Looking south,
This is my 7 Lane Pass-Through Labyrinth I recently painted on the pathway beside the ice hockey rink in the north-east corner of Trinity-Bellwoods Park, Downtown Toronto.
Looking south,
This is my 7 Lane Pass-Through Labyrinth I recently painted on the pathway beside the ice hockey rink in the north-east corner of Trinity-Bellwoods Park, Downtown Toronto.
“E a vida aos pouquinhos vai voltando a ser fora de casa.
As atividades físicas aumentam, o estresse diminui, a mãe aqui tem tempo para autocuidado e como consequência o sono da Alice fica melhor!
Sempre digo que criança que dorme 12 hrs de sono noturno é raridade, mas quando a Alice faz muita atividade ela chega a dormir esse tanto 😱.
Não é sempre, mas acontece.
Ela não é uma criança que mostra sinais muito claros de sono, então ficamos bem de olho para perceber se ela está cansada mais cedo quando temos dias mais intensos.
Aqui em Toronto temos muitos parques, os playgrounds foram abertos há umas duas semanas e começamos a curtir mais a cidade.
Isso que vocês estão vendo aí se chama Wading Pool e essa do lado da Alice é uma amiguinha da escola, depois de 5 meses sem se verem ❤️.
Foi uma alegria que só!
Seus pequenos dormem melhor depois de passar o dia brincando?”
Eglinton Park Wading Pool Labyrinth when it’s a Wading Pool in Summer . . .
What a way to celebrate – with ❤️❤️grandkids on opening day of wading pools. Happy Canada Day #grateful #CanadaDay2020 🇨🇦 pic.twitter.com/1EvnUcMmSk
— Caron Gan (@carongan1) July 1, 2020
The colours are faded, yet still comfortably visible enough to walk the Labyrinth Steve & I painted in the Wading Pool in Eglinton Park, midtown Toronto . . .
In the now removed wading pool in Bellevue Square Park, I had painted the concentric circles of that Labyrinth in a wavy twisty style.
The idea was to mimic the look of the Labyrinth under water, for when the wading pool was water-free, which was most of the year.
It didn’t work out so well visually, and walkably, without the water.
I never painted another Labyrinth like that again.
The arcs of my Wading Pool Labyrinth appear wavy in Christie Pits Park, that’s the water doing that.
The Labyrinth here is indeed comprised of concentric circles.
Ice water temperatures in the Wading Pool in Christie Pits Park in Toronto.
Appreciate these images as I can see how the colours of the concentric circles of my Wading Pool Labyrinth are doing.
The purples are okay, yet the Red ones, which were closer to Orange when last I re-painted them, really needs refreshing.
More work for me when I’m back in T.O.!
And I’m happy to do it!
Quite surprised how long lasting this chalk Labyrinth has turned out to be.
Perhaps there are unique conditions at this very spot, the material of the paver bricks, the sea air around this pocket of South East False Creek, and being a corner that is less frequently walked upon yet beside the desire line of a path where most everyone walks beside.
Who knows?
Last time I re-visited this Labyrinth, I only had to re-chalk red into a few hearts, and re-outline the outer-most perimeter circle wall.