Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Follow the yellow brick homes

22 Comments

Terri over at Second Wind Leisure Perspectives has challenged us to post about all things yellow. This works out perfectly for me because I’m just home from four days spent camping in Canada, where one thing became very obvious — some time in the last century building beautiful homes out of yellow brick was a thing.

We were driving up highway 21 through small towns along the eastern coast of Lake Huron and every town had a lot of yellow brick houses. They were all beautiful, big or small.

Some were out in the country.

Many were along shady streets in town.

The town of Kincardine had so many of these beauties along one street that we just had to park and walk a few blocks admiring the houses and their gardens.

I’ve traveled in Canada a few times and have always noticed how beautiful their gardens are. On this street almost every house had flowers in full bloom from the front porch to the street.

I’ve got lots to show you from our four day camping/bagpiping/starry night trip, but I still have lots of images to sort through.

Bur I didn’t want to miss an opportunity to show you yellow from a Canadian point of view. I hope you enjoyed seeing these beautiful homes.

If you ever get a chance to drive up the eastern shore of Lake Huron you’ll find the same thing we did; friendly, happy people, cute little towns and stunning landscapes.

I’ll show you more soon.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

22 thoughts on “Follow the yellow brick homes

  1. How pretty are these homes!
    I was just thinking of the years when we visited my late aunt, who had a country house near the town of Port Dover, Ontario. Her house was painted yellow! She was on Lake Erie, though.

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  2. All this yellow is so cheery! No wonder you fell in love with it! We don’t have much yellow brick in my area — it’s lots more red brick as well as limestone. Both of those are pretty, too, but I’ve got to say, those Canadian gardens are amazing!

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  3. Those are beautiful homes — and somehow they look very Canadian to me. A little like Sarnia, maybe?

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  4. Pingback: Sunday Stills Monthly Color Challenge: Are You All-in for #Yellow? – Second Wind Leisure Perspectives

  5. I’m pretty sure I’ve never seen yellow brick homes–especially here in the West. I’ve seen plenty of yellow clapboard homes with iconic wrap-around porches in various places. You really hit the jackpot with these, Dawn. Thanks for sharing sunny yellow with us and taking time to link to Sunday Stills!

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    • I’ve never seen so many all together, that’s for sure. In these pictures they reads a little more brown than they actually are. It’s quite striking to see a whole street lined with houses in the same brick, all different structures, but always with a steep pointy roofline.

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  6. Fun to see all those homes and wonder what they look like inside!

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    • Yes that’s true. I was so fascinated by the gardens I didn’t really think about the insides, but I wonder if they’re all modern kitchens and big open spaces, having been remodeled, or still small separate rooms like they probably were originally.

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  7. How interesting! You know, it always seemed Canadiens have that traditional English garden thing going on. Probably I should call it “European garden thing. ”

    Beautiful. I wonder why everyone seemed to have used yellow brick during that period??

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    • Hi Michelle! We asked that ‘why the yellow brick everywhere’ question of at least 3 Canadians we met along the way. They all looked at us blankly and had no answer. Then on our drive home we talked about it (Beth was on the trip with me) and we decided that if people came up to us and randomly asked us why our brick was red we wouldn’t know the answer either. We think maybe the soil is that color along the coast? Or wherever the bricks were made?

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  8. Those yellow bricks are so handsome. I had to lookup what made the bricks yellow. As it turns out, elevated lime and sulfur in the red clay turn the bricks yellow when they are fired. But I am guessing you knew this.

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  9. I love it. A color theme done in architecture. Nice. Looking forward to the starry night pics

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    • I loved it too. Some towns had whole streets with yellow homes. And they were also here and there, quite frequently, in other subdivisions or blocks and even out in the country. The starry night was amazing.

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  10. I love all of these. I just love old houses.

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  11. You captured such enchanting examples of the quaintness of the yellow brick – nice job. Thank you for taking us out on your adventures too! 🥰

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