Early Morning at The Labyrinth in Wells Hill Park, Midtown Toronto . . .
Early Morning at The Labyrinth in Wells Hill Park, Midtown Toronto . . .
Inti Norbert atop the Water Pump inside The Wading Pool Labyrinth . . .
“The little way”
Today is World Labyrinth Day 2021.
My Friend and City of Labyrinths Volunteer Labyrinth Maker,
Sent me this photograph of my newly re-painted Labyrinth on the Wading Pool surface in Christie Pits Park in Toronto . . .
Thank you Steve !
Happy World Labyrinth Day everyone !
Happy World Labyrinth Day 2021 !
Many thanks Steve for showing me this !
I repainted the entire Christie Pits Park Wading Pool Labyrinth on the day before the current Stay-at-Home Order went into effect.
I painted one additional lane right around the water pump in the centre of the wading pool,
Expanding this into a 12 Lane Labyrinth.
Concentric Circle Arcs looking good in Deep Dark Blue !
Because I finished (re)painting it after dark,
This is the first time seeing anyone walk into the final 12th Labyrinth Lane before reaching and entering the centre !
Quite Grateful to see these images and time lapse video.
It shows how ugly it is right now,
because of how much the colours haves faded off my Labyrinth painted on the surface of the wading pool in Christie Pits Park in Toronto.
This suddenly bumps UP which of my Labyrinths will be re-painted first during my semi-regular Labyrinth Maintenance Rounds …
Christie Pits Park will soon gets it Labyrinth back,
Beautiful as ever, and with a slight redesign expansion to 12 Lanes !
As soon as I can find paint roller, enough blue paint, and time.
Dog Walk Stop atop the Labyrinth . . .
“Splash Pad with a Heart. Lakeshore, TO
I have taken many photos on the Lakeshore in 2021.
Sometime it is good to let them lie for a while and look at them with fresh eyes.
This photo got little bit colour overhaul, but otherwise it is unaltered.
Call me Mr. Pragmatic, but I like the idea of a maze, so even when the weather is cold, the splash pad is still being used.
Created by HiMY SYeD who specialize in Labyrinths.
923. Toronto. 2021- Mar 03; P1450010; Upload 2022-Jan 20. Lmx -ZS100″
– Tom R.
“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 . . .