One of the many, many things I love about Toronto, is that
you can go from bustling urban metropolis to wild natural habitat within just a
few minutes. One minute you’re on the concrete sidewalk, cars whizzing by you,
the sounds of the city (construction, ambulances, aeroplanes) closing in and
assaulting your senses, and the next
minute, you’re standing with your feet in the dirt, tangled vines cocooning
you, giant trees dwarfing you and... nothing... silence... except for the
chirping of birds and the psychotic chatter of a pissed-off squirrel nearby. (Squirrels
seem to spend a lot of time pissed-off; I don’t know why, that’s just the way
it is).
Just mere steps from our apartment lies a sprawling mass of
parklands in the Don River valley, and this is where we walk our dogs every
day. Trails branch out for miles in every direction, and you can walk for ages
without leaving the protection of the trees and the reassuring burbling of the
river. The parklands are filled with birdlife and smaller critters (mostly
squirrels, groundhogs, mice and racoons). There have even been talk of
deer-sightings, but this is brushed off as the stuff of urban myths. Muggle
loves swimming in the river, and Dobby has become obsessed with those damn squirrels
– this valley is their happy place. We literally have to drag them out of it at
least twice a day when we head for home after walks.
A great thing too is that I mostly feel safe walking here. I
don’t want to draw comparisons between here and Joburg, but I know that I
wouldn’t have felt safe walking the dogs alone at Emmarentia Dam during the
week when the park is mostly deserted. It’s just one of those things.
However, no place in the world is totally safe, and you get psychopaths
everywhere – Canada is no exception. All you need to do is look at the excess
of body parts that have been turning up all over Canada to realise that
Canadian psychos are just as active as South African psychos. And they
especially love parks. Nice.
So even when I’m walking alone along a quiet trail, feeling
safe, there’s always a part of me that’s a bit nervous. And this isn’t my South
African part; this is the side of me that went through a hectic psychological-thriller
reading phase for a few years. The side that knows you never walk past panel
vans, because their doors will slide open and you will be shoved inside by homicidal
maniacs. Also the side of me that knows that the excess skin that flaps under
my arms when I do the YMCA can be turned into a cute little purse for some
fashion-conscious weirdo with a sewing machine.
Which is why I completely and utterly shat myself yesterday
when walking along one of the more isolated trails in the valley, and something
large suddenly leapt out at me from behind a bush.
To be continued... Not to create suspense (I’m clearly alive
and not dismembered if I’m writing this) but because this is a long story. Like
most of my stories. Deal with it.







OOOh - Mr Grey himself?
ReplyDeleteYou are such a dork :)
ReplyDeleteLove it.