From muddy stream to our own boardwalk

A few months ago, there was still a shrub rose growing at King George Station. I sniffed it en route to work for years. A few weeks ago, that rose was sacrificed to an enormous hole, dug for a new development. Then the fenced and re-routed pedestrian path between the construction site and the station became a stream of running water and mud from the wheel washers. Then someone created a small cement dam along the edge of the chain link fence to redirect the extra water another way.

That only lasted a few days before it was breached by increasing volumes of water, helped on by autumn rains. For now we have our very own raised boardwalk, topped with anti-slip roofing material and decorated with hot pink paint. It's been an interesting evolution of pedestrian pathways. I wonder what's next.
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Frost fringes banana palm at David Hunter's in Surrey

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Remembrance Day: Dad, Louise Penny, the Conscription Crisis, and the Canadian forest