Goat kids in pajamas catch 230,000 clicks for fun

Brother and sister goat kids are a sensation in patterned pajamas as seen at their home at Sunflower Farm Creamery in Maine. It is said by the owners that the siblings are headed for a future as milking goats on the farm. Winifred and Monty are Nigerian Dwarf Goats and look comfy in the management’s goat pajamas during a spell of rainy cold weather. They don’t leave then barn even though they could. So far nearly 230,000 have looked at the video.

Go Green Field of Dreams opens Thursday afternoon

Thursday, June 4, 2015 will mark the opening of what organizers are calling the Thorncliffe and Flemingdon Park Field of Dreams. The new Go Green multisport facility officially opens for community use at 2:30 p.m.  Activities start with a Grand Match on the Home Ground between the Toronto Police Cricket Club and the Go Green Youth Coaches Team at the site in the back yard of Valley Park Middle School (VPMS), 130 Overlea Blvd. “This is a very special event for Go Green and VPMS. Although we must still raise funds to erect our LED sports lights, we are very excited to open after so much collective effort went into raising $1.75 million dollars, since the dream began in 2010,” says VPMS principal and Go Green Co-Chair Nickolas Stefanoff. June 4 opening of Go Green Cricket Field 

Average detached home in City now at $1.15 million

May figures from the Toronto Real Estate Board reveal a full-fledged sales boom in Toronto, with detached homes hitting on average $1.15 million. It is a staggering realization for many, despite all the amazing increases which have gone before. The average selling prices of houses and condos combined climbed 11 per cent last month, year over year, to $649,599. That’s up from $584,946 just a year ago. The MLS Home Price Index Composite Benchmark was up just 8.9 per cent reflecting the increased sales of high-end homes from a year ago, skewing average sales prices upward.

Building lots “gobsmacking”

It is supply and demand on steroids. Listings are said to be way behind potential buyers. Bidding wars and bully offers are exceeding asking  prices. Sales are up 18.2 per cent in the last year. In Leaside and Davisville Village builders are in ferocious bidding wars to get access to mud under an old house. According to a real estate source, the gobsmacking price of $1 million+ is the norm for a lot in Leaside. “Bidding wars and bully offers have been rampant in the “South Bayview” area this spring!  Not enough supply.”

Loblaws, Sobey’s and the march of the cost of food

A court order for Loblaws to hand over many company records to the Federal Competition Bureau is causing interest. The bureau evidently is concerned that the big grocer’s business practices in dealing with suppliers represent a threat to the open market. It’s about how much you pay for food and whether it can reasonably be said to be too much.  For Loblaws and the other giant retailer Sobey’s, is will be about margins.  That’s where brand names like Silk soy beverage get squeezed off the shelf at Loblaws. It’s a popular product but Loblaws thinks it can make more money by using the shelf space for something else. There is lots of competition for Loblaws, a sure force for keeping prices down. There are curious anomalies too. Like Dole non-organic bananas at 69 cents per pound at the high-end Summerhill Market, eight cents less than at Loblaws at 301 Moore where the price is 77 cents a pound. Go figure. The Toronto Star quotes an industry lobby source, Gary Sands, as saying:  “We think this investigation underscores the need for a code of conduct in Canada to govern the grocery industry.” A nice idea but does it inspire much confidence? The bureau meanwhile says it has determined that Loblaws practices with manufacturers and suppliers may “impact the incentives and conduct of suppliers to Loblaw and the ability of other retailers to compete vigorously with Loblaw, particularly on price and product selection.” That smells a bit like restraint of trade, which is the bureau’s main bete noire. One thing is certain, there is enormous competition in South Bayview for your grocery dollars. The newly renovated Metro has a dazzling array of food.  Whole Foods is set to open at 1860 Bayview Ave. next year. Longo’s is an aggressive promoter of its Leaside Village store and Rowe Farm Meats on Bayview is now selling fish. Sobey’s is ever-present and Summerhill Market has two fine stores. Got enough choice?

 

Banff Road annual street sale includes as many as 15 homes

Monica Franklin writes to say the Banff Road annual street sale will again benefit from the efforts of at least 15 families in the stretch of Banff between Eglinton Ave.East and Soudan Ave. It is scheduled to go this Saturday, June 6 between 8 a.m.and 2 p.m.  Thinking ahead, there is a rain date of Sunday, June 7, 2015. Items are said to include china, rockers, antique picture frames, railway items, an aquarium, two sewing machines plus tables, portable sewing machine, dining room light fixture. This street sale offers to feed you too. Hot dogs and beverages.

Saks will place flagship brand alongside Off 5th bargains

Marina Strauss writes in the Globe and Mail that Saks Fifth Avenue, which is owned by the Hudson’s Bay Co. will bring with it to Toronto the discount chain Off 5th. as it opens stores next year. Unlike in the U.S. Saks will apparently locate Off 5th stores nearby or next to its Saks branded outlets. It seems like an effort to build volume regardless of previously finicky concerns about location. Ms Strauss quotes Jerry Storch, CEO of Hudson’s Bay, for this information.

Rosedale architect Roger de Toit dead in cycling accident

roger

Roger de Toit, a well known Rosedale architect, has died of his injuries in a cycling accident May 19, 2015. Mr. de Toit’s bicycle was in a collision with a light SUV at Roxborough St. E. and Wrentham Place. He died at Sunnybrook Hospital. The collision occurred as he rode north on Wrentham. He collided with an eastbound vehicle driven by a 43-year-old woman. PC Clint Stibbe of TPS traffic says the investigation into the accident is ongoing. Mr. de Toit was a distinguished member of his profession and a founder of the firm DTAH. The victim was friendly with fellow cyclists in Rosedale. One report says that a memorial ghost bike ride is being organized. Police say the investigation is ongoing and asked anyone with information to contact traffic services at 416-808-1900 or Crime Stoppers anonymously.

Sepp Blatter quits as new scandal snares pal Jerome Valcke

blatter-valcke

In a stunning announcement made at a hastily called news conference Tuesday (June 2, 2015) in Zurich, FIFA President Sepp Blatter said he will resign after FIFA elects a new leader at an “extraordinary congress” that will be called by the organization’s executive committee. It appears that cannot happen until September. But the situation is fluid. The defiant Blatter reversed himself as his second-in command Jerome Valcke was named by U.S. investigators as the authority for  a $10 million wire transfer that ended up vanishing into the murky coffers of corrupt officials in New York and Trinidad. Valcke is  FIFA’s secretary general and works hand-in-glove with Blatter. It seems the splattering mud of corruption has landed on Blatter himself.  A spokeswoman for FIFA said the $10 million in bank transactions were authorized by the then-FIFA Finance Committee chairman. The Finance Committee chairman was Julio Grondona, who died last year.