Maybe I’m a cheapskate, but I really like designing and cutting my own Corn Maze each year. I know I could spend lots of money and have the Battle of Hastings or a portrait of Barak Obama designed professionally to fit my cornfield, with GPS coordinates provided and all that, but I’d still have to cut it myself. And don’t we already have enough digital in our lives? So every year I make the decision to do it all myself…well, with a lot of help from the summer crew. We all take ownership of the corn maze, and by the time we’ve finished sketching, measuring, cutting, running out of gas, sweltering in the July heat, we’ve got a corn maze with soul.
And one of my favorite corn maze devices is circles. Not as mysterious as crop circles, mind you, but often just as baffling. When a path through the corn maze comes to a circle, one is confronted with multiple options. Some lead nowhere. Others lead somewhere, but just not the right somewhere. And yes, one is the right path. At Ridgefield Farm, our corn maze always has lots of circles.cutting-the-corn-maze
But for some insane reason, my circles have to be perfectly formed. One kid stands in the middle with a tape measure, or rope, or sometimes a pole. Another holds the other end tightly at just the right measurement and walks in a circle around the first kid, thus maintaining a perfect radius. Cautiously, the person on the mower follows close behind. Ah, yes. Perfectly round! Perfectly done!
Here’s a link to the largest corn maze in the world!