One-Tank Trip for July 6/13
(c) By Jim Fox
Make it a summer of discovery by stepping
back in time, stopping to smell the roses, attending a garden party and
checking out the whatchamacallits.
Buggy
rides, butter tarts
Hitch up to discover the Horse and Buggy
Trail, called a “unique tour of tidy Mennonite farmsteads, old villages and
historic country stores.”
This is in the Township of Southgate in the
southeast corner of Grey County, formed by amalgamated communities including
Dundalk and Holstein, near Mount Forest.
“It is a visit to where we all came from
over a century ago when the villages were just a comfortable buggy ride away
and where farm products were traded for mercantile store goods and
comestibles,” said Linda Reader project coordinator.
This 70-kilometre trail offers visitors a
“chance to be immersed in another culture for a day,” said publicist Janine
Fawcett.
The farm-gate tour welcomes visitors into
the one-of-a-kind rural culture of a Mennonite community.
Quilts, solid-wood furniture, home-made
bread, fresh local meat, delicious baking and fruit pies are found year-round.
An easy-to-follow map makes the self-guided
tour a pleasant drive or for cycling.
Sightseeing bus trips include a back roads
fall colour tour on Sept. 14 while buggy rides can be arranged with two
Mennonite farm families.
An educational excursion visits a family
farm home and vegetable garden, buggy factory, old mill and general store for
penny candy followed by a horse-and-buggy ride.
Chef Gary Gingras of Cedars Cottage Resort
on Lake Eugenia offers a fall overnight package with cooking classes with the
bounty from the trail – from maple syrup to ducks and tunnel tomatoes. horseandbuggytrail.com
Step
back in time
Explore Amish country on bus tours offered
by the Perth County Visitors Association and Cherrey Bus Lines.
Tours on July 26 and Sept. 19 start at the
Perth County Welcome Centre and Artisan Market in Shakespeare (also with a
pickup at the Stratford Festival Marketplace).
It includes a visit to the Ebersol Buggy
Shop, Anna Mae’s Bakery Restaurant for lunch, Millbank Family Furniture and Conestoga
Bird Feed.
An Aug. 23 tour includes the Quilt’s Galore shop
with more than 100 Amish quilts on view and a harness maker. Tours cost $48
plus tax, including lunch. visitperth.ca;
1-888-366-0160
How
does your garden grow?
Colourful and creative private gardens can be viewed across Huron and Perth counties. |
Enjoy a “rare opportunity to see over fences
and hedges at gardens that are lovingly tended” across Huron and Perth
counties.
The self-guided tour includes more than 20
private gardens this month and next, said gardener Rhea Hamilton Seeger.
Gardens of Huron Perth include the Purple Rooster
with an eclectic mix of sun and shade, old and new shrubs and perennials, and Riverbend
Gardens and Nursery with nearly 1,000 varieties of hostas.
Karen Redmond in Auburn uses ornamental
grasses to create a double garden while Brentwood on the Beach B&B has a waterfall
and stream that leads guests to the garden sculptures of Frank Moore. For a
brochure and map: gardensofhuronperth.com
Isn’t
that a party?
Ladies in floppy hats and summer dresses
harken back to simpler
times when garden parties were the rage.
Having fun at the Oxford Garden Party. |
Oxford County was home to the famous Zenda
Garden Party years ago and offers a current version on July 9 from 6 p.m. to 9
p.m.
That’s when the Oxford Garden Party “celebrates
local chefs and farmers” at the Elm Hurst Inn in Ingersoll, said Tourism Oxford
publicist Cathy Bingham.
There will be a five-course dinner created
by some of Oxford’s top chefs.
Tickets are $75 plus tax. oxfordfresh.com; 1-866-801-7368, Ext. 3355
What’s
that?
Rodney Frost Himself is an exhibition of
mechanical toys, whirligigs, kinetic contraptions and whatchamacallits.
One of Rodney Frost’s creations on view in Orillia this summer. |
The show is on through Sept. 15 at the Leacock
Museum National Historic Site in Orillia.
“On the surface, Rodney Frost’s imagination
appears to have gotten the best of him – and as a consequence we are the
beneficiaries,” said Darcy Hoover, Orillia’s
marketing manager.
“Despite having been tagged ‘an emerging
artist’ by the Canada Council, the Orillia resident has doggedly pursued his
muse through what can only be described as a lifetime of modest accomplishments
and monumental setbacks,” said museum curator Fred Addis.
About 30 of Frost’s “whirligigs, mechanical
toys, kinetic contraptions and, for lack of a better word, whatchamacallits,
are featured.” leacockmuseum.com; (705)
326-5578
-30-
Jim Fox
can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
For more
One-Tank Trips: http://1tanktrips.blogspot.ca
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