The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Canadian couple builds world’s largest snow maze

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ST. ADOLPHE, Canada: Amaze-ing: a snow labyrinth in the frigid, windswept prairies of Western Canada has broken the record for the world’s biggest.

According to Guinness World Records, the whopping 2,789.11 square metres of terrain dwarfs the previous Canadian record holder at the Fort William Historical Park in Thunder Bay, Ontario.

For years, farmers Clint and Angie Masse would ring in the fall harvest by building a corn maze on their property just outside of the small town of St Adolphe, a short drive from Winnipeg, Manitoba.

With a long, cold winter in the Canadian forecast, they decided late last year to try to extend the experience of finding one’s way through the network of paths and hedges by several months.

And despite temperatur­es plunging to a low of -40 degrees Celsius in January, people kept coming in droves.

But it was no easy feat, Clint Masse told AFP. He said building the maze required weeks of planning, tens of thousands of dollars and 370 truckloads of snow to supplement the relatively thin powder on their fields.

“Making snow is really expensive,” he said, pointing to the cost of renting generators, tractors and other equipment, fuel and weeks of labor.

There were design challenges too.

“You’re not designing a path, what you are is designing walls and every wall has a double duty: it’s got a path on this side and a path on that side,” Masse said.

“I wanna say it took me a better part of a week. The corn maze I think I could do in a day and a half so it’s a lot of more work to design.”

The couple used commercial computer-aided design and drafting software.

Inside the labyrinth, visitors walk between walls of snow that are 1.8 metres high, and atop a layer of snow packed tightly to prevent it from melting too soon into slush under the pedestrian traffic. — AFP

 ??  ?? People play in a maze built by farmers Clint and Angie Masse in St Adolphe, Canada. — AFP photo
People play in a maze built by farmers Clint and Angie Masse in St Adolphe, Canada. — AFP photo

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