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Bunch

Bunch

from Toronto

Bunch throws rock concerts, dance parties and artist salons for families and shares information about how to experience the city with your kids. Check out www.bunchfamily.ca to get in on the new family fun!

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Sorauren Park

Rated this place:

50 Wabash Ave, Toronto, ON, M6R 1N2

Totstock

Totstock: A whole bunch of indie rock dads are banding together for Totstock, a festival of music, stories and crafts in support of The High Park Nature Centre, taking place on Father's Day from 2-5 PM at Sorauren Park. This eco, rock and literary festival is spearheaded by Don Kerr, who is performing with The Blue Bin Band. Fellow dad Dave Wall is on tap to perform The Lorax by Dr. Seuss and Andrew Larsen (a dad) will read from his book the Imaginary Garden. Claire Jenkins is performing, too. Dads and kids alike will enjoy her paper hat and penchant for throwing glitter at the crowd. I Eat Kids, a band made up of ten year olds who love their dads will perform as well. Should be a really fun and relaxed way to spend Father's Day listening to music outside with friends in support of a great cause

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Surreal Things at the AGO

Rated this place:

317 Dundas Street West, Toronto, ON, M5T 1G4

Surreal Father's Day

Surreal Father's Day: Take Dad and the rest of your crew to the AGO and catch Surreal Things, an exhibit that brings together some of the weirdest, craziest objects ever made. Start the day of with Absurd Breakfast In Bed (should be easy if you are a crumby cook). Give Dad a Dada gift (could be anything, really, the most random assortment of objects will qualify) then head to the AGO.

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Body Blitz

Rated this place:

471 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, ON, M5V1T1

Mother's Day Beyond Brunch: Spa with Friends

Mother's Day Beyond Brunch: Spa with Friends: My friends are totally obsessed with Body Blitz and have regular girls nights where they go and hang out in the different pools and drink juice. I totally didn't get it until I went. And now I am converted. I think a mother's day soak in the: ~ warm sea salt pool ~ hot green tea pool ~ cold plunging pool ~ aromatherapy steam room ~ infrared sauna ~ showersfor a good 2-3 hours with friends combined with some chocolate, tea or juice would be pretty darn perfect.

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Dufferin Grove Park

Rated this place:

875 Dufferin St., Toronto, ON, M5H2N2

Dufferin Grove Park is awesome

Dufferin Grove Park is awesome: Mad love goes out to Dufferin Grove Park in Bunch’s home city of Toronto as one of the best urban community centres going. Thanks to the work of an awesome bunch of community volunteers, and an organization that isn’t (there are no formal meetings, no committee structure, no charitable status) called Friends of Dufferin Grove Park, the park’s rink house is always abuzz with activity.Friends of Dufferin Grove Park was formed in the early 90s, when a proposed expansion of a nearby mall caused concern for local residents. As a settlement, the mall corporation offered the park $20,000 to spend on new playground equipment. The official parks department meeting was poorly attended but an informal telephone survey found that grown ups wanted more places to sit and access to fresh, healthy food and drink. Kids wanted basketball courts and an adventure playground. Everyone wanted a prettier, more welcoming park.Through 93 and 94, an adventure playground was created, complete with lumber and tools donated by neighbours, community cooking fires were established and a children’s garden was begun. Summer drop in programs were created, allowing kids to do art in the park. In 1995, Dufferin Grove’s first of two outdoor woodburning ovens was built.Today, Dufferin Grove is a community hub. Volunteers can be found tending to several gardens (In addition to the children’s garden there’s a butterfly garden and a kitchen garden.) The park plays host to local theatre troupes, art festivals, and performances. Local schools use the rink and city activists hold their meetings around the cook ovens or in the rink house. Thursdays there’s a farmers market.Community has always organized best over food, and Dufferin Grove Park’s community is no different. Each Friday, many dozens of families flock to the park to share a meal with their neighbours and to talk, play and be a part of a bigger whole.On Sundays, the bake ovens are thrown open to kids and grown-ups alike to make pizzas. Next to the playground and wading pool, The Cob Courtyard, an outdoor adobe structure complete with second wood stove, provides refreshments to parents and kids, so they have more energy to keep on playing outdoors.The neighbourhood reports that the sense of community fostered at the park seems to really make a difference. Youth crime in the area has gone down noticeably since the park’s revitalization. Kids who grow up hanging out in the park feel a sense of connection to their community, they eat together, play together, and, possibly more importantly, plan together.

HALLOWEEN EXPERIENCE
It begins with a fantastical masked community parade though the Dufferin/Bloor/College Street neighbourhood. The parade leads to Dufferin Grove Park where there is a massive spectacle, a bonfire and dancing (to fiddle music with costumed ghosts). This event is too crazy and beautiful to describe. Go!

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Hardboiled Inc.

Rated this place:

82 Nassau Street, Toronto, ON, M5T1M5

Buy Dad a T-Shirt

Buy Dad a T-Shirt: For some reason, when I was a kid it was our family tradition to buy our dad Soap On a Rope EVERY YEAR for Father's Day. We've started a waaay better tradition for my husband. My kids get him a t-shirt from Hardboiled in Kensington every year. Hardboiled works with hot young designers and sells really fresh, cool shirts. The staff and owner are very lovely and they will print any design on a t-shirt colour and style of your choosing. So my kids get to play mini-designer. Inevitably, I wind up buying my kids the same design that they pick out for their dad so they can charm or nauseate our friends and relatives by wearing their matching t-s. I confess, I think it's cute and makes for a nice Father's Day picture. Plus, for some reason my husband will not buy himself t-shirts so the gift is functional.

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Edgefest

Rated this place:

Downsview Park 1-35 Carl Hall Road, Toronto, ON, M3K 2B6

Take Dad to Edgefest

Take Dad to Edgefest: This year's Edgefest is conveniently scheduled on the Saturday before Father's Day and Metric, K-OS and The Stills are playing. This is a great opportunity for a Father's Day date that speaks to your pre-parent identities. Pack a picnic! Get a sitter!

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Luna Cafe

Rated this place:

181 Dovercourt Rd, Toronto, ON, M6J3C6

Just a great place

Just a great place: We've been going to Luna since forever. They will make your kid an all foam cappuccino if you ask nicely. They have boosters. It's a small place but, by some magic, I've never waited more than ten minutes for a table. The food is local, organic and delish. It's a neighbourhood hang out. Luna's great.

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Gladstone Hotel

Rated this place:

1214 Queen St W, Toronto, ON, M6J1J6

TINARS for TOTS

TINARS for TOTS: This fall, Pages books introduced a junior version of their popular literary event playbill This Is Not A Reading Series (TINARS). On one Saturday morning every month, caregivers can enjoy brunch and witty presentations from some wonderful kid's book authors (Matt Hamil, Jeremy Tankard, Ruth Ohi) and the odd music jam (Totsapalooza). Toronto literary luminaries serve as hosts, including the unbeatable husband and wife hosting team, Don Kerr and Claudia Dey. It's a sunny, warm, feel-good kind of party. With books. Which are good for kids. And there's coffee.

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Horseshoe Tavern

Rated this place:

368 Queen St W, Toronto, ON, M5V2A2

Mother's Day: Beyond Brunch- Live Music Show

Mother's Day: Beyond Brunch- Live Music Show: Get a babysitter or leave your partner at home with the kids and head out to the Horseshoe with some friends to catch kick-ass girls group and critic's darlings, Vivian Girls at the Horseshoe for some music therapy. You will feel so. good. Because they are awesome. Make sure you thrash around and toss your hair a reasonable amount for full restorative effect.

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Black Line Studio

Rated this place:

577 King Street West, Toronto, ON, M5V1M1

Mother's Day: Beyond Brunch - Get Inked

Mother's Day: Beyond Brunch - Get Inked: Celebrate motherhood with some new ink or insist that your husband show his appreciation by getting a tattoo tribute to you. We have been running a series called Parent Tattoos on our blog (www.bunchfamily.ca) that you can check out for inspiration. We recommend Black Line studio for a very plush tat experience. Their tag line is actually "so swank, your mom might come, too."

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Pantry

Rated this place:

974 College St, Toronto, ON, M6H 1A5

the most beautiful food shop

the most beautiful food shop: pantry is a gourmet food shop where you can take out the most delicious ready made food, prepared with natural, local and organic ingredients. the store itself is like an art installation. it's whimsical and delightful and perfect and was clearly a labour of love to create. there is a little play area at the front and lots of room the kids to run around (the owners have two).

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The Dakota Tavern

Rated this place:

249 Ossington Ave, Toronto, ON, M6K3A1

It's all good at the Dakota

It's all good at the Dakota: Warm up at the Dakota’s super fun musical brekkie. Every Sunday, they offer T.O. a family-style bluegrass brunch. $12 gets you endless platters of scrambled eggs, potatoes, OJ and coffee, plus live bluegrass music for you and your kids to dance to. Ron Sexsmith has been known to turn up and play a set or two. My husband says they overcook the eggs but I don't give a hoot. Here's why: I love going to the Dakota with my kids and with my friends more than I can say. The compactness of the venue means that you can sit and talk to your buddies and still keep an eye on your offspring while they dance in front of the stage or you can join them for a little bit of Sunday morning swaying if you are so inclined. I have never left this brunch feeling anything short of awesome. I don't know what it is, but I have never seen a kid have a meltdown in the Dakota. It's just an inter-generational feel-good kind of a place.

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The Drake Hotel

Rated this place:

1150 Queen Street West, Toronto, Ontario, M6J 1J3

Hipsters like kids: It's true. The cool kids who work at the Drake Hotel actually like children, making it that much more comfortable and fun for you to stake out a table for brunch. This may be an unpopular opinion in some circles, but I really do love the Drake. They do everything right. The food is really good, the staff is really good, the place is good looking and they don't give your four-year-old the stink eye.

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Bunch Family Dance Party: Glam Rock Pre-Mother's Day Edition

Rated this place:

57 Adelaide Street East, Toronto, ON

Celebrate Mother's Day on the dance floor

Celebrate Mother's Day on the dance floor: Many Bunch moms have pointed out that Mother's Day winds up being a lot of running around to spend time with their mom and with their partner's mom. We thought it was important that there be an M-Day option where Bunch moms could let their hair down and party with their partners and their friends and their kids. So every year, on the day before Mother’s Day, we host a legendary momma-appreciation party. We're excited about this year's Glam Rock theme and about our venue, the ultra glam Courthouse. Glam Goings On: *Yahoo! Canada will pay tribute to Gwen Stefani, Madonna and all the moms that rock. *You will make fierce wearable art with Avenue Road Arts School. *MC Abdominal and your kids will perform a rap ode to mommas. *Kid breakers from the TVO show Pop It! will perform and teach. *Tynan Studio will shoot your family’s portrait in the Yahoo! Canada Photo Lounge *Sweetmama.ca will treat kids to Bowie-inspired face painting. *Kids will dress up as the Gods of Rock. *DJ Fase will go crazy on the ones and twos, and there will be dancing, a whole bunch of dancing.

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Macklem's Baby Carriage & Toys

Rated this place:

2223 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON, M6R1X6

Stroller MacGyver

Stroller MacGyver: Macklem is a pretty good baby stuff store even if the staff are at times cranky but here's the real reason to shop here or to bring your ride by: The owner is a stroller MacGyver. He can fix anything and will trick your stroller out to your specification.

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Nataraj

Rated this place:

394 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON, M5S1X4

John and Rishma give it two thumbs up

John and Rishma give it two thumbs up: Our friends John and Rishma are South Asian plus they are serious foodies and this is their Indian restaurant of choice. When John cooks Indian food at home he makes his own yoghurt and paneer cheese, so if he says a place is good he's not kidding around. Their New Year's Eve ritual is to invite a bunch of families over and get vats of take out butter chicken from Nataraj. We are angling for an invitation.

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Ontario College Of Art & Design (OCAD)

Rated this place:

100 Mccaul St, Toronto, ON, M5T1W1

Kids re-invent the city

Kids re-invent the city: On Sunday, March 29, from 2-5 PM, Yahoo! Canada presents the third annual Bunch Family Salon at the Ontario College of Art & Design. At this event, kids and parents will team up with some of Toronto’s top intellects to do some radical thinking about what a city is, and then make one.Families at the Salon will take part in a think tank, design playgrounds, create a wind driven art garden, build a massive cardboard box city, go on guerilla green missions, create public art and play an urban planning game.Kids and parents will also be able to consult a giant Yahoo! Canada search interface to get answers to questions raised by the Salon’s activities as wells as exercise their photojournalism skills and document the day for Flickr.The team behind this world class family event includes: Art Gallery of Ontario, archiTEXT, Bunch, Design Exchange, Evergreen, Institute without Boundaries, Learning Through the Arts, Toronto Renewable Energy Co-operative and Ontario College of Art & Design.To ensure that kids from all parts of Toronto get to share their vision of what a city should be, some free admissions to the Salon will be given to families in need through the non profit groups Kids Up Front and Art City.The Salon tradition dates back to 17th century France, where a host or hostess would bring together interesting and creative people to entertain and inspire one another.

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Dufferin Grove Park

Rated this place:

1873 Bloor St West, Toronto, ON, M5H 2N2

Halloween experience

Halloween experience: It begins with a fantastical masked community parade though the Dufferin/Bloor/College Street neighbourhood. The parade leads to Dufferin Grove Park where there is a massive spectacle, a bonfire and dancing (to fiddle music with costumed ghosts). This event is too crazy and beautiful to describe. Go!

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Hodo Kwaja

Rated this place:

656 Bloor St. W., Toronto, ON, M6G 1K9

Machine is super cool

Machine is super cool: My bunch enjoys taking a walk by Hodo Kwaja on Saturday mornings to watch them making walnut cakes (Hodo Kwaja) with their super neat walnut cake making machine. The machine is very intricate. It has little arms that flip the molds and a tube that doles out batter and bean paste in metered amounts. My whole family is fascinated by it. Follow the viewing up with a walnut-y snack.

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LEAF (Local Enhancement and Appreciation of Forests)

Rated this place:

601 Christie St, Suite 253 (Artscape Wychwood Barns), Toronto, ON, M6G 4C7

Freebie

Freebie: Want a free tree? Urban Forestry Services (416.338.TREE) plants trees on city owned parcels fronting residential properties for free AND they will teach you and your bunch how to care of it. Want a tree for your backyard? LEAF (416.413.9244) offers subsidized native trees to Toronto residents. Their service includes advice on what native species will best thrive in your yard, where to plant it and how to care for it. Two great ways to welcome a new addition to your family.

  • favourite thing(s) at this place:
  • Freebie

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Rua Vang Golden Turtle Restaurant

Rated this place:

125 Ossington Avenue, Toronto, ON, M6J2Z2

it takes a village

it takes a village: We had dinner at the Golden Turtle on Sunday night with both of our two kids and a friend and both of her kids. My son frequently requests dinner at the Turtle. He really likes their steamed white rice. We showed up at 5:30 assuming that it would be reasonably uncrowded but the place was packed with grown-ups sans kids. The Turtle's incredibly wonderful staff (I think the Turtle is probably family run so staff maybe isn't the right word) found us a table and helped us settle in. My 4 year old and his 3 year old friend made a bee line for the fish tank and spent some time squealing into the ear of the poor woman sitting at the adjacent table. For some reason we didn't notice that they were being annoying. We may have been too busy drinking beer. The Turtle staff did and they ushered our kids back to the table. I mega heart the Turtle for this. They have a way of chastising your kids that makes you feel grateful rather than miffed. It's like we're a team trying to make it through together. They also seem genuinely okay with the amount of rice my kids leave on the floor. Which is significant. Also the Pho is really good.

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YogaBuds for Kids

Rated this place:

165 Dewbourne Avenue, Toronto, ON, M6C 1Z1

Family yoga

Family yoga: It's yoga. For families. To do together. This is a great idea on soooo many levels and the folks at YogaBuds pioneered it.

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White Squirrel Coffee Shop

Rated this place:

907 Queen Street West, Toronto, ON, M6J 1G5

Best view of Trinity Bellwoods

Best view of Trinity Bellwoods: The White Squirrel is a new coffee shop smack across the street from Trinity Bellwoods park. They serve good coffee and snacks as well as Greg's ice cream which will be life changing when we are hanging out at T-Bell in the summer. White Squirrel has a huge plate glass storefront and you get a panoramic view of the park. My husband takes my son Sam and his friend Tejas there every Saturday after their music class. It's a ritual. The boys have hot chocolate and ice cream and the dads have coffee and everyone chills out for a bit. The space is really bright and open and the proprietor's own kids are often underfoot so no need to feel bad if yours join the fray.

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Sprockets Film Festival

Rated this place:

2 Carlton Street (Toronto International Film Festival box office), Toronto, ON, M5B 1J3

Sprockets!

Sprockets!: Do you have a budding film maker? A mini Spielberg or a gestating Cronenberg? Or do your kids just really like good movies?Adult film makers and affectionados alike know that The Toronto International Film Festival is one of the most prestigious movie festivals in the world. On par with Cannes in France and Sundance in the US, TIFF attracts nearly a half a million movie buffs annually. What they might not know is that since 1998, the TIFF Group has been offering a similar film and culture experience to the youngest audiences. The Sprockets Film Festival runs for a week in April (18-24 in 2009) and both features high quality children’s movies and shorts and provides the opportunity for young film makers to showcase their own work. Sprockets judges are comprised of both film professionals and kids and awards are given for best films in a number of categories. The children’s category, called Jump Cuts, screens movies made by Ontario students in grades 3-12. Finalists get to see their movie on the big screen alongside professional competitors from all over the world! Past years’ finalists can be watched in the Jump Cuts Screening Room. Public tickets for Sprockets 2009 go on sale March 10th and movie submissions are accepted until March 16th. The 2009 Jury is full, but kids can apply starting November 1 to be considered for 2010’s exciting season.

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Rockin the Cradle at the Tranzac

Rated this place:

292 Brunswick Avenue (Toronto Australia New Zealand Club), Toronto, ON, M5S 2M7

Would love to rock, in a different cradle

Would love to rock, in a different cradle: Rockin' the Cradle is a Sunday afternoon show where kids and parents get to hear live music played by local indie bands at safe sound levels and with appropriate lyrics. My bunch attended on Feb. 22 and we had a great time making shakers and swaying along to the music of Bry Webb and Positive Thinking Seminar (Purplater). Alex Lukashevsky's rendition of RIck James' Superfreak (She's a very freaky squirrel) was legendary. But I have to say, and I speak as someone with very low standards of household cleanliness, the Tranzac is pretty darn gross. We considered banning our baby from crawling but we were too tired. We did let our son know that that 5 second rule just did not apply here. As an event planning person, I know it's really hard to find venues and it's really sweet of the Tranzac to host this, but it's got to move somewhere else to really capture an audience. In conclusion, we'd like to give a big shout out and a hug to the organizer, Sarah McGaughey who seems insanely cool. Not only is she bringing this potentially great event to Toronto families but her own family is trying to live garbage free, which you can read about here: http://nomoregarbage.wordpress.com/.

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