"They still have a long way to go to catch the Habs," Hunter said, his Canadiens having won 24 Stanley Cup titles compared to 13 for the Maple Leafs, who will soon begin the franchise's 100th season. "The Leafs have been a good doormat."
His Canadiens allegiance showed when he mentioned in passing that four of the farm's goats are named for current Maple Leafs players.
A maze theme is chosen with three criteria in mind: an anniversary, a Canadian connection and, in Hunter's words, "a really great image that resonates with people."
From Sept. 9 through Oct. 29, visitors will be able to navigate the paths, which are about 2½ miles, through a quarter of a million cornstalks in this extraordinary maize maze.
The Hunter brothers have come a long way since their maze-building began with small fields to attract visitors to their public market.
Today, an engineer maps out the maze with a satellite-based GPS, a highly accurate tool for mapmakers and land surveyors. This year, the brothers used a graphic designer to help with a layout that features two faces and an intricate logo.
"Engineers are good, but they're not artists," Chip Hunter said.
Aerial photos of the field were once taken from a small plane, but Chip Hunter's son, Leigh, shot images this year with a drone.
The maze is the cornerstone of the farm's fall festival and its kid-powered Field of Fun. The brothers hope 7,000 or more visitors will come over the next two months, weather permitting.
Hunter said that his Maple Leafs-loving brother-in-law hasn't yet taken this year's trivia quiz. But heaven help him, he added, if Rea scores lower than he did on the 2009 Canadiens quiz.
"They'll take away his Leafs membership," Hunter said with a laugh. "And his Darryl Sittler jersey."
The Toronto Maple Leafs maze and the Hunter Brothers Farm's Field of Fun in Florenceville-Bristol, New Brunswick, will be open weekends and holidays from Sept. 9 through Oct. 29. Visit hunterbrothers.ca and facebook.com/HunterBrothersFarm to learn more.