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Guelph, Canada
Trip started 13 May 2020
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1. Starting my Covid walkTravelled for 3 minutes2. The bakery. No line ups today. The plexiglass barrier created between staff and customers stop viruses, not speech. It stops the transfer of cash, not wireless tap of credit cards. What would sci fi writers from 100 years ago think?Travelled for 8 minutes3. Passing people on the street is much changed from pre-Covid times. We all give each other a lot of space. While doing so some are open and friendly and I feel happy to have the connection with them. Others look away and avoid meeting my gaze.Travelled for 4 minutes4. The local elementary school. My kids go here. Not right now …Travelled for 5 minutes5. A playground where we come regularly. A few years ago the playground was fenced off for renovations. Now there is only flimsy yellow tape around it. The effect is the same: no children play here now.Travelled for 10 minutes6. Just saw someone I recognized- barista from a coffee shop I really like. He seemed to be picking up street trash. All restaurants and coffee shops are still closed unless it’s take out.Travelled for 4 minutes7. The local public library. Often I see people without homes here, reading, connecting, or just falling asleep in the comfy chairs. Where are they now? Today is a beautiful day, but 2 days ago it was snowingTravelled for 5 minutes8. All the shops are still closed, the streets quite empty. People in Guelph are very proud of their locally owned bookshop that has been around for decades. How are they managing with no customers for so long now? Will they reopen?Travelled for 3 minutes9. There’s always people hanging out at the fountain, even now. But perhaps not so manyTravelled for 5 minutes10. I see so much of nature changed and remade for human purposes. But the virus pushes back and our own engineering and planning is co-opted by it, and takes on new meanings and shapesTravelled for 10 minutes11. I’m walking through microbes, all the time. I am mostly microbes, and so are those around me. Everyday we are connected in part by the microbes we share by touching each other, touching the same objects at different points in time, and by breathing the same air. Our lives have always been connected in this way. But now one virus at this particular point in human history divides us across plexiglass screens, masks, and distancing measures. And it unites us strangely across the globeTravelled for 8 minutes12. Another playground that is Verboten. I remember walking by here many weeks ago with my children. My 4 year old pointed out that not all parts of the playground equipment are technically inside the yellow tape …Travelled for 8 minutes13. Conversation across the fence: DistancingTravelled for 16 minutes13 May End of walk