Happy the Cockapoo being Happy inside North-West lanes of the Grange Park Labyrinth…
Happy the Cockapoo being Happy inside North-West lanes of the Grange Park Labyrinth…
Canary Yellow colour of the Grange Park Labyrinth looking good through the snow.
As is Hanzo (半藏),
The good boy who’s sitting in the centre . . .
“I have seen some of the little ones playing on that. Yeah, I thought it was pretty cool.”
“Everybody really, really enjoys that Labyrinth and every time it’s produced, a few days pass and The City comes and removes it.”
— Ray White, Grange Park Regular
I just saw this on the news. Wth is wrong with the people at City Hall. There is horrendous graffiti all over the City that never gets cleaned, but they spent $14,000 in 2022 removing labyrinths. Geez!
— Chase Stevens (@ChaseStevens2) February 18, 2023
I just saw this on the news. Wth is wrong with the people at City Hall. There is horrendous graffiti all over the City that never gets cleaned, but they spent $14,000 in 2022 removing labyrinths. Geez!
— Chase Stevens (@ChaseStevens2) February 18, 2023
An F1 is a Cocker Spaniel and Poodle bred together to create a Cockapoo.
F1 is known as the first generation crossbreed.
Mochi,
Visiting from Mississauga,
Sitting atop the Heart at the Start of the Grange Park Labyrinth,
is an Apricot F1 Cockapoo.
Evenings around Sunset time,
You might spot Ollie walking around the [re]painted Grange Park Labyrinth . . .
Inti Norbert atop the Water Pump inside The Wading Pool Labyrinth . . .
This photograph show French Bulldog MOMO inspecting the Labyrinth beside the Skating Rink in Trinity-Bellwoods Park.
If MOMO looks close enough,
He may see the chalk markings I used when designing and painting the Labyrinth.
This photograph was likely taken on the day I was painting it,
or during the days after.
Dog Walk Stop atop the Labyrinth . . .
“Dino Sunday Series 🦖🦕
Fun fact: The Triceratops had a hard, parrotlike beak.
One of the lesser-known facts about dinosaurs such as Triceratops is that they had birdlike beaks and could clip off hundreds of pounds of tough vegetation (including cycads, ginkgoes, and conifers) every day.
They also had “batteries” of shearing teeth embedded in their jaws, a few hundred of which were in use at any given time.
As one set of teeth wore down from constant chewing, they would be replaced by the adjacent battery, a process that continued throughout the dinosaur’s lifetime.
Could you imagine how many bones you could chew through if you had a beak like a Triceratops? 🤔”
Pay no attention to the Dinosaur behind the dog . . .
Dogs digging the Snow Pile dumped from Zamboni ice rink shavings,
With my Yellow Pass-Through Labyrinth in the background . . .
Dog Walking beside my Heart Labyrinth passing in front of Courage My Love in Kensington Market . . .