Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 23 Aug 2018, p. 42

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th ei fp .c a Th e IF P -H al to n H ill s | T hu rs da y, A ug us t 23 ,2 01 8 | 42 REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY Delivered to 23,750 Homes every Thursday! 905-877-8262 Your Real Estate Resource With 40 Year's Experience. Heather Morison Broker - ASA CIA CLHMS hmorison@royallepage.ca 905-873-4266 www.REresource.ca 519-853-0924 Noel Stoyles SALES REPRESENTATIVE DIRECT: (905) 866-8923 OFFICE: (905) 873-6111 (877) 306-IPRO (4776) 158 Guelph St., Unit 4 Georgetown, ON L7G 4A6noelstoyles@gmail.com Licensed Realtor serving Halton Hills since 1977 905-873-6111 158 Guelph St., Unit 4 Georgetown ills Mike AdamsTo advertise in this Full Colour Directory, please call Kelli 905-234-1018 or email kkosonic@theifp.ca GetWhatYou're Askin GoWith Baskin. Marc Baskin SaleS RepReSentativeSaleS RepReSentative Cell: 905-867-3280 Email:mbaskin@remaxcentre.ca www.gtown.ca Thinking of buying or selling? Call Effie or Helen for all your real estate needs. 905-873-6111 Effie: 416-991-4247 Helen: 647-258-5331 www.haltonpropertysisters.com sisters@iprorealty.com EFFIE DIMOU Sales Representative HELEN PAVLOPOULOS Broker PETER DYMOND Sales Representative DEMAND THE DYMOND STANDARD 905-456-1000 REALTY SERVICES INC., BROKERAGE www.PeterDymond.com Have you heard? Advertising works! This space is available for your ad. I sat down on the ground and was mobbed by fuzzy little noses. Sitting in the goat pen, I knew this wasn't going to be a Zen, meditative expe- rience. What I didn't know though, was how giddy and joyful a yoga experi- ence could be. The little hooved crit- ters danced in between ev- eryone as they moved from sun salutations, to down- ward dog and back again. They nuzzled, they frol- icked, they peed. What I learned is that goats make yoga some- thing different entirely. In a regular class, it's easy to bury your mind within yourself, to go into a deep meditative state, ig- noring your surround- ings. That's not what hap- pened in goat yoga, in- stead it was an energizing and uplifting session filled with laughs and surprises. These naturally curi- ous and mischievous ani- mals nuzzled everyone in the yoga class, checking out their smells, clothes, hair and mats. Everything was new to them and they had to know more. As the class began, I bent down into a forward fold and my hair fell down to my mat. The little brown goat was enamored with my hair, and I have to say, the feeling of the snuffling nose was a little soothing. A giggle erupted a few mats down, and a little goat was nibbling on someone's shirt. When the instructor went to move into a posi- tion on her hands and knees, she gingerly moved one on the inquisitive crit- ters to the side. When she went into downward dog, he put his front hooves on her back. Rain started falling partway through the class, the goats bleated in confu- sion, but the yoga instruc- tor kept on. With rain, goats and on- lookers watching the strange spectacle, there was certainly no way to lose yourself and forget the surroundings. That's not what this was though, it was invigorat- ing. It was funny, weird and quirky. It was a reminder not to take anything too serious- ly, because hey, these goats sure aren't, and we're doing yoga with them in the pouring rain. OPINION IFP reporter Alexandra Heck tried goat yoga at the Acton Farmer's Market, and found it to be an invigorating experience. Alexandra Heck/Metroland HERE'S WHAT HAPPENED WHEN I TRIED GOAT YOGA IN ACTON HAVE YOU EVER HAD A GOAT NIBBLE YOUR SHIRT WHILE YOU DOWNWARD DOG? TRUST ME, IT'S A GOOD TIME, WRITES HECK ALEXANDRA HECK aheck@metroland.com SIGN UP FOR OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER AT THEIFP.CA

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