
Walking as Remapping: Family Edition
Build a Poem from Place with Anna Swanson
For kids ages 7–12 and their caregivers
Come explore the city in a whole new way—by turning a walk into a poem! On this playful and creative walk, we’ll use our eyes, ears, and imaginations to notice the world around us: the sounds of the river, the shapes of the trees, the colours of the sky, and the textures under our feet.
We’ll start and end at the Boathouse Tea Room, with a walk along the river nearby. Along the way, we’ll collect words—things we see, hear, and feel—and write them down. At the end, we’ll use those words to build poems, rearranging them to create new meaning.
This walk is part of a bigger series that helps us see the city differently—not just how it looks on a map, but how it feels to walk through it, to imagine it, and to listen to its stories.
No writing experience needed—just curiosity, creativity, and a love of adventure.
Accessibility: This event will involve walking slowly on flat gravel walkways and some uneven dirt trails, with several stops to talk or write. There generally will not be formal seating where we stop to write, except for logs, blankets, etc. There are no significant inclines, and there are ramps in any place with stairs, including the bridge. There will likely be a portapotty at one point along the route (not wheelchair accessible), but we suggest using the washroom before the walk. Please contact info@artgalleryofguelph.ca in advance if you have accessibility questions or for further information.



Presented by the Art Gallery of Guelph as part of AGG’s Walking as Remapping program in partnership with the Department of Geography and School of Theatre, English, and Creative Writing with the support of the University of Guelph’s Wellness@Work program as well as TD Friends of the Environment.
Facilitator
Anna Swanson
Anna Swanson is a queer writer and librarian living in Guelph. Her first poetry book, The Nights Also, won the Gerald Lampert Award and a Lambda Literary Award. Her writing has appeared in various anthologies including In Fine Form: The Canadian Book of Form Poetry and The Best Canadian Poetry in English. She works with Riddle Fence as a poetry editor, and loves wild swimming in all seasons. Her second collection, The Garbage Poems, will be published by Brick Book in Fall 2025—”a series of found(ish) poems built out of text from garbage collected at some of my favourite swimming holes over the course of eight years”.
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