Wind & the Great Two-Four

19 May 2025 – There is a big difference, I realize — as I anchor my hat — between a calm 15C and a 15C with gusts that smack you in the face.

I’m just off the bus at the edge of Stanley Park, planning a walk through the park to celebrate this holiday long weekend. (Held the Monday before 24 May, and, both officially and unofficially, a single holiday with many names.)

My plan, before the hat-anchoring, was to walk across Lost Lagoon, out to Second Beach, and then whatever. Hat now anchored, I see the virtues of a trail walk among sheltering trees instead.

So I say good-bye to Lost Lagoon, despite the attraction of this mama duck and her babies (just off the point of those rocks)…

and this Pacific Great Blue Heron, posing right next to the path…

and, instead, I pivot my footsteps onto Tatlow Walk.

I don’t usually take any of the forest trails, and how silly is that? Here’s a whole 400 Ha of western rainforest, and I stick to the Seawall. Not today!

Tatlow offers me a whole different experience. See? (Ignore “You are here” — we are in fact in the upper-right curve of Lost Lagoon, about to slice diagonally through the forest on Tatlow Walk, and emerge at Third Beach.)

Why don’t I do this more often? Thank you, wind, for blowing me inland.

There is greenery — new growth climbing all over the old…

and woodpecker activity — scavenging insects from old trees…

and colour — the rich red of the cedar itself and the lichens on the bark…

and even sound effects — the angled tree squeaks as high-level wind rubs it against the trees that support it.

In the glade where Tatlow crosses Bridle Path (scroll back to that handy map, I’ll wait…), I meet a ghost.

One of seven ghosts, the stumps of the Seven Sisters, the soaring mix of Douglas Fir and Western Red Cedar that once stood here and were so popular with 19th-c visitors that they had their own dedicated trail.

Alas, by 1953…

they had to be honoured in a different way.

But the glade, like the rest of the forest, still has plenty of soaring verticals.

Side trails beguile…

but I look at the mud, and the bike ruts, and choose to stick with Tatlow.

At Stanley Park Drive, I wait for waves of holiday traffic to pass, cars as usual, but also motorcycle clusters and cyclists…

and then cross over. Within moments, here I am, about to emerge at Third Beach.

Where wind has free access, and white caps prove it.

Rocks, freighters (waiting their turn to enter the Port of Vancouver), and white caps. That’s the signature of my walk back down the Seawall.

Plus the occasional float plane silhouetted high against the clouds, snarling its way to, or from, the Flight Centre at Coal Harbour…

and crows swooping low across the beach…

and cyclists dismounting to navigate intersections with high-traffic walkways.

I take advantage of low tide, and walk the last stretch below the Seawall, down on the beach itself.

Just past park boundaries, I climb back up to Beach Avenue, Morton Park and…

a pop-up street fair. But of course. It’s a holiday weekend, isn’t it?

Quick browse in the fair, satisfying lunch on Denman Street (Indian, this time around), and a walk north on Denman, where the soaring verticals are quite different from those to be found in the park…

and, finally, a bus back home.

City, Grey & Green

16 May 2025 – It’s a chores + pleasure walk that will loop me west for a while and then back home. Practically just out my door, I’m standing transfixed by this — let’s face it — unexceptional street corner.

It’s exceptional only in that it is so very… city.

Street & sidewalk & sleek black new-build & fake Tudor old-build (to be incorporated into yet another new-build) & street murals & hydro wires & parked cars. Also trees bursting with spring blossoms & a blue sky over all.

All the entangled grey & green of a city. Grey, the hardscape of human construction; green, persistent nature; also “green,” human intervention meant to enhance nature, and co-exist rather than simply dominate.

Hardly an original thought, but it sticks in mind, and shapes how I see what I see, for the rest of my walk.

Oh, all right! It does not shape how I see what I see right here, chalked on a south-side rampart for the Cambie Bridge.

I throw this in, just because it is irresistible. Doubly cheeky, as well.

First, it suggests that We absorb Them, not vice-versa. Second, it demotes Them to the less-autonomous status of territory, not province. (Provinces exercise constitutional power in their own right; the three territories — Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut — exercise delegated powers under the authority of the Parliament of Canada.)

Highly amused, I leave patriotic red & white behind me, and return to urban grey & green.

Lots of grey, as I start north across the bridge.

A bit of green, in those tall trees on the far right edge — and an impressive display of “green,” though it is literally coloured grey. Just left of the green trees, you’ll find what looks like the five fingers of an upraised hand, complete with fingernails. Those are the exhaust stacks of the Southeast False Creek Neighbourhood Energy Utility down below. The NEU transfers waste heat from area sewers to insulated underground pipes, which in turn distribute the energy (via hot water) to the neighbourhood.

Panoramic views of grey & green as I near the north end of the bridge, with parkland and trails either side of False Creek, framed by city buildings beyond.

Some tucked-away green, a “green” initiative of the City, below the north-end ramparts…

where some local residents sponsor a garden, under the City’s Green Streets program.

I cross Cooperage Way, heading back toward the water, and skirt the side of a kiddy playground. It’s an important amenity, amid grey Creek-side condo towers — “green” in itself, and with the hidden “green” of recycled car tires underfoot instead of concrete.

Plus! all that fresh-mown very green grass. And the intoxicating smell of fresh-mown grass.

More fresh-mown grass, and indeed the mower mowing, as I come alongside Concord Community Park.

Grey & green & “green.” And a question mark. Three acres of park, with basketball and volleyball and table tennis and Muskoka chairs and landscaping, and it’s all swell. It is also, maybe, temporary. Concord = Concord Pacific, “landlord” (as the City itself puts it) of great swathes of this land, and busy building buildings, because that’s what they do. I can’t find any clear statement of whether, or how long, this park will remain green before transforming to the grey of another condo tower.

I do find this City of Vancouver page about Northeast False Creek park design, all about revitalization plans for various City parks in this area. Which is good. The partners, however, are the City, the Vancouver Park Board (which the current City council wants the Province to eliminate) and Concord Pacific (aka the “landlord”).

I’d say the future balance of grey & green is still unknown.

Another unknown, as I round the end of False Creek and pass a bike ramp in Creekside Park.

Not a mystery to rival “who is Banksy?”, but a mystery nonetheless. I’ve seen several other of these whimsical little creations in other parks, signed OXIDE. No clue as to their artist’s identity, not even online — except for various people fretfully asking “Who is OXIDE?” and getting no answer.

The bike path, this bit behind Science World, is always busy. Grey, green and “green.”

I’m particularly taken by the living fences, the way living shoots are bent to edge the landscaping, growing more lush as the season progresses.

Bike accommodation across Quebec Street, on the pavement surround for the Main Street / Science World SkyTrain station.

Lots of grey, and, with those bike racks, some “green.” Literal green in some of the mosaics as well, especially this one in the foreground, titled Environment.

I lean in, to read the sticker somebody has slapped at the centre of each mosaic.

Well now.

If “green” is about preserving the planet, about co-existence and sustainability… then I hereby declare this sticker to be Honorary Green.

May Day, May Dusk

1 May 2025 – May first. Early spring has matured into full-tilt spring.

Days are longer, weather gentler.

The election is over…

and 343 candidates have been transformed into duly elected Members of the House of Commons.

Our cherry trees are also, quite suddenly, transformed.

Leaves take over; spent blossoms now pink-carpet the sidewalks…

and adorn the burls of their once-host trees.

Dude Chilling Park hums with early-evening activity.

As frisbee enthusiasts practise skills in the park itself, Canada geese pace the crosswalk to the north…

and skateboarders mentor each other on the school boundary lane to the east.

By 8:48, the sky over Main Street is still light, but bleached of colour.

The giant crane for the Broadway Subway project is is a severe black silhouette…

while Ray Saunders’ Mount Pleasant clock, a block farther north, is already a-dazzle with its evening lights…

and the block of sidewalk tribute banners, so quiet by day…

applaud the clock with their night-time turquoise glow.

Mind Plans; Feet Don’t Care

23 April 2025 – My mind has created a very clear plan for the morning.

Follow the Quebec Street bioswale — not a ditch! a rainwater gathering/purifying system! — to Science World, down there at False Creek…

do the interview; walk my usual “Cambie Loop” to and over the bridge; and then zigzag eastward back home.

I do the interview. (The Mystery Interview. Be patient, a post will follow.) I start walking west along the False Creek Seawall.

All according to plan.

Suddenly, where Carrall St. butts into the Seawall, my feet execute a sharp right-turn. They don’t even inform my mind, let alone ask permission. They just take mind (and the rest of me) hostage, and execute their own plan.

Away we go. I find myself walking north on Carrall.

I decide not to argue: this could be interesting! The route offers a tidy cross-town slice past Andy Livingstone Park, through Chinatown, on into the Downtown East Side (DTES) and Gastown, all the way to Water Street with Burrard Inlet just beyond.

Poignant, powerful street art at West Pender, by the impressive street artist and DTES resident/advocate, Smokey D.

“It’s by Smokey D,” I hear two street kids say to each other, their voices full of respect. The City agrees. In tribute to his concern for others and use of his skills to inform and empower others, in 2023 Vancouver proclaimed March 11 — his birthday — to be Smokey D Day.

Another downtown symbol at Water and Cambie streets, this one much happier in mood: Raymond Saunders’ 1977 Steam Clock, still puffing steam and, in another 10 minutes, due to mark 12-noon with the opening bars of O Canada.

By now my mind fully supports what my feet set in motion: this is a promising route! I even manage to rediscover the Silvestre café and reacquaint myself with its Peruvian menu — another mug of Chicha Morada (purple corn drink) but this time, a Chicharron sandwich (pork belly) rather than an Alfajor dessert.

At Richards Street, my feet graciously allow my mind some say in what happens next. Continue west another block or two? Or turn south right here? Right here, says my mind, and my feet pivot accordingly.

Yet more patriotic fervour in the Macleod’s window at Richards & West Pender…

and appropriately vintage in style, as befits this rare, used and antiquarian bookstore.

I cross Dunsmuir, where signage informs me that this next stretch of Richards is part of the City’s “blue-green rainwater system.”

The last panel of the sign is an illustration of the pavers involved in the system. The caption asks, “Do they remind you of water flowing towards the tree?”

I step out into the street, check the pavers.

Yes, they do.

Another happy rediscovery, a place I can never find on purpose. I just have to, literally, walk into it…

the joyous, multi-level Rainbow Park at Richards & Smithe.

Getting closer to False Creek with every step!

On past Emery Barnes Park at Davie, and then across Pacific Blvd., right to the tumbling fountains of George Wainborn Park, which slopes down to the Creek.

Eastward along the False Creek Seawall, past a swimming dog (and ball-tossing owner)…

and then I’m beneath the towering girders at the David Lam ferry dock. Each girder base is incised with a different story of time & place.

This one commemorates the Great Fire of 1886…

when, on June 17, an authorized clearing fire on CPR property blazed out of control and destroyed the infant city, whose wooden structures were no match for the wind and flames. In the words of one survivor: “The city did not burn, it simply melted before the fiery blast.”

And then I walk some more, on past the Cambie Bridge, on along to Coopers Mews, with its symbolic barrels on high. At this point, mind, feet and the rest of me all agree on our course of action.

We follow the Mews to Pacific Blvd., and catch a bus for home.

Twists in Time

14 April 2025 – It’s spring time, full-tilt — but even so, twists of last fall and winter are still woven into the offering.

We’re once again at the VanDusen Botanical Garden. We’re eager for spring and, at first, that’s all we see.

Western skunk cabbages are once again a-glow in the boggy creek that feeds into Livingstone Lake…

and trilliums, Ontario’s provincial flower, are in their seasonal glory on a slope in the VanDusen’s Eastern North America garden.

Then we begin to notice the overlaps, the twists in time.

Glossy two-tone Southern Magnolia leaves are always with us…

but all around the R. Roy Forster Cypress Pond, those same two tones tell a more complex story. Here the green of new ferns begins to rise above the year-round ochre of cypress “knees.”

Just off the north end of the pond, the shadow fork of a still-bare deciduous tree frames the spring blossoms of this burst of Snake’s Head…

while over at the north end of Heron Lake, this Japanese Maple doesn’t yet obscure the long view down the lake. (But just wait another few weeks! Those leaves are about to unfurl.)

Face to face with the spring blossoms of this Sargent’s Magnolia, we’re also face to face with fall and winter. Petals already litter the ground — where they lie atop the desiccated leaves that fell last year. Visible also, there in the lower left quadrant of the photo, another reminder of last year: rusty skeletons of Mophead Hydrangea.

In the Fern Dell, the Tasmanian Tree Fern is — I think — putting out new spring fronds. (A hemispheric twist in time: from the Down-Under cycle of seasons, to our own, here in the Up-Over.)

There are things that don’t change, such as the deep-textured bark of a mighty Douglas Fir..

and things that do, such as the intricate spring coils of the Hedge Fern.

An old Emperor Oak leaf is caught in the glossy leaves of an Autumn Camellia (which saves its blooms, thank you very much, for fall)…

and this season’s cherry blossoms are already flying through the air like confetti…

as if they know that the Sakura Days Japanese Fair has now ended.

No, I take that back.

Yes, the Fair has ended, and yes, petals are flying — but these Daybreak Cherry trees are still laden with blossoms.

How fitting that the marble sculpture they shelter, titled Woman, is by Japanese artist Kiyoshi Takahashi.

Signs of These Times

10 April 2025 – Signs take many forms.

There are nature’s signs, for example, created by nature and marking nature’s own events…

and then there are human signs, created by humans in response to human-generated events.

This spring, they are plentiful.

We see them tucked among the café stir-sticks…

blazoned across store-front windows…

and even…

unexpectedly & heart-warmingly…

taped to a utility pole.

3 x W

6 April 2025 – Three images from the last two days, and the subsequent discovery that all three dance to the letter “W.”

Water…

and Wood…

and Wall.

This one embodies a more complicated bit of alphabet than its companions. At the time, any designation would have been “S-for-shadow.” Because… well, look at it. Look how that boring wire-mesh fence throws filigree shadow on the rusted corrugated metal.

Even if we boot “S” to the sidelines, we can still applaud this image as a triple-W, all by itself.

Wall, check.

Also, Warehouse, check. The rusty metal covers a ramshackle old warehouse on False Creek South, one I’ve eyed with fascination for the last seven years, wondering whether entropy or the bulldozer would finally bring it down.

Turns out: bulldozer. The cheerful young City employee padlocking a bit of the security fence told us that yes, the building is about to be razed — but the wood will be saved.

W for wood!

“Inside this metal crap, it’s all old-growth timber. Old growth! Still in good shape. We’ll be taking it apart piece by piece, because the City plans to reassemble it as part of an industrial-heritage display.”

No, he didn’t know how soon, or where. We then grimaced our mutual recognition of the best-laid plans of mice, men and civic authorities.

Still! It’s W-for-wonderful.

(Says Walking Woman.)

Zen & the Thoughtful Dog

31 March 2025 – Neither Zen nor any kind of dog is in my mind, as I step out the door into the fresh morning air.

My mind is perfectly happy with just the beginnings of a plan: walk to False Creek; take a ferry from Olympic Village to Granville Island; walk on west along the Seawall at least to Vanier Park, then head south into town, and then… Oh, never mind. Events will take over. As they do.

I’ll see what I see.

Vehicular back-chat in an alley, for starters…

followed by back-chat on a literal human back, as I near the Olympic Village dock on False Creek.

When I tell the cheerful young couple that I admire the image, the story gets even better. As he poses for my camera, he prompts her to take credit and explain. Turns out this is a line of jackets rightly called SwapWear, since — thanks to zippers and Velcro — you can swap out that back panel for additional choices. A changeable art gallery, right there on your back.

I walk off, much amused, to catch my ferry.

I’d’ve been even more amused had I known that — along with a Thoughtful Dog — more cat’s ears and more fish would become part of this walk as well.

But I don’t know that. And my Aquabus ride is quite enough to keep me up-energy and happy with the day.

Last time I was on Granville Island was February 20, when my post title summarized the experience: Off-Season Drizzle. Now the site is all warmth! and people! and signs everywhere that a new season has arrived.

Dragon boats are already in the water, with trainee crews digging in furiously as their trainers just as furiously shout instructions. Much more peacefully, racing sculls and kayaks are piled in colourful stacks at water’s edge.

I walk on, per my sort-of plan.

But not for very long.

I’m barely at the public fish market when detour signs send me inland. I had forgotten the mammoth construction project down there at water’s edge. Oops. Time to channel, yet again, the wisdom of a dear Toronto friend and co-founder of our two-woman Tuesday Walking Society. Every time we miscalculated and had to backtrack, she’d shrug. “We’re out for a walk,” she’d remind me. “It’s all walking.”

So I behave myself, navigate boring stretches that are nonetheless All Walking, and keep heading west, as close to the water as possible.

I am rewarded for all that good behaviour at the corner of West 1st and Burrard — just across the street from the point where (I’m pretty sure) I’ll be able to work my way down to the Seawall again. As I wait for the lights to change, I notice a little girl and her parents, also waiting.

I compliment her on her cat’s ears headband; we agree Cats Are The Best. She raises her hand, to show me the bouquet of flowers she has just picked. We further agree that Dandelions Are The Best. Red light turns green, and she scampers ahead toward Seaforth Peace Park, calling back as she goes: “Mummy! Look! More flowers!”

Her mum reminds her to pick only three, “and leave the rest for the bees and the birds.”

All this causes me to notice the chamomile blossoms scattered through the grass…

and also the craggy rock sculpture rising up from the grass. It is message-heavy.

First I read the plaque, describing this tribute by the Latin American community to the courage of their first wave of immigration (talk about the entangled nature of darkness and light)…

and then I read the incised recipe for Sopa Sur, “enjoyed all over Latin America.”

Iconic seafood soup, something I might not have discovered, but for a little girl with cat’s ears on her head.

(Is Sopa Sur part of your life? Have you comments, or a recipe to share? I’d love to hear.)

And then, yes, I do make my way back to the Seawall, and yes there are people and dogs and benches and blossoms and crows and gulls all around. And chamomile blossoms in the grass.

And, as I round the curve to the west end of Vanier Park, there is also the Blue Cabin

the floating artist residency program, now moored in Heritage Harbour alongside the Vancouver Maritime Museum. On April 1st, it will welcome its first resident artist of the new season.

On round the next curve, on to Kitsilano Beach Park, where nobody is waiting for April first.

Dogs are in the water, or furiously chasing sticks. Humans are on the beach proper, though still well bundled up. The day may be warm, as early spring goes, but the temperature is only about 10C.

Then I see the one exception to all this prudent behaviour: a woman stripped to her bathing suit, explaining herself to a clearly amazed, and very fully clothed, passer-by.

Enough chat. Putting her body where her mouth was, she runs into the water and starts swimming.

I admire her, but I’m glad to be up here on the path. Where I also admire the beach volleyball net being slung into position.

It’s the last to go up, the other seven courts are already in full swing. (Full swing? I didn’t plan the pun, but let’s all enjoy it.)

Time for city sidewalks, I decide. I leave the park at its Cornwall St. border to head south on Yew. Smack on the corner, a combination I was not expecting.

It seems to work. I don’t know how many eyeglasses they’re selling, but the café end of things is doing a brisk trade.

Another unexpected combination, a few blocks farther south.

I finally meet the Thoughtful Dog!

Oh all right, Zen and dog are not woven into one package, not like the eyewear/espresso duo — but they are visually if not commercially paired, and that’s quite enough for me.

More city blocks, a break for lunch (avo-chicken sandwich plus butternut squash soup, yum), and after a while I’m on West 10th.

Here, near Hemlock, a fresh new camellia blossom showing all those buds how it’s done…

and here, at Birch, a lot of weary old skateboard tips,,,

that still provide, despite their age, a crisp, good-humoured edge to the volunteer-tended traffic circle and sidewalk gardens.

Just past Oak, I stop to take one last picture.

A couple of pedestrians pass behind me.

She says: “Canadian flags!”

He says: “Looks good, doesn’t it.”

Le 6 AM (& Other Discoveries)

29 March 2025 – I’m still pursuing light, as a resource for coping with darkness. This time, not physical light, but emotional — small things I notice along the way that encourage, impress or just plain amuse me.

Truly small, truly everyday. That’s what I like most about them.

For example, the City’s network of bike lanes…

this one veering past a corner cafe’s turquoise “tiny free library” over there by the flower bed.

I check it out. At the top, the slogan “freely take, freely give, for the joy of sharing”; at the bottom, a bin marked “free dog toys/balls.” I do take a book (one of Reginald Hill’s old Dalziel & Pascoe series), knowing I’l be dropping it off again, one of these days.

Next corner over, a young woman with skis on her shoulder.

Still ski season at altitude — and available by public transit, all the way from downtown Vancouver. She’s not dressed for skiing today, but she could do it, if she wanted to.

Meanwhile, here at sea level…

the forsythia is in full bloom.

Skis and spring blossoms, all at the same time!

Two more blocks, and I’m startled to a full stop by this front gate notice.

Arguably this speaks to darkness, not light, in that it’s about bullying. On the other hand, it’s also all about defiance, and I like the thought of Old Wrinklies speaking up. (Being one myself.)

Another block or so, and a passing teenage girl, noticing my fixed attention, tracks my gaze with her own. We then wag heads at each other in mutual admiration…

for the preening window-framed cat. Feline living art.

More frames, more art, down by Cambie Street, where the fence around subway project construction is a display of an elementary school project.

Here’s my favourite, this child’s joke about the station due to be built at this very corner.

Across Broadway, north toward the water, under the Cambie Bridge ramps as I make my way to the False Creek Seawall. It’s mostly bleak under here, yes it is… but there’s always something.

This invitation, for example.

“Le 6 am club”? “Communauté de course”? Later, I look it up. In both official languages, the website invites early risers to get together once a week, at a given location, for a group run.

I am not about to join them but I am delighted the club exists.

As I am to see — even if only in peripheral remnants — the splendid 2014 mural painted by Emily Gray plus 100 volunteers all over the Spyglass Place ferry dock.

Murals fade, other pleasures endure. Sitting on a log just off Hinge Park, for example, and letting the world go by.

A small act of public kindness, down by the Olympic Village dock. Someone lost track of her pretty straw hat…

and someone else has hung it high, to increase the chance its owner can find it again.

Turning south from the water back towards city streets, I’m cheered by the energy of a pair of junior skateboarders, even more so since one of them is a kick-ass little girl.

And I’m even more, even-more cheered to see them screech to a halt, joined by a slightly older girl on her own two legs.

What stops them? A sign. It blares, “What’s This?”, and they’ve decided to find out. Little boy reads it aloud, older girl hugs younger girl.

Having educated themselves, they zoom off. I promptly move in, to see for myself.

The sign tells me, and I tell you: this is not a ditch. “This bioswale collects and cleans one-third of the rainwater that falls on streets, plazas and other public land in Olympic Village.” All part of Vancouver’s rain city strategy.

One last small delight.

Right in front of me, as I wait for traffic lights to change, just a block from home.

Happy socks!

I am not tra-la-la. My clenched belly shivers with the darkness, all around. But neuroscience tells us that darkness is not the whole story, and noticing the whole story will help. “When you tilt toward the good, you’re not denying or resisting the bad. You’re acknowledging the whole truth, all the mosaic tiles of life…” (Rick Hanson, PhD, Buddha’s Brain.)

The Light!

25 March 2025 – Politically, the world grows steadily darker. All the more reason to notice and embrace light, whenever and however it presents itself. It, too, is real, and it offers us courage and strength and joy.

I am giddy with it, this early-spring evening: temperature well into the teens, and each day longer than the one before.

It is 7:30 in the evening, and the sky is still bright. The crows have not yet flown home to Burnaby (mid-winter, they go through by 4:30 or so), and — look — golden sunlight still bounces off the library branch window opposite my building.

Here’s the source: the sun just dipping out of sight in the western sky, the sky itself warm with rosy-gold.

Over at Dude Chilling Park, just minutes later, women chat beneath a sky that has now lost its rosy-gold, but is still bright with pink and blue.

Daffodils offer their own gold to the sky, tall against the community garden fence. Warmth & light inform the scene: children romp just inside the fence, parents call encouragement from the far side of their allotment and, behind them, the west face of the school building is a-glow.

But by now, natural light is fading fast. Tree branches are black against the sky…

and it is street lights that illuminate these butterfly ornaments draped on a residential tree…

and it is the security light in someone’s yard that pops my own silhouette back at me from the directional arrow in this traffic circle.

Car lights glitter on the leaves of a street-side hedge…

residents’ lights tumble a visual waterfall through this apartment building…

and the entrance to a neighbouring building punches its shaft of light & colour out onto the street.

Only 45 minutes since I left my door, and artificial light, city light, is now dominant. I peer down an alley, looking for a bit of sky that is still itself, still wears its own colours.

There.

The last washes of indigo and pewter-grey.

Good night.

  • WALKING… & SEEING

    "Traveller, there is no path. Paths are made by walking" -- Antonio Machado (1875-1939)

    "The voyage of discovery is not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes" -- Marcel Proust (1871-1922)

    "A city is a language, a repository of possibilities, and walking is the act of speaking that language, of selecting from those possibilities" -- Rebecca Solnit, "Wanderlust: A History of Walking"

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