilton Ave, TorontoW4271276451 Rimilton Ave, Toronto 372 Williamson Rd, MarkhamN4271316372 Williamson Rd, Markham 140 Estate Garden Dr, Richmond HillN4271390140 Estate Garden Dr, Richmond Hill 46 Thornapple Lane, Richmond HillN427130646 Thornapple Lane, Richmond Hill 184 Bayview Fairways Dr, MarkhamN4271341184 Bayview Fairways Dr, Markham 80 Emmeloord Cres, MarkhamN427142480 Emmeloord Cres, Markham 95 Glen Cres, VaughanN427117195 Glen Cres, Vaughan 160 Maria Rd, MarkhamN4271298160 Maria Rd, Markham 73 Joseph St, NewmarketN427111873 Joseph St, Newmarket 37 Edward Jeffreys Ave, MarkhamN427141537 Edward Jeffreys Ave, Markham 2 Empress Rd, VaughanN42712972 Empress Rd, Vaughan 35 Sandown Ave, TorontoE427130935 Sandown Ave, Toronto 324 Logan Ave, TorontoE4271253324 Logan Ave, Toronto 68 South Woodrow Blvd, TorontoE427121768 South Woodrow Blvd, Toronto 157 Avondale Ave, TorontoC4271089157 Avondale Ave, Toronto 179 Bayview Fairways Dr, MarkhamN4270624179 Bayview Fairways Dr, Markham 79 Port Royal Ave, VaughanN427072979 Port Royal Ave, Vaughan 617 Davenport Rd, TorontoC4270893617 Davenport Rd, Toronto 21 Granville Gate, MarkhamN427090321 Granville Gate, Markham 32 Thicket Rd, TorontoW427053432 Thicket Rd, Toronto 2915 Hammond Rd, MississaugaW42705132915 Hammond Rd, Mississauga 8 St Michele Pl, VaughanN42710568 St Michele Pl, Vaughan 68 Soho Cres, MarkhamN427072768 Soho Cres, Markham 6 Forestgreen Dr, UxbridgeN42710546 Forestgreen Dr, Uxbridge 1052 Westmount Ave, MississaugaW42708731052 Westmount Ave, Mississauga 10 Hillcroft Dr, MarkhamN427100510 Hillcroft Dr, Markham 1367 W King St, TorontoW42705791367 W King St, Toronto 37 Deerhurst Rd, HamiltonX427069537 Deerhurst Rd, Hamilton 134 Mccabe Cres, VaughanN4270577134 Mccabe Cres, Vaughan 2423 Boag Rd, East GwillimburyN42709782423 Boag Rd, East Gwillimbury 16639 Mount Pleasant Rd, CaledonW427066416639 Mount Pleasant Rd, Caledon 104 Church St, GeorginaN4270870104 Church St, Georgina 370 Hinton Terr, MiltonW4270798370 Hinton Terr, Milton 20 Catalina Crt, BramptonW427077820 Catalina Crt, Brampton 53 Zaduk Pl, GuelphX427053353 Zaduk Pl, Guelph S13955 Lakeridge Rd, UxbridgeN4270801S13955 Lakeridge Rd, Uxbridge 443 Merton St, TorontoC4270926443 Merton St, Toronto 21 Twilight Terr, VaughanN427096721 Twilight Terr, Vaughan 106 Kenilworth Ave, TorontoE4271040106 Kenilworth Ave, Toronto 182 Roywood Dr, TorontoC4270795182 Roywood Dr, Toronto 322 Etheridge Ave, MiltonW4270833322 Etheridge Ave, Milton 206 Starling Blvd, VaughanN4270591206 Starling Blvd, Vaughan 27 Connaught Ave, Whitchurch StouffvilleN427082627 Connaught Ave, Whitchurch Stouffville 147 Priscilla Ave, TorontoW4271061147 Priscilla Ave, Toronto 33 Kimbark Cres, MarkhamN427060533 Kimbark Cres, Markham 10 Greenbury Crt, Whitchurch StouffvilleN427086610 Greenbury Crt, Whitchurch Stouffville 440 Sackville St, TorontoC4271053440 Sackville St, Toronto 100 Redmond Dr, VaughanN4270876100 Redmond Dr, Vaughan 22 Sherwood Ave, TorontoC427054222 Sherwood Ave, Toronto 29 Elderslie Cres, VaughanN427054129 Elderslie Cres, Vaughan 94 Douglas Ave, TorontoC427068994 Douglas Ave, Toronto 59 Deverell Cres, TorontoW427105559 Deverell Cres, Toronto 308 E Cannon St, HamiltonX4270469308 E Cannon St, Hamilton 252 Walkers Line, BurlingtonW4270460252 Walkers Line, Burlington 1216 April Dr, MississaugaW42703301216 April Dr, Mississauga 126 Norseman St, TorontoW4270077126 Norseman St, Toronto 82 Government Rd, TorontoW427018782 Government Rd, Toronto 30 Woodhaven Cres, Richmond HillN427034930 Woodhaven Cres, Richmond Hill 78 Foxwood Rd, VaughanN427034078 Foxwood Rd, Vaughan 185 Rumble Ave, Richmond HillN4270096185 Rumble Ave, Richmond Hill 44 Felicia Crt, VaughanN427016644 Felicia Crt, Vaughan 89 Raintree Cres, Richmond HillN427021789 Raintree Cres, Richmond Hill 18 Janesville Rd, VaughanN427013718 Janesville Rd, Vaughan 261 Bingham Ave, TorontoE4270386261 Bingham Ave, Toronto 1296 Military Tr, TorontoE42703651296 Military Tr, Toronto 18 Bamber Crt, TorontoC427022218 Bamber Crt, Toronto 128 Margueretta St, TorontoC4270215128 Margueretta St, Toronto 32 Ellsworth Ave, Richmond HillN427267232 Ellsworth Ave, Richmond Hill 1469 W Myrtle Rd, WhitbyE42727191469 W Myrtle Rd, Whitby 590 Ossington Ave, TorontoC4272684590 Ossington Ave, Toronto 7 Knollview Cres, TorontoC42727757 Knollview Cres, Toronto 103 Cocksfield Ave, TorontoC4272590103 Cocksfield Ave, Toronto 66 Coldstream Ave, TorontoC427274066 Coldstream Ave, Toronto 158 Glenview Ave, TorontoC4272658158 Glenview Ave, Toronto 99 Caines Ave, TorontoC427274499 Caines Ave, Toronto 180 Blythwood Rd, TorontoC4272686180 Blythwood Rd, Toronto 88 Bel Air Dr, OakvilleW427243388 Bel Air Dr, Oakville 175 The Kingsway Ave, TorontoW4272481175 The Kingsway Ave, Toronto 1112 Monastery Dr, OakvilleW42725051112 Monastery Dr, Oakville 1552 Merrow Rd, MississaugaW42725451552 Merrow Rd, Mississauga 396 Sandlewood Rd, OakvilleW4272457396 Sandlewood Rd, Oakville 3052 W Seneca Dr, OakvilleW42723513052 W Seneca Dr, Oakville 16 Easson Ave, TorontoW427235816 Easson Ave, Toronto 4141 Derry Rd, MiltonW42720404141 Derry Rd, Milton 28 Black Walnut Cres, Richmond HillN427239828 Black Walnut Cres, Richmond Hill 25 Castleglen Blvd, MarkhamN427228025 Castleglen Blvd, Markham 70A Elderberry Tr, AuroraN427251770A Elderberry Tr, Aurora 23 Alex Black St, VaughanN427237123 Alex Black St, Vaughan 11 Shilo Crt, Richmond HillN427203811 Shilo Crt, Richmond Hill 44 Sprucewood Dr, MarkhamN427205044 Sprucewood Dr, Markham 38 Kentbridge Way, VaughanN427240438 Kentbridge Way, Vaughan 107 Sylvan Ave, TorontoE4272346107 Sylvan Ave, Toronto 83 Fenwood Hts, TorontoE427253583 Fenwood Hts, Toronto 183 Gledhill Ave, TorontoE4272333183 Gledhill Ave, Toronto 50 Doris Dr, TorontoE427247550 Doris Dr, Toronto 25 Ashdale Ave, TorontoE427204325 Ashdale Ave, Toronto 83 Clinton St, TorontoC427257083 Clinton St, Toronto 67 Dunblaine Ave, TorontoC427220767 Dunblaine Ave, Toronto 329 A Clinton St, TorontoC4272452329 A Clinton St, Toronto 875 Millwood Rd, TorontoC4272209875 Millwood Rd, Toronto 57 Marmion Ave, TorontoC427245057 Marmion Ave, Toronto 17 Valliere Pl, TorontoC427225517 Valliere Pl, Toronto 111 Howland Ave, TorontoC4272225111 Howland Ave, Toronto 57 Dane Ave, TorontoW427202557 Dane Ave, Toronto 3B Marquis Ave, TorontoW42717713B Marquis Ave, Toronto 24 Kingsgarden Rd, TorontoW427170324 Kingsgarden Rd, Toronto 53 Yorkleigh Ave, TorontoW427188053 Yorkleigh Ave, Toronto 34 Ellis Park Rd, TorontoW427185134 Ellis Park Rd, Toronto 18 Burnhamhall Crt, TorontoW427163818 Burnhamhall Crt, Toronto 8 Alhart St, Richmond HillN42720108 Alhart St, Richmond Hill 613 Via Romano Blvd, VaughanN4271859613 Via Romano Blvd, Vaughan 73 Catalina Cres, Richmond HillN427165573 Catalina Cres, Richmond Hill 64 Ironbark Crt, VaughanN427177764 Ironbark Crt, Vaughan 252 Rose Green Dr, VaughanN4271858252 Rose Green Dr, Vaughan 31 Quail Run Blvd, VaughanN427194631 Quail Run Blvd, Vaughan 11 Green Ash Cres, Richmond HillN427200011 Green Ash Cres, Richmond Hill 64 Keatley Dr, VaughanN427188164 Keatley Dr, Vaughan 6 Thornlea Crt, MarkhamN42720136 Thornlea Crt, Markham 7680 Cedarbrook Tr, WhitbyE42718297680 Cedarbrook Tr, Whitby 36 Vince Ave, TorontoE427164836 Vince Ave, Toronto 249 Patricia Ave, TorontoC4271725249 Patricia Ave, Toronto 206 Ava Rd, TorontoC4271794206 Ava Rd, Toronto 559 Briar Hill Ave, TorontoC4271679559 Briar Hill Ave, Toronto 101 Wembley Rd, TorontoC4271681101 Wembley Rd, Toronto 608 Conacher Dr, TorontoC4271719608 Conacher Dr, Toronto 370 Douglas Ave, TorontoC4271938370 Douglas Ave, Toronto 228 Strathallan Wood, TorontoC4271963228 Strathallan Wood, Toronto 208 Bayview Heights Dr, TorontoC4271854208 Bayview Heights Dr, Toronto 54 Cork Ave, TorontoW427161954 Cork Ave, Toronto 25 Killarney St, Richmond HillN427160725 Killarney St, Richmond Hill 158 Strathearn Ave, Richmond HillN4271586158 Strathearn Ave, Richmond Hill 36 Christina Cres, TorontoE427159836 Christina Cres, Toronto 66 Yorkview Dr, TorontoC427158366 Yorkview Dr, Toronto 75 Forsythe St, OakvilleW427155475 Forsythe St, Oakville 76 Elgin St, MarkhamN427144476 Elgin St, Markham 280 Stouffville Rd, Richmond HillN4271519280 Stouffville Rd, Richmond Hill 18 Lexington Dr, MarkhamN427155318 Lexington Dr, Markham 2 Fitzmaurice Dr, VaughanN42715362 Fitzmaurice Dr, Vaughan 21 Elfreda Blvd, TorontoE427147021 Elfreda Blvd, Toronto 21 Burton Rd, TorontoC427150321 Burton Rd, Toronto 28 N Crossburn Dr, TorontoC427153128 N Crossburn Dr, Toronto 343 Hopewell Ave, TorontoW4271380343 Hopewell Ave, Toronto 36 Gordon Randle Dr, BramptonW427143636 Gordon Randle Dr, Brampton 167 Hoey Cres, OakvilleW4271136167 Hoey Cres, Oakville 2350 Salcome Dr, OakvilleW42712222350 Salcome Dr, Oakville 3043 Eighth Line, OakvilleW42712893043 Eighth Line, Oakville 82 Morningside Ave, TorontoW427116182 Morningside Ave, Toronto 70 Millbank Crt, VaughanN427135470 Millbank Crt, Vaughan 34 Crimson Crt, Richmond HillN427117934 Crimson Crt, Richmond Hill 1450 19th Sdrd, KingN42712281450 19th Sdrd, King 39 Carolwood Cres, MarkhamN427114639 Carolwood Cres, Markham 30 Melbourne Dr, Richmond HillN427111130 Melbourne Dr, Richmond Hill 30 Jazz Dr, VaughanN427115530 Jazz Dr, Vaughan 205 King Hills Lane, KingN4271381205 King Hills Lane, King 51 Woodland Park Rd, TorontoE427122951 Woodland Park Rd, Toronto 47 Ranleigh Ave, TorontoC427131947 Ranleigh Ave, Toronto 132 Cheltenham Ave, TorontoC4271339132 Cheltenham Ave, Toronto 95 Walker Ave, TorontoC427115695 Walker Ave, Toronto 55 Afton Ave, TorontoC427118255 Afton Ave, Toronto 147 Shaw St, TorontoC4271375147 Shaw St, Toronto 66 Tranby Ave, TorontoC427118066 Tranby Ave, Toronto 186 Mutual St, TorontoC4271093186 Mutual St, Toronto 77 Glenview Ave, TorontoC427096677 Glenview Ave, Toronto 318 Glenayr Rd, TorontoC4270672318 Glenayr Rd, Toronto 173 Byng Ave, TorontoC4270719173 Byng Ave, Toronto 265 Lakeland Cres, Richmond HillN4270746265 Lakeland Cres, Richmond Hill 5016 Cherry St, Whitchurch StouffvilleN42745055016 Cherry St, Whitchurch Stouffville 231 Pine Hill Rd Bradford, West GwillimburyN4274423231 Pine Hill Rd Bradford, West Gwillimbury 19 Benlamond Ave, TorontoE427441619 Benlamond Ave, Toronto 32 Regal Rd, TorontoC427452832 Regal Rd, Toronto 15 Groveview Crt, MarkhamN427441015 Groveview Crt, Markham 318 Lake Promenade, TorontoW4274344318 Lake Promenade, Toronto 159 Bridgepointe Crt, AuroraN4274380159 Bridgepointe Crt, Aurora 358 Willowdale Ave, TorontoC4274322358 Willowdale Ave, Toronto 24 Farnham Ave, TorontoC427433424 Farnham Ave, Toronto 83 Bridlewood Dr, HamiltonX427428283 Bridlewood Dr, Hamilton 13 Elder Ave, TorontoW427424113 Elder Ave, Toronto 19 Gorman Ave, VaughanN427415819 Gorman Ave, Vaughan 56 Guildford Circ, MarkhamN427427156 Guildford Circ, Markham 12 Nursewood Rd, TorontoE427431912 Nursewood Rd, Toronto 32 Pine Ridge Dr, TorontoE427415532 Pine Ridge Dr, Toronto 44 Walker Ave, TorontoC427430844 Walker Ave, Toronto 42 Fairfield Rd, TorontoC427420642 Fairfield Rd, Toronto 193 Banbury Rd, TorontoC4274270193 Banbury Rd, Toronto 519 Melrose Ave, TorontoC4274204519 Melrose Ave, Toronto 6303 Chippewa Rd, HamiltonX42741086303 Chippewa Rd, Hamilton 57 Harshaw Ave, TorontoX427394957 Harshaw Ave, Toronto 30 Stokes Tr, MiltonW427402230 Stokes Tr, Milton 1254 Crawford Crt, OakvilleW42739171254 Crawford Crt, Oakville 419 Stanfield Dr, OakvilleW4273909419 Stanfield Dr, Oakville 215 Pinehurst Dr, OakvilleW4274006215 Pinehurst Dr, Oakville 8191 Churchville Rd, BramptonW42738488191 Churchville Rd, Brampton 21A S Pine Ave, MississaugaW427377821A S Pine Ave, Mississauga 1360 Acton Cres, OakvilleW42738131360 Acton Cres, Oakville 191 Dickson Park Cres, MississaugaW4273735191 Dickson Park Cres, Mississauga 16802 Hurontario St, CaledonW427372716802 Hurontario St, Caledon 20 Horse Rake Rd, VaughanN427386820 Horse Rake Rd, Vaughan 379 Thomas Cook Ave, VaughanN4274116379 Thomas Cook Ave, Vaughan 156 Willow Farm Lane, AuroraN4273845156 Willow Farm Lane, Aurora 166 Roe Ave, TorontoC4274087166 Roe Ave, Toronto 147 Old Yonge St, TorontoC4273944147 Old Yonge St, Toronto 102 Leacrest Rd, TorontoC4273726102 Leacrest Rd, Toronto 1456 Tanner Crt, OakvilleW42734661456 Tanner Crt, Oakville 2 Chiswell Cres, TorontoC42736312 Chiswell Cres, Toronto 26 28 Roywood Dr, TorontoC427320626 28 Roywood Dr, Toronto 191 Dew St, KingN4273502191 Dew St, King 600 St Clarens Ave, TorontoW4273333600 St Clarens Ave, Toronto 16 Berkshire Cres, MarkhamN427333916 Berkshire Cres, Markham 11 Stratford Dr, Richmond HillN427364711 Stratford Dr, Richmond Hill 2338 Prince John Blvd, MississaugaW42732942338 Prince John Blvd, Mississauga 18 A Westmount Park Rd, TorontoW427367518 A Westmount Park Rd, Toronto 1700 Sir Montys Dr, MississaugaW42737011700 Sir Montys Dr, Mississauga 488 Manning Ave, TorontoC4273216488 Manning Ave, Toronto 132 Spring Gate Blvd, VaughanN4273211132 Spring Gate Blvd, Vaughan 120 Stibbard Ave, TorontoC4273507120 Stibbard Ave, Toronto 231 Goulding Ave, TorontoC4273588231 Goulding Ave, Toronto 148 Timber Lane, VaughanN4273673148 Timber Lane, Vaughan 728 Huron St, TorontoC4273228728 Huron St, Toronto 331 Stephanie Blvd, VaughanN4273278331 Stephanie Blvd, Vaughan 148 Hollyrood Heights Dr, MississaugaW4273600148 Hollyrood Heights Dr, Mississauga 171 Chaplin Cres, TorontoC4273421171 Chaplin Cres, Toronto 2366 E Gerrard St, TorontoE42731962366 E Gerrard St, Toronto 422 Willard Ave, TorontoW4273520422 Willard Ave, Toronto 55 Miriam Cres, Richmond HillN427356055 Miriam Cres, Richmond Hill 73 Greenland Rd, TorontoC427349673 Greenland Rd, Toronto 240 Garden Ave, TorontoW4273709240 Garden Ave, Toronto 33 Dickson Hill Rd, MarkhamN427339833 Dickson Hill Rd, Markham 87 Leuty Ave, TorontoE427336487 Leuty Ave, Toronto 64 Elm Grove Ave, Richmond HillN427366064 Elm Grove Ave, Richmond Hill 26 Lyall Ave, TorontoE427337326 Lyall Ave, Toronto 41 Silker St, VaughanN427348341 Silker St, Vaughan 38 Anglin Dr, Richmond HillN427330838 Anglin Dr, Richmond Hill 107 Lawrence Cres, TorontoC4273414107 Lawrence Cres, Toronto 144 Strachan Ave, TorontoC4273416144 Strachan Ave, Toronto 37 Fallingbrook Rd, TorontoE427333537 Fallingbrook Rd, Toronto 890 19th Ave, Richmond HillN4273555890 19th Ave, Richmond Hill 8 Walder Ave, TorontoC42732348 Walder Ave, Toronto 27 N Peveril Hill, TorontoC427345227 N Peveril Hill, Toronto 29 Killdeer Cres, TorontoC427337029 Killdeer Cres, Toronto 66 Garland Cres, Richmond HillN427338466 Garland Cres, Richmond Hill 201 Burnhamthorpe Rd, TorontoW4273040201 Burnhamthorpe Rd, Toronto 52 Burrows Ave, TorontoW427313952 Burrows Ave, Toronto 3164 Countess Cres, MississaugaW42730193164 Countess Cres, Mississauga 119 Macdonell Ave, TorontoW4273017119 Macdonell Ave, Toronto 104 Golden Forest Rd, VaughanN4273009104 Golden Forest Rd, Vaughan 108 Fern Valley Cres, Richmond HillN4273008108 Fern Valley Cres, Richmond Hill 17 Whitewood Rd, TorontoC427308017 Whitewood Rd, Toronto 64 Tranby Ave, TorontoC427313564 Tranby Ave, Toronto 72 Yorkview Dr, TorontoC427304872 Yorkview Dr, Toronto 87 Chaplin Cres, TorontoC427305387 Chaplin Cres, Toronto 996 998 Avenue Rd, TorontoC4273023996 998 Avenue Rd, Toronto 5 Colchester Crt, TorontoW42729025 Colchester Crt, Toronto 43 North Dr, TorontoW427296843 North Dr, Toronto 158 Claxton Dr, OakvilleW4272951158 Claxton Dr, Oakville 26 Maynard Ave, TorontoW427287626 Maynard Ave, Toronto 49 Loyalist Rd, TorontoW427291149 Loyalist Rd, Toronto 12383 Jane St, VaughanN427292312383 Jane St, Vaughan 450 Pumphouse Rd, KingN4272917450 Pumphouse Rd, King 8 Gallant Pl, VaughanN42729528 Gallant Pl, Vaughan 238 N Newton Dr, TorontoC4272944238 N Newton Dr, Toronto 1447 Beemer Ave, MississaugaW42728401447 Beemer Ave, Mississauga 6 The Wynd, TorontoW42728186 The Wynd, Toronto 1408 Broadmoor Ave, MississaugaW42727181408 Broadmoor Ave, Mississauga 129 Village Gate Dr, MarkhamN4272811129 Village Gate Dr, Markham 1797 Old School Rd, CaledonW42705641797 Old School Rd, Caledon 100 Woburn Ave, TorontoC4271069100 Woburn Ave, Toronto 26 Brookfield Rd, TorontoC427052826 Brookfield Rd, Toronto 226 Morrish Rd, TorontoE4270793226 Morrish Rd, Toronto 14650 Concession 6, UxbridgeN427061514650 Concession 6, Uxbridge 170 Albany Ave, TorontoC4270770170 Albany Ave, Toronto 1 Dalla Riva Crt, BramptonW42707751 Dalla Riva Crt, Brampton 9 Greengate Rd, TorontoC42706879 Greengate Rd, Toronto 38 Ava Rd, TorontoC427066338 Ava Rd, Toronto 153 E Hillsdale Ave, TorontoC4270748153 E Hillsdale Ave, Toronto 1593 Calumet Pl, MississaugaW42707411593 Calumet Pl, Mississauga 288 St Clements Ave, TorontoC4270613288 St Clements Ave, Toronto 135 Maple Ridge Cres, MarkhamN4270749135 Maple Ridge Cres, Markham 81 Forest Grove Crt, AuroraN427059581 Forest Grove Crt, Aurora 167 Coldstream Ave, TorontoC4270585167 Coldstream Ave, Toronto 147 Sterling St, HamiltonX4270580147 Sterling St, Hamilton 52 Hamster Cres, AuroraN427065252 Hamster Cres, Aurora 41 Harbourside Crt, OakvilleW427087241 Harbourside Crt, Oakville 1400 Bayview Ave, TorontoC42709251400 Bayview Ave, Toronto 27 Cherry Post Cres, TorontoW427076327 Cherry Post Cres, Toronto 22B Birch Ave 22B, TorontoC427057622B Birch Ave 22B, Toronto 34 Hammersmith Ave, TorontoE427084234 Hammersmith Ave, Toronto 130 Crawford Cres, MiltonW4270803130 Crawford Cres, Milton 148 Conklin Cres, AuroraN4270549148 Conklin Cres, Aurora 168 Church St, MarkhamN4270934168 Church St, Markham 74 Lynwood Ave, TorontoC427091474 Lynwood Ave, Toronto 35 Donwoods Dr, TorontoC427105235 Donwoods Dr, Toronto 57 Endless Circ, VaughanN427091557 Endless Circ, Vaughan 46 Burnhamthorpe Cres, TorontoW427035446 Burnhamthorpe Cres, Toronto 16 Leamington Ave, TorontoW427045116 Leamington Ave, Toronto 634 Cedar Ave, BurlingtonW4270398634 Cedar Ave, Burlington 38 Thirtieth St, TorontoW427023538 Thirtieth St, Toronto 9 Lukow Terr, TorontoW42686769 Lukow Terr, Toronto 2334 Hammond Rd, MississaugaW42701842334 Hammond Rd, Mississauga 1507 Constance Dr, OakvilleW42701671507 Constance Dr, Oakville 44 Olympus Dr, Richmond HillN427028344 Olympus Dr, Richmond Hill 73 Bowhill Dr, Richmond HillN427025573 Bowhill Dr, Richmond Hill 81 Kingscross Dr, KingN427038381 Kingscross Dr, King 677 Chaleur Pl, NewmarketN4270150677 Chaleur Pl, Newmarket 48 Bluff Tr, KingN427015448 Bluff Tr, King 104 Morton Ave, East GwillimburyN4270103104 Morton Ave, East Gwillimbury 30 Gleave Crt, AuroraN427011030 Gleave Crt, Aurora 7 Roxville Ave, TorontoC42703097 Roxville Ave, Toronto 24 Summerhill Gdns, TorontoC427028124 Summerhill Gdns, Toronto 195 Wedgewood Dr, TorontoC4270293195 Wedgewood Dr, Toronto 83 Alcina Ave, TorontoC427034483 Alcina Ave, Toronto 52 Unsworth Ave, TorontoC427030452 Unsworth Ave, Toronto 286 Laird Dr, TorontoC4270209286 Laird Dr, Toronto 1404B Bayview Ave, TorontoC42704531404B Bayview Ave, Toronto 6 Plateau Cres, TorontoC42704816 Plateau Cres, Toronto 301R Davenport Rd, TorontoC4270089301R Davenport Rd, Toronto 337 Shaw St, TorontoC4270160337 Shaw St, Toronto 247 Brighton Ave, TorontoC4270226247 Brighton Ave, Toronto
Featured Listings 12th October 2018 first appeared on: GTA Real Estate Pros 154 Bathurst St, Toronto, ON, M5V 2R3 647-362-2000 https://goo.gl/Yj7G5g
source https://www.gtarealestatepros.ca/featured-listings-12th-october-2018/
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canaldelmisterio · 6 years
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Fotografían el rostro demoníaco de un monje en el mismo lugar donde murió quemado hace 500 años
Fotografían el rostro demoníaco de un monje en el mismo lugar donde murió quemado hace 500 años
Fotografían el rostro demoníaco de un monje en el mismo lugar donde murió quemado hace 500 años
The Village, Mansfield se encuentra en el Condado de Nottinghamshire, Inglaterra. Construido en 1802, fue un matadero, una fábrica de cerveza e incluso un club nocturno, pero originalmente fue un antiguo granero. Debajo de ese granero había un túnel que conducía a la Abadía de Newstead, ubicada a…
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Eight Days: Your one-stop guide to the week ahead: June 17-24
New Post has been published on https://funnythingshere.xyz/eight-days-your-one-stop-guide-to-the-week-ahead-june-17-24/
Eight Days: Your one-stop guide to the week ahead: June 17-24
Kabaret Dietrich features as part of Melbourne Cabaret Festival
Photo: Sanjeev Singh
ART Marking the 10th anniversary of the Northern Territory National Emergency Response, or “the Intervention”, Jo Holder and Djon Mundine OAM present A Widening Gap: The Intervention 10 Years On. Until July 8, today, 1pm-5pm, Counihan Gallery, Brunswick Town Hall, 233 Sydney Road, Brunswick, free, 93898622, moreland.vic.gov.au
Mon, Jun 18
FOOD David Moyle and David Verheul, the chefs behind Embla and Longsong, respectively, have crafted a renaissance-inspired feast. Tickets include delights such as salted fish, ginger and vermouth bruschetta, roast chicken in mead and saffron, matching wines, and a live chef Q and A. 6.30pm, Melbourne Palms, Fed Square Car Park Rooftop, Russell Street Extension, city, $175, goodfoodmonth.com
Tue, Jun 19
STAGE Queen of cabaret Dolly Diamond returns as the Melbourne Cabaret Festival‘s artistic director, bringing together up to 10 performances daily, including 20 brand new shows, at the festival hub Chapel off Chapel. Jun 19-Jul 1, various times and prices, Chapel off Chapel, 12 Little Chapel Street, Prahran, 8290 7000, melbournecabaret.com
Wed, Jun 20
STAGE Prima ballerina Irena Kolesnikova stars in the St Petersburg Ballet Theatre’s world-renowned production of Swan Lake, bringing the Russian classic back to the Princess Theatre for the first time in 65 years. Jun 20-30, Wed, 7.30pm, Princess Theatre, 163 Spring Street, city, $69-$145, 1300 111 011, ticketmaster.com.au
Overheard by Oslo Davis, Brunetti, Carlton, Saturday 10am Her: “He’s that funny Asian guy on The Front Bar.” Him: “Anh Do?” Her: “Yeah, him.”
Photo: Oslo Davis
Thu, Jun 21
WORKSHOP Popular writer, illustrator and creator Mari Andrews has carved a career through relatable and comical illustrations of everyday life. She hosts a hands-on workshop, Turning Pain into Art, and speaks about her debut book Am I There Yet?. 6.30pm, the White House, 11 Princes Street, St Kilda, $200-$250, theschooloflife.com
Fri, Jun 22
MUSIC After selling out his national tour in May, Marlon Williams makes a quick stop in Melbourne ahead of a European tour. The New Zealand born and raised singer-songwriter is known for his arresting vocals. 8pm, Forum Melbourne, corner of Flinders and Russell streets, city, $53, 1300 111 011, ticketmaster.com.au
Sat-Sun, Jun 23-24
OUT OF TOWN Across four weekends, Queenscliff’s inaugural Low Light Festival embraces the senses with a program of local and international artists and culinary talents. Perfect for a weekend away, the festival features film premieres, degustation dinners and wine tastings. Jun 22-Jul 15, Queenscliff, 5258 4843, lowlightqueenscliff.com.au
MUSIC Gabriella Cohen pays homage to her influences on her album Pink Is the Colour of Unconditional Love blending bossa nova, lilting strings and rambling rock’n’roll. Sat, 8pm, The Gasometer Hotel, corner of Smith Street and Alexandra Parade, $20-$25, 94163335, thegasometerhotel.com.au
STAGE Three choreographers showcase the talent of the Australian Ballet in Verve. Alice Topp, who has choreographed for Megan Washington, presents Aurum alongside Tim Harbour’s Filligree and Shadow and Stephen Baynes’ Constant Variants. Jun 21-30, Sat, 1.30pm and 7.30pm, State Theatre, city, $35-$225, 1300 182 183, artscentremelbourne.com.au
OUT OF TOWN The Village Winter Festival is a family celebration of the winter solstice including the Fire Spectacular, a multi-dimensional show of pyrotechnics and special effects. Sat, 2pm-midnight, Newstead Racecourse, free-$15, 54734426, thevillagefestival.com.au
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fullerbattery · 6 years
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My wife Jane and I got married on the 10th June 2017 at a friends house in the grounds of Newstead Abbey after an engagement of 17 years. We had a festival style wedding with tents, live bands, and wood fired pizza and lots of alcohol!
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We have a great bunch of friends who donated money towards our honeymoon instead of gifts (for which we were very grateful)
We both enjoy cycling and have a Tandem which we ride weekly we cover about 50 miles per week
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I am not sure which one of us came up with the idea I am sure it’s probably me (they always blame the little fat guy) to cycle along the Rhine from Andermatt (somewhere near the source) down to Rotterdam over to Hull on the Ferry then back to Mansfield in total about 850 miles of peddling.
So to the planning, our Tandem is over 8 feet long but I managed to find a freight company that said they would ship it for £230. I was telling Phil (my fellow director at County Battery Services Ltd and friend from our days together in Hucknall Round Table) that I was going to book the freight and he said that he fancied doing a County Battery road trip and he had enlisted the help of another ex-tabler Martyn Knox Hopkins Solicitors they would deliver the bike to Andermatt for us.
Our friends Anna and Josh helped us secure flights to Zürich and we booked air B&B for the first two nights in Andermatt and booking.com for the first stop in Werdenberg 90 miles down the River. We decided that we would decide on the route where we would stop. We then booked a suite and breakfast on the ferry from Rotterdam to Hull we might need a rest by then.
So to preparations we had to go from doing 50 miles per week to an average of 60 miles per day. We purchased a book called The Rhine Cycle Route by Mike Wells which gives a detailed study of the whole route from the source to the sea. we studied this and it appeared the route does not always follow the river bank and is sometimes on both or just one variant of sides. This gave us the excuse to buy a to so  we also bought a Garmin 1000 explorer in case we got lost (I know! How difficult is it to follow a river?)
We tried to increase the amount of miles we were doing but the weather conspired against it was  February and March 2018 and the snow and freezing (we are scared of cycling in the ice and snow) weather was relentless
TAs the weather improved we increased the distance on a weekly level. The Garmin was great it allowed us to find new and interesting routes with the round trip planner which allows you to pick the type of roads or tracks you want to avoid then the distance and direction you want to travel.
As well as the Garmin we bought a special tandem roof rack from J D Tandems
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Which allowed us to tour different places. We had a great time finding new rides and beautiful villages in the countryside
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  J D Tandems  will lend you a tandem for a day as a trial we thought this was a great offer and travelled up to Gargrave to train for the weekend and try out an Orbit Tour. We booked a chalet again with Airbnb the owners (Dawn & Phil 07591 691150)  call a garden room Which is a chalet in there garden. It was a five minute walk from J D Tandems and they have a garage to lock the bike away!
We put a route into Garmin Asked the chaps in the shop if it looked OK as it was the weekend of the Tour of Yorkshire. They warned us it was a tough ride they were correct 3700 feet climbed in 44 miles but some great views
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The next day we decided to take our Dawes Galaxy and push a little further 63 miles with nearly 5000 feet of climbing. The weather was great and here is a good point make sure you use the sun cream
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When we got back to the chalet as there is a washing machine we would see how well the cycling clothing would dry. We washed it and hung it out to dry at 7.00pm
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The weather was warm and dry next morning at 8.00 am our cycling clothes were dry, which was a great test as we were to carry  everything we were taking in panniers and saddlebag.
Honeymoon on a bicycle made for Two! My wife Jane and I got married on the 10th June 2017 at a friends house in the grounds of Newstead Abbey after an engagement of 17 years.
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ramialkarmi · 7 years
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Cities and states across the US are abandoning Columbus Day — here's the list
On October 9, the United States recognizes Columbus Day as a federal holiday. Established in 1937, the day celebrates Italian explorer Christopher Columbus's docking on the Americas in 1492.
But this year, cities and states are replacing it with Indigenous Peoples Day, which commemorates the history of Native American people.
Advocates for abandoning Columbus Day recognize that Native Americans first inhabited the land that's now the present-day US. They argue that Columbus did not discover the Americas, but instead started the European colonization of it. 
Some estimates say that about 18 million Native Americans resided in what's now the US before Columbus and the colonists came. "By 1800, that number had crashed to 900,000," Reuters columnist Peter Apps wrote. By 1900, only 250,000 remained — this at a time when the population descended from Europeans was skyrocketing." 
As The New York Times notes, Americans have long questioned Columbus's legacy, even before there was a holiday in his name. But it wasn't until 1977 that the International Conference on Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations in the Americas started to discuss swapping Columbus Day for Indigenous Peoples Day.
South Dakota renamed Columbus Day as Native American Day in 1990. Two years later, Berkeley, California started recognizing Indigenous Peoples Day, and implemented related programs in schools, libraries, and museums. Earlier this month, a member of Washington, DC's city council proposed a bill to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day, Time reports.
The abandonment of Columbus Day follows an ongoing national conversation about the celebration of historical figures with controversial pasts. There have been calls from residents of several cities, from Baltimore to Los Angeles, to remove monuments of Confederate leaders.
  States, cities, and universities that are celebrating Indigenous Peoples Day are below:
States:
Hawaii
Vermont
Oregon
Alaska
South Dakota*
Cities:
Los Angeles, California (and Los Angeles County)
Berkeley, California
Santa Cruz, California
San Fernando, California
Burbank, California
Long Beach, California
San Luis Obispo, California
Watsonville, California
Seattle, Washington
Olympia, Washington
Spokane, Washington
Bainbridge Island, Washington
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Grand Rapids, Minnesota
St. Paul, Minnesota
Denver, Colorado
Durango, Colorado
Boulder, Colorado
Phoenix, Arizona
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Traverse City, Michigan
Alpena, Michigan
East Lansing, Michigan
Ypsilanti, Michigan
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Portland, Oregon
Eugene, Oregon
Newstead, New York
Village of Lewiston, New York**
Ithaca, New York
Anadarko, Oklahoma
Norman, Oklahoma
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Tahlequah, Oklahoma
Carrboro, North Carolina
Asheville, North Carolina
Belfast, Maine
Bangor, Maine
Orono, Maine
Brunswick, Maine**
Portland, Maine
Bexar County, Texas
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Amherst, Massachusetts
Northampton, Massachusetts
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia
Lawrence, Kansas
Davenport, Iowa
Durham, New Hampshire
Moscow, Idaho
Oberlin, Ohio
Salt Lake City, Utah
Austin, Texas
Nashville, Tennessee
*Celebrates Native American Day.
**Celebrates both Indigenous Peoples Day and Columbus Day.
SEE ALSO: There are hundreds of Confederate monuments across the US — here's when they were built
Join the conversation about this story »
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