Procession of lights seen at 109 hibernia street, stratford, on, canada, n5a 5v3, in the backyard in the hot tub. gps co-ordinates 43.3752001,-80.9911738 starting on sunday, may 3, 2020, at approximately 22:05 edt ending on sunday, may 3, 2020, at approximately 22:10 edt if you form a line at 22:10 edt between the stars dubhe (the "end of the pot" on the big dipper) and polaris (the "tip of the handle" on the little dipper, the north star), the procession of lights crosssed that line travelling west to east (left to right) at about the 1/3 way point from dubhr to polaris (closer to dubhe, in other words). looking straight at polaris as the origin point of a graph (or rather the point on the line between dubhe and polaris where they crossed), the procession of lights didn't travel straight across horizontally, but rather from an upper-left quadrant to the lower-right quadrant at perhaps a 15 degree or 20 degree angle. the spacing between them seemed uniform, and was about 80% of the distance between dubhe and polaris. i noticed the first light (might not have been the first light in the procession, but was the first light that i noticed) after it would have crossed the dubhr-polaris line. i followed it until i couldn't see it any more, wondering what it was (no noise and no blinking, so not a small plane; light way too bright and moving way too fast to be a large jet). that was when i noticed the second light, and then the third, and so on. all following the same path through the sky (how exact they were following, i don't know, but it looked to my eyes to be all the same line). they appeared like stars, except for the fact they were moving of course. no blinking, just medium-to-bright white lights travelling across the sky. from start (when i could first notice them in the west) until end (when they disappeared behind the house's blocking of the view) was about maybe 45 to 60 seconds for each light. they all seemed to be travelling at the same speed, maintaining their distance from one another. travelling parallel to the 2nd or 3rd last light in the "main" line was another light, going the same speed as the lights on the "main" line and the same angle, only this one passing just a little bit below polaris. other than being lower than the "main" line and the light that it was "paired with", it was identical to the lights in the "main" line. total number of lights involved is approximately a dozen (could be 10 or 11, could be 13 or 14), including the lights in the "main" line and the single light in the "lower" line. total time taken from first noticing the first light until the last light disappeared from view was about 5 minutes. about 4 to 5 minutes after it was over, i went inside to check the time on the cable box, which read 10:15pm. the exact count of lights is an estimate, as is the angle at which they were travelling. the timing of their speed is also an estimate, as is the assumption that they were all doing the same speed and were uniformly spaced, although it sure seemed that way to my eyes.