Tag Archives: Toronto Events

Triumph and Tragedy at the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon

Each of the thousands of athletes running the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon has a story. Here are ten tales from this windswept test of endurance and conditioning that concluded “Toronto Marathon Week” (as proclaimed by Mayor Rob Ford).

Four Leading Men Celebrated Four Victories in the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon

The four fastest finishers in the marathon were Kenneth Mungara, Shami Abdulahi Dawit, Reid Coolsaet and Eric Gillis.

Kenneth Mungara nipped Shami Abdulahi Dawit by about one-third of a second, in 2 hours, 9 minutes and 50 seconds (2:09:50). Mungara’s  margin of victory was 0.3 out of 7790 seconds, or 0.004%. Think about that when you see a photo-finish in the 100m.

It was Mungara’s fourth victory in the STWM (Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon). We hope Dawit was proud of his hard-earned silver finish.

Coolsaet and Gillis were jubilant Canadians. They clinched their status as teammates going to the 2012 London Olympics. Canada will indeed be represented in the men’s marathon event once again.

Coolsaet earned his bronze in the 2011 STWM in 2:10:55. Apparently this included a quick “bathroom break”. It was a personal best, but it fell short of the Canadian men’s record of 2:10:09 set by Jerome Drayton thirty-six years ago in Japan.

Gillis finished fourth in 2:11:27, with one second “to spare” in meeting the Canadian Olympic qualifying time of 2:11:29 for men’s marathon.

How Fast Are These Men Running the Marathon?

To put these times in perspective, finishing in 2:07 requires an average 20 Kph speed over the 42.2Km of a marathon. That is the recommended maximum speed for bicycles on Toronto’s Martin Goodman Trail.

Top Three Women of the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon

Koren Yal won the women’s gold in the 2011 STWM in 2:22:42. She was 13th overall, with a narrow victory over fellow Ethiopian Mare Dibaba in 2:23:35 (15th overall). Yal was not sure her time would qualify her for the Ethipian Olympic team, since others have also raced in 2:22 elsewhere.

Silviya Skvortsova of Russia was third, in 2:27:51 (17th overall).

Two World Records Without Winning in the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon

How can you set a world record without winning? You do have to win your age category…just ask Ed Whitlock and Fauja Singh.

80 Years Old but Top 300 for Ed Whitlock

"Ed Whitlock, age 80, in March 2011" by by susayoun237 (Susan Young)
"Ed Whitlock, age 80, in March 2011" by susayoun237 (Susan Young)

Ed Whitlock placed 296th overall but set the world record for men 80 years of age in 3:15:54. Living in Milton, Ontario, Whitlock has more age-group records at a variety of distances than one would be able to “shake a stick at”.

Whitlock had set age-group marathon records at previous STWM events..

Fauja Singh with Success at 100 Years of Age

Fauja Singh is listed near the end of the race results page, coming in at #3849 overall of 3858 finishers, of whom some were his entourage. His time of 8:25:16 should not be regarded as a slow marathon pace, but contrasted with the number of hours anyone would put into a day of work.

This is the ninth world record Fauja Singh claimed this week. As reported in “Records and Relays Before the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon“, he set eight records at Birchmount in shorter distances in just one morning.

As well, he had set the world record for men in their 90s at a previous STWM.  Fauja Singh raises money for charities, with a special focus for helping children.

To put his triumph into perspective, some 97 people started the STWM, crossed at least the first timed checkpoint at the 10Km mark, but failed to cross the finish line.

Bonus Congratulations in the 2011 STWM Half Marathon and 5Km

Congratulations to Thomas Breitbach (1:07:21) and Leslie Sexton (1:16:33) for winning the men’s and women’s half marathon events, respectively.

Likewise to Jeremy Walsh (15:37.5) and Kerri Cook (17:38.8) in the 5Km.

One Death in 2011’s STWM Half Marathon

Tragically, one 27 year old man died near the finish of the half marathon. The National Post reported, “Between 2002 and 2006, there were at least four deaths at Toronto races”. (My own fallible memory is that Toronto has averaged about one death every two or three years, between what is now the Goodlife Fitness Toronto Marathon and the STWM. This includes both the marathon and the half marathon distances. Chicago and Montreal also have recently experienced similar losses).

I have not been able to find his name in the news reports. May his family and friends find support and consolation to help them through this time of grief.

[Added 2011-10-22]: On Oct. 22, the Toronto Star reported that Kale Garner was the 27-year-old man who died in the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon. He was running his first half-marathon, paced by co-worker Angela Shryane in her eighth. Garner had not mentioned any trouble through the 20.8Km that he did cover. Garner was following Shryane closely near the finish; then he fell. Prompt medical assistance failed to revive him. The cause of death is not yet known.

References:

Paul Gains, STWM, “Mungara Wins Toronto Fourth Time”, Oct. 16, 2011.

Postmedia News via National Post, “Runner’s death overshadows Mungara’s 4th Toronto marathon win”, Oct. 16, 2011.

Mike DeHaan, DeHaan Services, “Records and Relays Before the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon“, Oct. 14, 2011.

Mike DeHaan, DeHaan Services,”Kew Garden Ceremony for the 2011 Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon“, Sept. 28, 2011.

Paul Hunter, Toronto Star, “Kale Garner had everything going for him when he died running a half-marathon“, Oct. 22, 2011.

Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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Kew Garden Ceremony for the 2011 Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon

The New Calendar Schedule for the Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon

Thinking about Canadian Thanksgiving, which is coming up for Oct. 10, 2011, reminded me that the Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon will be scheduled for “the Sunday after Canadian Thanksgiving Monday”.

This year, the date is Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011.

This is the date formerly used by the Goodlife Fitness Toronto Marathon, which was bumped into the spring season.

How Kew Gardens Fits into Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon Events

Kew Gardens has two (count them 2!) links to this event.

"Old House in Kew Garden" by John Vetterli
"Old House in Kew Garden" by John Vetterli

Light the Flame on Friday in Kew Gardens

First, the “Marathon Flame Lighting Ceremony” will be held on Friday Oct. 14 at 8am at the Alex Christie Bandshell in Toronto’s Kew Gardens.

This early-morning event pays homage to the Olympic tradition of running a torch from Athens to the Olympics site. Beach Councillor Mary Margaret McMahon is expected to be one of the dignitaries.

For Toronto’s Beach community, this represents an opportunity to cheer and watch the start of a relay run, bringing the torch to the Direct Energy Building on the CNE grounds.

The CNE will host a press conference at 10am or so, and is also the race kit pick-up site. (The marathon runners already know that they should pick up their race kits, with the all-important numbered bib and electronic timing chip, on Friday or Saturday)

Toronto Traffic Warning for Friday, Oct. 14

Every important Toronto event must include a traffic warning.

Although running the torch along the Martin Goodman Trail will avoid disrupting the Beach neighbourhood, they still have to contend with Queen’s Quay.

Be prepared for reports from 680 News and every other traffic reporting news service.

Kew Gardens and Toronto’s Beach Neighbourhood on Race Day, Sunday Oct. 16, 2011

The Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon starts at 9am from University Avenue, north of Adelaide Street. The route includes Lake Shore Blvd East from Leslie to Coxwell; Eastern Avenue to Queen St. at Kingston Road; Queen Street eastbound to Neville Park and the TTC streetcar turnaround point; and westbound on Queen St. and Eastern Avenue onto Front Street.

DeHaan’s Guide for Marathon Spectators at the 2011 Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon

Choose any spot between Kew Gardens and the park on the south-east corner of Queen and Kingston Road. Bring a noisemaker or clapping-stick balloon set, so you can show your endurance as you applaud these athletes.

These locations are ideal because you can see the runners between the 30 and 36Km distances of the total 42.2Km route. Compare the pace of eastbound and westbound runners at any one moment. Pick out a memorable eastbound individual and watch for him or her to return: has the speed decreased or the pain increased?

Admire the determination of these runners, and perhaps consider signing up for an endurance fitness program yourself.

If you must walk or cycle across the race course:

  • Look first
  • Be sure you don’t get in the way or impede the runners
  • Give them a lot of room! (From my experience, they will have no energy to dodge out of your way!)

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Toronto’s Beach Neighbourhood Traffic Warning for Sunday, Oct. 16

Traffic control will begin early on Sunday morning. Expect barricades and polite people asking you not to ram them.

Do not try to drive through the barricades once the runners start to arrive.

The leading men should reach the 30Km mark on Coxwell by 10:30am or shortly thereafter. The world record pace is a shade quicker than 3 minutes per kilometre: that’s 20kph, or the speed limit for bicycles on the Martin Goodman Trail!

The merely human runners will continue running in the Beach until mid-afternoon. The intersection of Eastern and Coxwell is about the 36Km mark. The slowest athletes might not reach this point until about 2pm.

The plan is to finish opening all roads for normal traffic by 3pm.

Mayor Rob Ford Proclaims “Toronto Marathon Week”

Read the proclamation from Toronto’s mayor, Rob Ford,  that Oct. 10-16 is “Toronto Marathon Week“.

I am personally gratified that Mayor Ford is aligning himself and Toronto City Council with this important event, particularly due to his earlier comments about the need for cars to take precedence over road closures for athletic competitions.

"Rome Marathon 2010" by Giulio Menna
"Rome Marathon 2010" by Giulio Menna

Civic Footnote (updated Oct. 5, 2011)

The Toronto Star reported that some city council members are upset that Spring 2012 will see Yonge Street closed thrice for 3 running events. The displaced GoodLife Fitness Toronto Marathon moved from autumn to spring. That bumped the long-established Sporting Life 10Km run, apparently causing a rumpus with its race director, who has applied to organize another 10Km along Yonge Street.

Allow me to throw some editorial raspberries. First, to those council members who, apparently, did not mark up a calendar with all the conflicting events. Secondly, to both Alan Brookes and Jay Glassman. They are the organizers for these various events; they, of all people, should have touched base with the rest of the Sporting Life organization as well as informing Council of all the conflicting schedule moments. Especially to Mr. Brookes, who had been the Sporting Life organizer and did not keep them informed; and who decided to insert the new event.

Let’s throw a raspberry for lack of originality. How many other civic centres does Toronto have? (Etobicoke and East York and Scarborough each have one, far removed from Yonge Street). How many 10Km stretches of road does Toronto have, at least 2Km away from Yonge Street? (“I dunno. Lots”).

The Toronto Star headline (“Traffic chaos looms over running events”) is overdrawn and misleading. Each “traffic chaos” event will be its own crisis. Closing the same road three times over five weeks will be aggravating, but each inconvenience happens at its own time.

Finally: if anyone complains about a “conflict” with the Toronto Ride for Heart on June 3, 2012, please be prepared for another blast of raspberries. They take over the high-speed DVP (Don Valley Parkway, for non-Torontonians) and Gardiner Expressways, not city streets.

References from the Waterfront Marathon Site

References are from the Toronto Scotiabank Waterfront Marathon web site and accessed Sept. 28, 2011:

Event Information“.

Marathon Flame…“.

STWM Route Map“.

The 2011 MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale Event at Black Creek Pioneer Village

The 2013 MCC Sale at Black Creek Pioneer Village

(Updated Aug. 11, 2014): Please see my 2014 article, “Two Quilt Events at Black Creek Pioneer Village in Toronto” for the updates, including an August quilt show and sale organized by a completely different organization.

(Added Sept. 1, 2013 and updated Sept. 1, 2014): Starting in 2013, this annual Toronto event will add the title, “Toronto Mennonite Festival”, to its name. Visit us on Sat. Sept. 20, 2014.

(Updated Aug. 11 & Sept. 10, 2012). MCC (Mennonite Central Committee) will hold the 2012 Relief Sale on Sat. Sept. 15. I’ve added a new article, “2012 Quilt Auction at the Black Creek Pioneer Village Relief Sale“.

Most of the details and links in this article are still true!

This Annual Event is in the Past: The Black Creek Pioneer Village Fall Festival

Toronto’s premier annual fall fair, the Black Creek Pioneer Village 55th Annual Pioneer Festival will welcome the MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale on Sat. Sept. 17, 2011 at 10am.

The next festival will be Sat. Sept. 21, 2013.

"Hand-Made Ice Cream"
“Hand-Made Ice Cream”

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What is the MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale Event at Black Creek Pioneer Village?

The Quilt Auction is a fund-raising project for MCC. The relief sale includes vegetables or pies to take home; ready-to-eat foods such as pie, roasted chicken legs, corn on the cob, Sloppy Joe on a bun, Asian cuisine; jams and preserves; and more.

Each hand-made quilt, requiring many hours of piecing and stitching, is donated to this auction.

This Toronto event is a significant regional fund-raising opportunity for MCC. It is also a terrific family event with the opportunity to learn about pioneer life. Quilt collectors can bid for bargains or compete for a high-quality display quilt.

What is MCC (Mennonite Central Committee)?

MCC, or Mennonite Central Committee, is a service organization supported by many Mennonite denominations. It “shares God’s love and compassion for all in the name of Christ by responding to basic human needs and working for peace and justice”.

One specific example in 2011: providing relief from drought and famine in East Africa. They were in Haiti after the earthquake and in Indonesia after the 2007 tsunami.

MCC is one of the most effective relief and service organizations in the world, largely because they partner with local agencies and organizations, and because they usually take a long-term approach even when responding to immediate needs.

Let me introduce you to MCC through my article “Modern Mennonite Relief Organizations and Service Agencies“, or read the official MCC web site.

Where Does the Money Go?

Proceeds go to MCC for its relief efforts throughout the world: famine and drought relief in East Africa; aid after natural disasters; and many other projects.

The organizers run a separate fundraising event as part of their annual general meeting. Local Mennonites cover nearly all the costs associated with the event, to ensure the public’s money goes toward MCC’s relief efforts.

What is Black Creek Pioneer Village?

Black Creek Pioneer Village plunges its visitors into the “lifestyles, customs, and surroundings of…the typical crossroads community village found in the Toronto area during the 1800’s”.

Owned and operated by the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority, Black Creek Pioneer Village has authentic “period” buildings and artifacts. Staff and volunteers re-enact the trades and lifestyles befitting those historic times.

Livestock also lives at Black Creek Pioneer Village. Vegetable gardens are cultivated and harvested. Read more at the official Black Creek Pioneer Village web site.

Where is Black Creek Pioneer Village?

Black Creek Pioneer Village is at 1000 Murray Ross Parkway in north-west Toronto, just east of Jane Street on the south side of Steeles Avenue. It is on the west side of the York University Campus.

How can I Find Black Creek Pioneer Village?

From highway 401, take highway 400 north and exit onto eastbound Steeles Avenue.

From highway 407 take Jane Street southbound, then turn east onto Steeles Avenue.

From highway 400 southbound, take highway 7 eastbound, then turn south onto Jane Street and later east onto Steeles Avenue.

Parking costs $6 for the day.

The TTC’s Steeles West 60 bus arrives from the Yonge/Steeles station. The Jane 35 bus connects from the Bloor/Jane station.

York Region Transport serves Black Creek Pioneer Village with the Route 10 (Woodbridge) and Route 20 (Jane-Concord) bus lines.

What will it Cost to enter Black Creek Pioneer Village and the MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale Event?

Black Creek Pioneer Village charges admission, from $11 to $15 per person depending on age. Taxes are extra.

There is no additional admission charge for the MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale event. You will be tempted to eat your way through the village green, typically for $5 or so per plate. You can hope to catch a bargain on a small quilt, or be prepared for a bidding war for the most coveted full-size quilts.

When will the MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale Event at Black Creek Pioneer Village be Held?

The MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale Event at Black Creek Pioneer Village will be held on Saturday Sept. 17, starting at 10:00 am.

The quilt auction starts at noon, so arrive early to preview the quilts and find some nourishment.

Further Details about the MCC Quilt Auction and Relief Sale Event at Black Creek Pioneer Village

Catch me at this pioneer festival. I will spend part of the day selling Sloppy Joe snacks (meat or vegetarian) at this fall fair.

For more details, see the official Toronto Mennonite Festival (Black Creek Pioneer Village Relief Sale) web site.