So I had booked last Friday and this week off as holidays. I was feeling rather stressed and frazzled by work, and I needed a break; also I had planned to take another course about the Ontario building code. Well, last Monday (!) I found out that the course had been cancelled. Needing the break and having the holidays anyways, I decided to rravel in spite of things.
Greyhound, in its coporate wisdom, decided to cancel the Saturday bus to Bancroft. This means that I cannot take the bus there and back for a weekend visit without taking a Friday off work.
So Friday (the 23rd of March) I took the bus to from Toronto to Bancroft. The bus goes via Peterborough; it’s about a four-hour journey, though you can drive it in three (or 2.5, if you’re a [del]maniac[/del] trained race-car driver, like my friend Steve (all names changed to grotect the guilty and confound the inquisitive. Except Doper names. We know who you are anyways.))
The bus trip origiates at the Bay Street bus station in downtown Toronto, and the first hour of this trip is spent getting out of Toronto, stopping in the inner burbs at Scarborough Town Centre after 45 minutes). By 1:15 or so into the trip, we exit the 401 at Westney Road in Ajax, and I realise to my dismay that I am on the Bancroft Extremely Local run.
We enter the distressingly-ill-planned town of Ajax, which was more-or-less created out of thin air to house munitions workers during the Second World War and has no centre. The central street, running north-south, is Harwoood Avenue. It’s actually not a badly-designed street, with a grass median, but the surroundings don’t meet that standard. The west side is shopping plazas and parking lots all the way from the Highway 401 overpass south to Bayly Street. The east side is apartment buildings and the Town Hall.
North of the 401, Harwood passes through a few suburbs of ‘temporary’ wartime housing (still occupied these 60+ years later), and then a clutter of ugly commercial buildings, to reach the east-west Old Highway 2. Lately the areas around Hwy. 2 have been invaded and conquered by big-box stores; when I was a kid, it was farms. The ugly quotient is way up.
The bus terminal, such as it is, is a small brick waiting room next to the parking lot of one of the shopping plazas on the west side of Harwood Avenue. We stop and a few people get on. I am dismayed to notice that the Town Hall, an attractively-designed Modern structure in dark textured paneling, has had a hideously-clashing addition grafted all over it. The colours don’t go together at all, and both new and old look cheap and hastily-planned.
The Ministry of Transport, in its infinite wisdom, decided to eliminate the interchange that formerly admitted traffic directly from the 401 to Harwood. They are also widening the freeway to 10 lanes through Ajax. We therefore go east to the Salem Road interchange and rejoin the eastbound 401.
Next stop: Oshawa.