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Anonymous
Originally posted by argonsagas
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Anonymous
I've been to Toronto for work the past couple of years. It's a nice city, but very hectic.
Now about the Pope... oh never mind.
Roger in Seattle -- riding 3 days so far without problems. Thanks guys!
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Anonymous
Originally posted by Roger MooreHey, are you guys making fun of me? 8) You better be careful or I may just lose my santification.
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 19275
- Toronto, Canada
Originally posted by MrFluffyOriginally posted by Roger MooreHey, are you guys making fun of me? 8) You better be careful or I may just lose my santification.
Scotty: 35 years later Toronto IS Chinatown! With the hand-over of Hong Kong, we had an explosion in immigrant numbers. Chinese are now the greatest per centage of the population, and I have heard this is the largest concentration anywhere outside of China, including San Francisco.
Street cars/trolley cars are still here, but they have some new ones that are guaranteed to foul up your radio/television signal every time they pass.
The building you mentioned is Toronto City Hall. The Provincial Government/Legislature buildings are a few blocks north and west of there, and (I'm not certain of their dates) are about 100 years old.
Toronto hectic? Well, I've been in worse places, but it sure isn't like it was 35 years ago. Highways are more in number, and several lanes wider...but quite frequently , nothing moves.
Today, with the visit of the Pope...much of the City is completely stopped.Bertrand Russell: 'Men are born ignorant, not stupid. They are made stupid by education.'
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Anonymous
Thanks Ron
When I was there Chinatown was about 2 blocks long and had almost no people walking on the street. The city was extra clean but not busy at all.
thanks again
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 19275
- Toronto, Canada
Scotty: The Chinatown you saw is gone. Still a bit of it exists, but mostly it shifted west and got much larger. All the later versions of David Carradine's Kung Fu were filmed there. Chinatown also split into other areas of the city, mixed with Korean and Viet Namese shops. The city has been re-amalgamated, to make a larger single entity...now you drive 45 miles on the freeway to cross Toronto itself, and even longer if you add in the connecting municipalities. Highway 401 (east-west) across Toronto was 4 lanes and brand new then; today it is 12 in parts, and traffic moves slower.
Hmm....35 years ago I was just getting into biking, riding a Jawa 250. No cross-country touring on that, but I drove it about 25-30 miles to work, and then back, and played with it afterwards and on weekends.
I even tried 2-up driving a few times. Bit difficult on the highways, but it worked. (Both of us were light). What a difference with the GS1100!Bertrand Russell: 'Men are born ignorant, not stupid. They are made stupid by education.'
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Anonymous
Originally posted by argonsagasHmm....35 years ago I was just getting into biking, riding a Jawa 250. No cross-country touring on that, but I drove it about 25-30 miles to work, and then back, and played with it afterwards and on weekends.
I even tried 2-up driving a few times. Bit difficult on the highways, but it worked. (Both of us were light). What a difference with the GS1100!
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 19275
- Toronto, Canada
Jawa 250
I had neither of those. Just a little street bike that never knew the meaning of wheelie, except when I took it over the top of a little knoll at about 40mph. and it got a bit of air. A great first bike. It stood up very well to my driving, and it was pushed hard, and often.
It wasn't even mine, actually. A friend who had been on bikes forever wanted me on one, and gave it to me to learn on. I had it for two years, then bought the Triumph I wrote about in your post " Now the Forum's are up and running". I don't remember ever going down with the Jawa, but with the Army Triumph ....adventure time!
That bike taught me a lot of respect for British soldiers. The Triumph proved indestructible, but it treated you like a western rodeo horse: if you made a mistake, you were either off it or under it (I've been both). Those soldiers had to be tremendously good riders to stay on it and ride like hell in war zones. Hat (and helmet) off to them!Bertrand Russell: 'Men are born ignorant, not stupid. They are made stupid by education.'
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