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Two Little Railways Made North American History
The Toronto Grey & Bruce and the Toronto & Nipissing Railways were the first of their kind on the continent.
Field of Schemes
There’s a population boom coming to Headwaters. Where will all the people go and what will it mean for our countryside?
Enough of Zoomburb
When I moved to Caledon from Toronto in 1974, feeling all starry-eyed and back-to-the-landish, as befitted the mood of the times, the population of the newly minted “town” was just…
Letters – Our readers write: Spring 2008
Letters published in the SPRING 2008 edition of In The Hills magazine.
Bursting bubbles, boosterisms and commoner sense
Boost “Deficit spending is already beyond belief, and the country is hugely indebted, as are households. The housing bubble has already burst. The Federal Reserve has made clear it will…
Jim Reid
“The painting sites I choose are places I have revisited since childhood, and so they are also saturated with personal memory.”
The Party that Grew: Drummers’ Snack
“We did not see a drunken man on the grounds,” observed the Advocate (although the paper did wonder who rang the park bell at 6 a.m. on Saturday morning).
All Abuzz about Honey: Hockley Valley Honey Farm
Dan Garyfalakis surprised his wife Nina with their first pair of beehives as a gift.
Time to buff the barbecue
We recommend grilling red snapper, which is the most popular of the 250 or so varieties of snapper.
A Puzzling Conclusion: Spring 2008
A backyard rescue in Grand Valley, putting things in chronological order and when was Abigail in Shelburne?
A Puzzling Conclusion: Winter 2007
A tavern in East Luther, easy conundrums for speedy solutions and crossing the Humber.



