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The Rural Voice, 2002-08, Page 20Perth County couple have the world by the trail as they open their 36 -acre cvf'n maze You might say Ernst and Nelly Hofer threw themselves a birthday party last year and 6,000 people showed up. The Hofers both turned 40 last year and thought it was a special occasion so came up with the idea of The Ontario Maze. They'd seen a small maze in Switzerland while they were on vacation there and liked the idea. Theirs would be much larger. They picked out a 36 -acre field as their canvas. Last year's theme was the province of Ontario and, seen from the air, it presented the crest of the province. "Last year it was awesome when you saw it from the air," Nelly says. "If you walk it, it's good but when you see it from the air, it's different." If you've already been successful on a grand scale, why not take on the world. So when the maze opens for the new season on Saturday, July 27, it will sport the theme "The Amazing World", with a map of the world laid out in corn for the continents and mixed grain for the oceans. "I promised my wife I'd take her on a world trip," Ernst jokes. Planning for this year's project began in December, says Ernst. The plan is created then entered into a global positioning computer system to map where borders should be. Location of the continents was marked on the ground with spray paint. "After we got the outline of the continents mapped out we started 16 THE RURAL VOICE Nelly and Ernst Hofer's second effort at a corn maze is this 36 -acre map of the world, seen (above) from the air. At right, the couple shows some of the indoor displays that will give more information about the countries that make up the maze. seeding." The corn came first and the mixed grain was planted later so it wouldn't be too mature as the time approached for the opening of the maze. Of course the dry weather then slowed germination. Despite planning, a lot of decisions get made on the fly, Nelly says. With growing crops you have to adapt. In mid-July came the task of cutting paths through the corn to mark the political boundaries of the different countries. The paths form the maze for the people to follow (and get lost, Nelly chuckles). Last year there were two or three occasions where people had to be rescued because they got disoriented, Ernst says. With the field being 36 acres of corn with paths cut through it, the possibility of people getting lost was bigger. You could hear people if they called out, Nelly says. Usually, Ernst adds, it was the parents who got lost, not the kids. This year with the corn making up a smaller portion of the maze it should be possible for people to walk out to the "oceans" of mixed grain and easily find their way. In the first year the maze drew more than 6,200 people from as far away as Holland, Germany, Switzerland and Austria as well as closer locations such as Toronto, Sudbury and Chatham. "It was very interesting to talk to them," says Nelly. "Because it was the first year, last year, you really don't know what you're getting into so you might worry about different