Toronto: The World's Most Multicultural City 🇨🇦 | Solo Travel Vlog
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 พ.ค. 2024
- Travel alongside me to Canada's largest and the world's most multicultural city - Toronto in my latest vlog, where I walk you immersively through the five senses (sights, sounds, tastes, feels, and smells) that make up the Toronto experience!
Explore more of Canada and North America:
• North America and Cent...
Read about my Toronto adventure at
www.asenseoftravel.com/toront...
Chapters:
00:00 Intro
02:41 The Urban Heart of Toronto
13:15 Experiencing Natural Toronto
18:31 The Tastes of Toronto
21:51 Niagara Falls
Thanks for watching, and if you like what you see, I'd greatly appreciate you subscribing to my channel so that I can continue to share these incredible parts of the world with you.
#Canada #Canadian #Ontario #Toronto #Travel #NorthAmerica #TravelVlog #travelblogger #vlog #vlogger #travelvlog #TotontoTravelVlog #TorontoVlog #torontotravel #TorontoVacation #adventure
@destinationcanada @DestinationToronto @MatadorNetworkTravel @travelandleisure
I am a travel blogger on a mission to bring the sights, sounds, tastes, feels, and smells of places around the planet to you!
For more of Canada, check out the Montréal Experience! th-cam.com/video/LhiLCl5bVF0/w-d-xo.html
I’m legally blind and I LOVE that you talk about all of the senses, not just the “sights”. I’m travelling to Toronto soon and this helped me imagine what I might experience 👩🏻🦯, thank you!
Anyone visiting Toronto should make the St Lawrence market their first stop for a lunch. Don’t fill up in one spot. Walk around, smell and try many different foods. Love that place and it’s always my first stop when I get to Toronto.
Was just there a few weeks ago and I totally agree. It was an awesome slice of so many different cultures. A great encapsulation of Toronto as a whole.
Fully agree!
I love your approach ---- giving us the sounds and the smells. Brilliant.
You missed out on Cabbagetown, a neighbourhood with hundreds of beautiful Victorian-era houses on tree-shaded streets. This district is just a short walk from the downtown core, but it's a world apart. So much so that it has long had it's own flag (two green bars on each side of a green cabbage on white). It has one of the friendliest parks in town, where you see big family picnics, frolicking dogs, frisbee tossers aplenty, and a kids' zoo of farm animals ---- and a fantastic tobogganing hill with wonderful views. It's not far from a lively gay neighbourhood and scores of thickly populated apartment towers full of new immigrants, and an inner city university campus. There are dozens of novels set here, going back to the 1930s, and many writers and artists spent their childhoods in it, when it was considered a slum. The cabbage? In the 19th century, it was a rough and rowdy Irish Catholic neighborhood in a city run by dour Protestant Scots and prissy Anglicans. To the horror of the straight-laced elite, the poor Irish grew cabbages in their front yards instead of flowers. One of dozens of distinct and interesting neighbourhoods. But watch out for the raccoons! They'll grab your pizza slice.
I've been in Toronto for 40 years and I still have things to see!
Beautifully written and narrated. What a thoughtful and thorough visit to Toronto. We appreciate that. Became a subscriber. Best 🤸♂
Thank you so much!
@@asenseoftravel 🇨🇦
Great work, we really enjoyed your impressions of Toronto!
Thank you! Toronto is such an awesome place.
One of the best travel logs I’ve ever seen. 👍
This is such a great compliment, thank you!
Always so much going on in Toronto on any given day. Lots to see and do!
Agreed!
Philly is tiny compared to Toronto. Toronto is most similar to Chicago. New York and Mexico City are on another level of urbanity. But in terms of dense, skyscraper filled, walkable cities in North America, I'd say NYC, Mexico City, Chicago and Toronto are the main ones. Toronto feels even bigger than LA just because LA doesn't have that big city, skyscraper feel to it, even in downtown LA.
Sharon, I'm from Philadelphia, agree with your comments. Toronto is my favorite city.
Interesting ❤
I do not think I have seen a better review of Toronto. Reminded me that I have to get out more, as I live in Toronto. Although I have seen and experienced everything you have shown, it perked my interest to go back to some spots again and soon. Thanks!
So glad you enjoyed it! Definitely get back out there! It's always fun to be a tourist in your own town
Hope you enjoyed Toronto and revisit us again! We're definitely an up and coming growing, global city 🍁😎
Please visit Vancouver next! Thank you
Vancouver is the next Canadian city I plan to visit! 🎉🎊
Well done. You've represented Toronto very well. This video is basically what my life looks like :)
Great video Mike!
Thank you!
This is the first video of yours I’ve seen. Pretty good representation of the city. You at least mentioned that it is a city of neighbourhoods but I wish you would have shown some residential streets. Houses are a mix of styles with a lot of the houses ringing downtown built from 1905-1925. Craftsman, Edwardian styles are popular and most houses are brick. Toronto has a lot of semi-detached homes, which means two houses side by side attached in the middle. You were right in the Beaches neighbourhood. From their you could have walked west thru LeslieVille and Riverside (where you would have passed Degrassi Street). Walk north on Broadview passing thru Chinatown East and then the wester boundary of Riverdale. You would have see a wonderful view of Toronto from Riverdale Park East. When you go to the Danforth turn right to go east thru Greektown. Throuout this walk I’d go down a few side streets to see the beautiful urban homes built close together making for amazing communities. I’d recommend this walk for anybody visiting Toronto
Thank you for visiting Canada, hope you had fun. As a home sick Canadian living abroad thanks. Come back.
A great watch. Toronto looks beautiful this time of year. Keep em coming, from new sub❤️🙏
Great video!
Nice video. Multi culti has added diversity to Toronto, but also divisive elements who want to rewrite our history.
True ☹️
Sharon from Philadelphia. I will watch your video at a better time.
I love Toronto, it is my favorite city, privileged to have been there twice.
I always say to people who are younger than I am, that if you are going to do any traveling, do it while you are younger, because you never know what thingd will be like when you get older.
While I subscribed, I honestly don't know if I will be able to watch this, it brings back too many memories that are hard to deal with.
this is amazing!! thank you for this! love love love Toronto!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video. Thank you.
Thanks for watching! Loved every minute in Toronto.
I was amazed that you pronounced “Toronto” like a local by leaving out the second “t”.
It's because I grew up in the southeastern US! We don't say "Atlanta" we say "Atlanna"
He was going in and out a lot though. Sometimes pronounces the 2nd T, sometimes doesn't.
Awesome video mate! Visited Toronto 5 years ago. Was great! Visited a month ago. Every part of the tourist places that i visited and went to eat or drove outside of Toronto to see. Was filled with massive amounts of Indians from Indian. What has happened? It was so overwhelming for the most part. What is going on with Canada?? Feels good being back in Switzerland
Nice work man
Thank you! Cheers
Excellent video.
Thanks a ton! Excited to return to Toronto one day for a deeper dive
@@asenseoftravel, you need to return and check out Toronto's Inner Suburbs (the boroughs of Norrh York, Scarborough, Etobicoke, East York, & York) for some more surprises (a science museum in North York and a zoo in Scarborough, lots of great ethnic restaurants in North York & Scarborough as well as Etobicoke), the Caribana festival/parade that happens in early August, the CNE (Canadian National Exhibition) that happens late August, the Toronto International Film Festival in early September, the Royal Ontario Museum, the Art Gallery of Ontario, and last but not least, both Chinatowns and little India (as well as the Pacific Mall.)
Dude, you need to try the Danforth Greek community , grab some souvlaki and sit and watch the sunset from Riverdale park.
Toronto has the largest underground pedestrian walkway (called The Path) in the world. It spans more than 30 km and connects 70 buildings. It is listed in the Guinnes World Record as the largest underground shopping complex in the world.
Great video, very interesting.
Thank you!!
Kensington Market is a must-visit.
One of my favorite markets on this side of the world for sure!
@@asenseoftravel I think you'd also enjoy The Distillery area. Maybe next time you're this way.
Montreal used to be Canada's largest city when it hosted Expo 67.
Gay toronto was good,
Hi Michael, I'm en route to becoming like u. Can u mentor me?
lived in toornto doubt its most multi cultural city, ever city in a canada mixed and think north america
I was hoping you were going to make it to Halan's Clothing Optional Beach on Toronto Island. I wanted to see more of your gorgeous body after a tease of that hairy chest of yours and hairy face stubble. What a beautiful and thoughtful video from such a cute guy!
SEAGULLS not lake birds smh😂
Hahaha, I wasn't sure if what I was hearing was seagulls since it's so far from the coast 🤷🏻♂️
@@asenseoftravel We just call them "gulls" here!
We should have an nfl team for sure
Canadians also do another thing better: How to protect property owners at the expense of *everyone else*, including the future of youth.
That’s crazy…😩😩😩😩
I dont know why people are determined to insist that Toronto is bigger than Chicago. it isnt. never quote city proper populations because those lines can be drawn arbitrarily or long ago before a city had much of it's growth. up until 25 years ago, Toronto "proper" only had a population of about 800k... then the city decided to redraw the lines so it included it's closest suburbs. the Toronto Metro pop of about 6.5 million vs Chicago's 9 million is a far more true comparison. if you were talking about London, UK would you only quote the population of the 1 mile by 1 mile "City of London"? no of course not because it doesnt make any sense.
To me it really doesn't matter which is which. I've had the misfortune of driving though both way too many times.
The official cities are about the same size in sq km and Toronto has a little bit more people in that space. In the "Metro" area, yes, Chicago has more people but it also has a much larger space because the USA usually includes larger spaces in their Metro areas. ChicagoLand is 24,000 sq km and includes 9.4 million people, while the Greater Toronto Area is only 7,400 sq km and 6.7 million people. If we take the Golden Horseshoe as the Toronto metro then it is still only 10,000 sqkm (less than half of ChicagoLand) and has a population of 7.7 million people.
So basically, the cities are very similar, and the appearance of Chicago seeming bigger is mostly because of the classification of US cities.
The biggest differences between Toronto and Chicago are social. T.O.'s crime-rate is a fraction of Chicago (handguns are illegal in Canada and it is not part of our culture to keep a gun in our homes). Canada has had an experiment over the past half century of welcoming immigrants, while encouraging them to not only become part of the country, but to hang on to old customs from home. This leads to fewer entrenched racial problems. 20:23 that is not a traditional butter tart; it looks like a small bun of some sort. Butter tarts have a bottom pie-pastry shell.
Interesting! I will say I thought it was interesting as well that Toronto was a place of refuge for formerly enslaved people throughout North America - I'm sure that's a large contributor to the welcoming, multicultural reputation.
@@asenseoftravel Definitely it was a hub for the Underground Railway which brought escaped slaves into Canada. The organizers were given a room to use for free in the St Lawrence Hall (which is still standing near St Lawrence Market) where they could plan ways to get people to freedom. Britain created anti-slavery laws in the 1790s just before the city of Toronto was founded in 1793. In fact anti-slavery legislation was passed in what is now Niagara on the Lake Ontario a few years earlier and is considered possibly the first anti-slavery legislation in the world. So we had no history of slavery here in Toronto. For the past 70 years Canada has experimented with a new type of multiculturalism which involved welcoming people as immigrants, but encouraging them to keep their old traditions and not lose them. The general feeling was immigrants should be proud of where they came from, and the diversity would make the fabric of the country richer. To a large extent it has worked well for us, as groups from around the world live together in relative harmony compared to many other places. Canada was influenced quite a bit by European politics, which is the reason why we have a Universal Health Care system, and very strict gun laws including outlawing handguns. Socially there is a different mindset then the USA, which is not always obvious to a visitor who just comes for a few days. Our two countries are the strongest allies in the world, but we do have differences! Hopefully you will come back to visit in the summertime!
Yeah we are told to leave our car keys inside our front doors so the home invaders can have easy access to our possessions. We punish victims here, and baby sit criminals!
First thing: reaaly good video. Chapeau.
Toronto food is good, thanks in large part to the multicultural makeup of the city.
Kensington Market was way cooler before the hipsters and weed shops colonized it. Kensington used to be the place where families would go and find stuff and food from the old country. Italian, Portuguese, Jewish, South American, Carribean, etc. You would see people of all ethnic backgrounds doing business.
Now, it's an ethnic zoo for tourists and a hang for pretentious wokey types who have nothing cultural or unique to contribute to the hood. And it's far too crowded. Most locals avoid the place now.
As for Yonge-Dundas Square... possibly the ugliest urban space in North America. The giant, tacky, video billboards help distract from the ugly grey modern rubbish that passes for architecture in this city. Comparing it to Times Square in New York is an insult to Times Square.
Now some positivity... The Islands are great and the city's parks, ravines and urban forrest help locals escape the city without having to leave the city.
The shrinking ethnic neighboorhoods of Greektown, Little Italy and Little Portugal are still cool to explore, but they are being gentrified and wokified, ironically erasing their identities as unique neighborhoods on the cityscape.
If you want to see the city from one end to another by tram, like they do in San Francisco and Lisbon, then there are 2 trams or streetcars worth considering: the 501 Queen Streetcar that takes you along the lakeshore and through downtown across Queen St. It's a long ride that tends to take you in a very straight line.
And my favourite, the 506 Carlton that takes you from Main Street subway station in the east end all the way to High Park in the west.
The 506 winds its way across town and you see more of Toronto's interesting neighborhoods, including Little India, U of T, Kensington, Little Italy, Little Portugal, Roncesvalles, and High Park.
The new Toronto trams aren't as cool as they used be but it is a great tram ride if you're a transit nerd.
Cheers.
not TO-RON-TO, you just say Tarrano
re architecture... Chicago's skyline and individual buildings far outshine Toronto's forest of banal low budget glass boxes that are simply copy and pasted dozens of times by the same 3-5 archit4ectural firms. you could probably count on one hand the number of top tier skyscrapers in Toronto, while Chicago would have dozens. you must be blind if you think they are super cool and innovative. look again closer. they are all literally glass boxes just with different glass or balcony patterns on them. it is the biggest joke of architecture I have seen anywhere in the world.
Insecure much? 😂😂
@@sid7088 insecure? its true, toronto is a soulless city
I will agree Toronto is a great city that has lost its way ...and after living there I will reiterate it is soulless
Is that why Toronto is expected to pass Chi in amount of skyscrapers and super talls as well ? This is expected to happen in the next 5-10 years.
lol! Bedroom ... why so much hate for Toronto? Get a grip lol!!
Poutine ? Is from french Canada not Toronto
If you had listened to what he said, you would have heard him say that Poutine is most commonly found in Quebec where it originated.
Isn't that what he said?
@@motr1912 Yes it was. The other guy didn't see that part
Calme toi!
@@deanjohnston4073 qui te dit que je suis pas calme????
Mexico City is not part of North America .. that's Central America.
Mexico is part of North America just look at NAFTA. Depending on where you learned geography. North America is usually separated from South America by Panama/Colombia border and Central America is the southern Mexican border to Colombia
@@jasonstevens2060 they added Mexico to NAFTA in order to get cheap labor. It was never considered part of North America when I was growing up .. that's why they aren't in NATO.
This really depends on how you're taught about the continents. In most of the English-speaking world, for example, North and South America are two continents, and Mexico is definitively a part of North America. In the Spanish speaking world, "America" is one continent, and Mexico would indeed fit into the region of Central America.
Its also the most UnCanadian city in Canada 🇨🇦 😕
Thank God lol!!
Multicultural? Hmmm i saw mostly punjabis when i went
Oh no, you saw other people 😂
lol strong subway system? modern patchwork? LMAO,.....this city used to be so amazing - I was so proud of this city but things have gone downhill. every time I have been to scar bluffs - next week there is always a body being found there. Crime, expenses, traffic etc have gone up big time. Toronto is a city which is full of woke people now - you could literally fall down on the street in downtown and no one would give a crap. 401 is the most busiest hwy in the world. Takes are crazy, rent is crazy...good city to visit but then pls leave....not a city where you want to live in anymore.
"Canadians do urbanism better than Americans"... with the notable exceptions of NYC and Chicago (before they became Democrat bastions of crime and decay).
Most boring big western city
Yes Toronto is diverse and that always seems to be a talking point, however, I find that those diverse communities like to stay within their own culture which in my opinion is a negative. Diversity, on its own when you dig deeper is not so great. Interaction between those diverse cultures would be fantastic but people like to be with those whom they have a cominality.