Activated Charcoal Ice Cream!
Ihalo Krunch . . .
Super Kid in The Labyrinth . . .
“Children never Walk a Labyrinth, Children always Run!”
They’ll even run my painted Labyrinth in a Wading Pool full of water!
Alexandra Park in Downtown Toronto . . .
Many of my Labyrinths include canvas spaces at the turn-arounds for additional artwork.
Often I create or paint smaller Labyrinths within the canvas spaces within the larger Labyrinth.
Akin to the driving plot point in the movie Inception,
Labyrinths within Labyrinths.
“Approaching the maze,
Do not forget the one goal:
Which is of course fun.”
In the distance through the branches, you can see Earl Grey Senior Public School, where I spent Grades 7 and 8.
In the foreground, you can see the Labyrinth I painted in the Wading Pool in Kempton Howard Park, Toronto . . .
Timelapse of walking the Roxton Road Labyrinth I painted in late 2015 on the surface of the wading pool in the south end of Fred Hamilton Playground in Toronto . . .
Part of Growing Up
Includes learning what happens when pushing the Splash Pad water feature activation button in October . . .
I recently re-painted my Labyrinth in the Wading Pool in Bellevue Square Park in Kensington Market.
You can also see some of the Design Motifs I also repainted.
The wading pool surface however has become decrepit and no amount of repainting can solve that.
At some point, the park itself will be remade, revitalized.
Unknown if the wading pool will survive at all.
Until then, you can still walk my Labyrinth . . .
You can easily see the outlines of the black quadrant.
With difficulty you maybe can see the red lines of the red quadrant.
This is, or will be, my Medicine Wheel Labyrinth in the wading pool in Wells Hill Park, midtown Toronto . . .
Hope to finish painting it when I get back from Vancouver.
Labyrinth Walkers sometimes ask questions, and by the time they reach the Centre of the Labyrinth, they may have an answer . . .
TOAD.
Temporary Obsolete Abandoned Derelict.
That’s the current category of Urban Infrastructure for this Wading Pool in Ashbridges Bay Park, Woodbine Beach, East Toronto.
It’s no longer a Wading Pool, nor will it the water pump ever be working again.
So, I painted a Labyrinth here years ago, and it is still there.
Quietly, in the middle of green space, this Labyrinth of mine . . .
In Toronto, A City of Labyrinths.