At the dawn of COVID-19 restrictions in March, 2020, 海角社区官网sisters Nan and Laura Cooper launched a small project that they were pretty sure would wrap, like the new flu, in a couple of weeks.
They lived on the waterfront, and the boardwalks by Lake Ontario were too crowded for them to feel safe. Instead, for fresh air, they decided to visit a different 海角社区官网park every day.
鈥淚n two weeks, we鈥檒l see 14 new parks and it鈥檒l be over,鈥 Laura told Nan, referring to both the park visits and COVID.
On Tuesday, more than four years after they began their project, they celebrated 500 parks with a toast in one-year-old Love Park, at York Street and Queen鈥檚 Quay.
About 25 friends showed up to help them celebrate.聽
鈥淚鈥檓 in awe,鈥 said former neighbour Lynda Eunson. 鈥淣an and Laura kept themselves going during COVID while the rest of us stayed in doing crafts.鈥
The Cooper sisters have been cataloguing their 聽Two things have surprised them: The parks are often empty when they visit, usually sometime between 10:30 and 2 p.m., and with a couple of exceptions, most of the parks they’ve visited have been clean and in good shape 鈥斅爐his despite a report from the city’s auditor general on Monday that found that some city crews charged with maintaining parks have been slacking off.
They’ve met many dogs off leashes, two foxes and a Cooper’s Hawk.聽
They no longer go every day, as they did at the beginning of COVID, maintaining the same kind of serendipitous approach that got them launched on the project.聽

Massey Harris on King Street West is one of the parks the sisters visited on their quest to visit a different 海角社区官网park every day.聽
Facebook/Laura Cooper聽鈥淲e just get in the car in the morning, pull up a map and say, where are we going to go,鈥 says Laura. 鈥淚t depends on how much time we have, whether it鈥檚 going to be one that鈥檚 close or whether we can get up to Scarborough or something like that.鈥
They鈥檙e not, as one might think of sisters in their mid-80s, using a paper map. Laura is a former IT specialist and Nan spent 25 years working as an executive assistant to the president of an international shipping company.聽
Laura uses her iPhone to chart their path, and Nan drives them there in her little black Honda Civic. Now living in a retirement community in Toronto’s Davenport neighbourhood, they go every day that they can.聽
They have set some rules 鈥斅爐he parks must be within city limits. They made one exception, for a park that became a favourite 鈥斅犅爐he Japanese themed .
They haven鈥檛 gone north of Hwy. 401, because it would take too long in traffic. They regret having to use a car at all, but the project began that way, to avoid possible COVID transmission on public transit, and it鈥檚 hard to reach a lot of the parks they鈥檝e visited on the TTC.
鈥淎 lot of them are really neighbourhood parks,鈥 said Laura.

Laura Cooper and sister Nan Cooper visited parks all over the city, including Centre Island.聽
Facebook/Laura CooperThey don鈥檛 like to name favourites 鈥 each park is unique 鈥斅燽ut they do mention a couple, including the new near Leslie Street and Unwin Avenue, and Jeanette Park, at Midland Avenue and St. Clair Avenue East, which features a path winding through tall grasses.
鈥淵ou feel like you鈥檙e on a farm somewhere, out of the city. It completely changes how you look at the city,鈥 said Laura.
The plan moving forward? More park visits.
While the city of 海角社区官网, about 400 of them are parkettes, said Nan. 聽
鈥淭here are only 1,100. As long as our legs are still functioning and we can still get there, we鈥檒l keep going.鈥
To join the conversation set a first and last name in your user profile.
Sign in or register for free to join the Conversation